This is what the Democrats have elected to the American Government.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is "taken aback" by the growing dissent and anger among rank-and-file Democrats over a possible resolution to formally condemn anti-Semitism,
a Democratic source told Fox News on Wednesday -- highlighting Pelosi's
tenuous grip on control over the House and underscoring the growing
power of the party's nascent far-left progressive wing.
Pelosi even reportedly
walked out of a meeting Wednesday with Democrat House members, setting
down her microphone and telling attendees, “Well if you're not going to
listen to me, I’m done talking."
The stalled resolution originated
after freshman Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, for at least
the second time in recent months, ignited an uproar for echoing tropes critics have deemed anti-Semitic. In February, she suggested on Twitter that supporters of Israel have been bought. The congresswoman then accused American supporters of Israel of pushing people to have “allegiance to a foreign country.”
Omar
-- who also tweeted in 2012 that "Israel has hypnotized the world, may
Allah awaken the people and help them see the evil doings of Israel" -- refused to address questions on Wednesday about accusations that she’s anti-Semitic.
Meanwhile, debate over how to address her latest remarks has overtaken House Democrats in recent days.
A
frustrated senior House Democratic aide told Fox News on Tuesday: "Here
we are again, fighting with ourselves. I've spent another week dealing
with this and not on policy." ON THE STREETS IN OMAR'S DISTRICT: SOMALI GANGS, LITTLE COMMUNICATING WITH COPS
A
vote on the resolution, which was originally planned for earlier this
week, did not appear on the House's official docket for Thursday.
President
Trump, turning to Twitter on Wednesday, highlighted Democrats' troubles
getting the resolution passed. He wrote that their failure to "take a
stronger stand" against anti-Semitism was "shameful."
Fox News has
been told that the Democratic caucus is trying to get the language of
the proposed anti-Semitism language “right," and that there is concern
about mentioning Omar by name -- a non-starter for many members of the
Congressional Black Caucus.
Two knowledgable sources said such a scenario could increase security threats against Omar, who is a Muslim.
Republicans did not specifically name Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa,
in a bipartisan disapproval measure that followed comments that
seemingly defended white nationalism earlier this year. But GOP leaders stripped King of his committee assignments as punishment -- while Omar remains on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Democrats say they have no plans to oust her.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., departs after talking with
reporters during her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill on Feb. 7.
(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
By the same token, Fox is told Democrats are also
concerned about making “a martyr” out of Omar if they don’t address some
of her controversial comments.
"I've spent another week dealing with this and not on policy." — Frustrated House Democratic aide
Pelosi,
for her part, was stunned by criticism among some Democratic members
who complained they weren’t informed in detail about the resolution;
freshman Rep. Jahana Hayes, D-Conn., for example, asserted the
Democratic leadership team failed in its duty to inform members about
the resolution's details.
But senior leadership sources scofffed
at that assertion, saying Pelosi spoke with multiple lawmakers all
weekend long about the measure.
Fox
News was also told one senior House Democratic lawmaker expressed
concern about the influence pro-Israel interest groups have over the
Democratic caucus, prompting debate about a resolution to condemn
anti-Semitism in the first place. Their complaints came in contrast to
the push by a trio of Jewish lawmakers who have pushed hardest for the
resolution: House Ethics Committee Chairman Ted Deutch, D-Fla., House
Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., and House
Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey, D-N.Y.
One senior
House Democrat even suggested the rift in the caucus was emblematic of
age-old tensions between Pelosi and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer,
D-Md.
“He’s more AIPAC,” said the Democrat. “She’s more J Street.
The caucus is more J Street these days.” That’s a reference to two
major, pro-Israel lobbying organizations in Washington.
The apparent tension comes as freshman Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib -- who herself has been accused of recent anti-Semitic comments
-- also clashed with party leadership on Wednesday, after joining
protesters to say she'd introduce a resolution this month urging the
Judiciary Committee to move forward with impeachment proceedings against President Trump. Pelosi has consistently resisted calls to impeach Trump, saying such an effort would be premature.
A senior House Democratic leadership aide, however, disputed the divide between Pelosi and Hoyer.
Lawmakers are also buzzing about if they should even address the comments by Omar at all. There’s a concern about precedent.
“Should
the House condemn [House Minority Leader] Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., for
what he said about George Soros?” asked one lawmaker who requested to
not be identified. In 2018, McCarthy tweeted: “We cannot allow Soros,
Steyer and Bloomberg to BUY this election! Get out and vote Republican
November 6th. #MAGA." (Soros, Steyer and Bloomberg all are of Jewish
heritage.
Rep. Rashida Tlaib joined protesters with CREDO Action and By the
People, a new advocacy group pushing for the impeachment of President
Trump. Together they urged members of Congress to begin impeachment
proceedings. (Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib)
McCarthy has since deleted the tweet.
One
source questioned if House Democrats ever attempted to rebuke former
Rep. Cynthia McKinney, D-Ga., who was known for questioning if President
George W. Bush knew of the 9/11 attacks ahead of time. She also
questioned U.S. support for Israel and demanded a more balanced approach
when dealing with the Palestinians.
The prolonged delay in
passing an anti-Semitism resolution -- which threatens to become a
public-relations headache for Democrats with each passing day -- spilled
over into the 2020 presidential race as well on Wednesday, as White
House contender Bernie Sanders, who is Jewish, defended Omar in a
statement.
“Anti-Semitism is a hateful and dangerous ideology
which must be vigorously opposed in the United States and around the
world," Sanders wrote. "We must not, however, equate anti-Semitism with
legitimate criticism of the right-wing, Netanyahu government in Israel.
Rather, we must develop an even-handed Middle East policy which brings
Israelis and Palestinians together for a lasting peace. What I fear is
going on in the House now is an effort to target Congresswoman Omar as a
way of stifling that debate. That's wrong.”
Added Elizabeth
Warren: "Branding criticism of Israel as automatically anti-Semitic has
had a chilling effect on our public discourse and makes it harder to
achieve a peaceful solution between Israelis and Palestinians." Fox News' Chad Pergram and Alex Pappas contributed to this report.
As
House Democrats expand their investigations into President Trump, there
may be an opposite effect among undecided voters, Townhall.com politics
editor Guy Benson suggested Tuesday.
This week, the House Judiciary Committee
sent letters to 81 Trump associates and entities in search of documents
for various investigations. Trump has repeatedly slammed the “stone
cold crazy” Democrats and deemed their recent expansion as “presidential harassment.”
During
Tuesday's "Special Report" All-Star panel, Benson -- along with
Federalist senior editor Mollie Hemingway and Reuters White House
correspondent Jeff Mason -- weighed in on the potential political
consequences Democrats might face if their wave of investigations into
the president backfires. CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE FULL SHOW
Benson
noted the Democrats’ sudden ”moving on” from the Mueller probe amid
shifting expectations that the report will be a “dud.” He then credited
former Obama adviser David Axelrod, who tweeted that Democrats “run the
risk” of irritating the public with their various investigations.
“Some
unaffiliated people and undecided voters might come around to the
‘harassment, witch hunt’ mentality,” Benson told the panel.
Hemingway
expressed a similar sentiment, insisting that Trump's “presidential
harassment’ claim will work in his favor because the investigations into
Trump’s business “fits that narrative” of congressional overreach
rather than “legitimate oversight.”
Meanwhile, Mason recalled
Trump’s rhetoric after the midterms, when he proposed that he and
Democrats work together -- or else very little legislation will get
done.
In this undated selfie provided by Bridgette Hoskie, her
brother Jay Barrett and herself pose for the photo. Barrett, a
terminally ill Connecticut man who's a big supporter of President Donald
Trump, is getting a bucket list wish fulfilled, with help from his
Democratic sister. (Bridgette Hoskie via AP)
President Trump and Eric Trump fulfilled
a terminally ill Connecticut man's dying wish with a phone call on
Tuesday evening -- and all it took was a little help from the man's
sister, an elected Democrat.
44-year-old Jay Barrett, of West
Haven, who has cystic fibrosis, left a hospital to begin palliative care
at his sister's home last weekend and asked for some sort of contact
with the president before he dies.
His sister, West Haven City
Councilwoman Bridgette Hoskie, who describes herself as "100 percent
Democrat," went on social media to help make it happen. Friends and
other supporters sent emails to the White House and its online petition
system.
The efforts paid off Tuesday night when Barrett received a
surprise call from Trump. According to Barrett, Hoskie handed him a
phone and he heard an understated greeting: “I’m the secretary for the
president of the United States. Do you have time to talk to him?”
Barrett was ecstatic.
"Alright Jay, you look handsome to me. I just saw a picture of you.” Trump began, in a video of the call posted to YouTube.
Barrett
responded: "Oh, you're giving me kind honors. I look like sh--."
That prompted Trump to laugh and ask, "How are you doing? How is it
going Jay? ... You’re a champ. You’re fighting it right?”
"That’s what the Irish do -- right?” Barrett answered.
"Yeah that’s what the Irish do -- you better believe it," Trump said.
"Mr.
President, through thick and thin, you know there's been a lot of
thicks, and there's been a lot of thins, I support you," Barrett
told the president.
“I
wish you could come to a rally. I wish you could come," Trump said. "I
know you like that stuff and I wish you could. ... It sounds like you
have a great sister, Jay.”
Trump promised Jay that when he has a
rally nearby, he'll "be sitting front, row center.” Trump added, "I know
where you live" and that he was very familiar with the area.
"You're my kind of man, Jay. ... I'm very proud of you." — President Trump
Barrett told Trump he's planned on coming down to Washington, D.C. “between now and my expiration date.”
"You're
my kind of man, Jay. ... I'm very proud of you," Trump said. "I'll talk
to you again, Jay, OK? You keep that fight going. We both fight."
Barrett told the New Haven Register that
he also received calls from Eric Trump and U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development regional chief Lynne Patton on Monday.
Eric Trump "told me they're pulling for me and praying," Barrett said.
Patton,
who is from New Haven, said she's coming to Connecticut on Saturday to
give Barrett a signed gift from the president. She also reached out to
the Trump family after a Register story about Barrett's wish was posted
online.
Barrett, who for most of his life considered himself an
independent, said he'd voted for President Barack Obama in 2008 but
didn't like many of his policies, including the Affordable Care Act,
also known as ObamaCare.
Barrett said he came to realize he was a
Republican and fell in love with Trump's style at the launch of his
campaign, and later, because of his policies.
His
original goal was to get to Washington to meet the president in person
and shake his hand, but he said he's grateful for anything.
Even though he's supposed to have only six months to live, Barrett said he intends to be around to vote in 2020. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., said in a weekend interview that she did not attend the kickoff rally for Bernie Sanders' second presidential campaign.
The
freshman lawmaker sat down with NY1’s Errol Louis, host of “Inside City
Hall,” for a Sunday interview that aired Tuesday night.
When
asked whether she attended Sanders’ rally in Brooklyn on Saturday, she
said: “I did not. Yesterday was my day to take care of myself.”
“I assume he asked you to be there,” Louis responded.
“Um,
he, he didn’t, actually,” Ocasio-Cortez responded. “I think that, we’ve
been, uh, so we’ve been in active conversation, I’ve been speaking with
him and several other of the 2020 (presidential) candidates.”
She
went on to say that endorsing a candidate “very early in this race”
prevents the Democratic Party from having conversations on issues like
income inequality, criminal justice, immigration, and the environment.
She later conceded that she will eventually endorse a candidate before the New York Democratic primary.
The interview comes amid a complaint filed with the Federal Election Commission this week that Ocasio-Cortez violated campaign finance law by being part of an "off-the-books operation" to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on candidates last year. She denied the allegations on Tuesday. Fox News' Alex Pappas contributed to this report.
What a difference a day makes.
Hillary Clinton made headlines Monday when she told a local New York news channel that she would not run for president in 2020.
"I'm
not running, but I'm going to keep on working and speaking and standing
up for what I believe," the former presidential nominee told News 12
Westchester. She insisted that she would remain relevant and has no
plans of "going anywhere."
But
late Tuesday, Maggie Haberman, a political reporter for the New York
Times, tweeted that she spoke with a person close to the former
secretary of state. The unnamed source said Clinton was not trying to
"be emphatic and close the door on running" with the comment and was
apparently "surprised" at the reaction.
"The person also says
[Clinton] is extremely unlikely to run, but that she remains bothered
that she's expected to close the door on it when, say, John Kerry isn't.
She has told her team she is waiting at least to see the Mueller
report," Haberman tweeted.
There is little buzz about a potential Kerry announcement, but there is clear interest in a potential Joe Biden bid. Recent polls have him leading the field of Democrats who have already announced. With Michael Bloomberg out of the way, there seems to be a clear path for a more centrist Democrat.
Those
interested in Biden's decision include New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and
former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, who are reportedly in
"wait-and-see" mode on their own potential candidacies until Biden ends
his "Hamlet act," according to Politico.
Clinton told News 12 Westchester on Monday that there is a lot at stake for the country.
"We've
just gotten so polarized,” she said. “We've gotten into really
opposing camps unlike anything I've ever seen in my adult life."
President
Trump said earlier that Clinton would “be sorely missed” in 2020.
Clinton appeared to respond to Trump's comment with a gif from "Mean
Girls," asking, "Why are you so obsessed with me?"
Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., said on
Monday that the House Democrats latest probe into the Trump
administration is necessary to make sure it “is not a dictatorship.”
(CNN)
Within hours of House Democrats launching a sweeping probe
into President Trump’s affairs on Monday, Judiciary Committee Chairman
Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., said the investigation was necessary to make
sure the Trump administration is not a dictatorship.
Nadler made the comments during a Monday appearance on CNN’s "Erin Burnett OutFront."
When asked whether Democrats
were just trying to kill Trump’s presidency “by a thousand cuts,”
Nadler insisted: “We’re simply exercising our oversight jurisdiction and
(Trump) doesn’t understand or he’s not willing to concede to Congress that we have an oversight jurisdiction.”
“[Y]ou’ve
had two years of sustained attacks by an administration of the nature
that we haven’t seen probably in a century or more, against the free
press, against the courts, against law enforcement
administrations...against freedom of speech,” Nadler added. HOUSE DEMS LAUNCH EXPANSIVE TRUMP PROBE WITH SLEW OF DOCUMENT REQUESTS
After
opening a new avenue in their investigations into Trump on Monday,
Nadler said the Judiciary Committee served document requests to 81
agencies, entities and individuals, as part of a new probe into "alleged
obstruction of justice, public corruption, and other abuses of power by
President Trump."
“We
have to make sure, as to what is true and what is not true,” Nadler
said. “And maybe come up with legislative limits on power or maybe do
other things. But we have to make sure that this is not a dictatorship
and that the rule of law is respected.” Fox News' Alex Pappas and Gregg Re contributed to this report.
The Democratic stampede is under way, with candidates charging in who have little national name recognition.
The latest two entrants are governors
with solid records, but no record of exciting anyone. They are
basically running as competent managers, which may be admirable, but is
also a tough sell in a polarized environment where all the Democratic
energy seems to be on the left.
John Hickenlooper, the former
Colorado governor, and Jay Inslee, the current Washington governor,
probably figure they have as good a shot as anyone else—and that the
national attention couldn’t hurt, even if they flame out.
And then
there’s Andrew Cuomo, who’s making the case for a nominee very much
like him—but only dropping the barest hints that he might run. CUOMO APPEALS TO BEZOS TO BRING AMAZON BACK TO NYC: REPORT
The New York Times says Hickenlooper is a “socially progressive, pro-business Democrat who has called himself an ‘extreme moderate.’”
Even
a friend of Hickenlooper is quoted as saying: “There are very few
people I know who wake up and want to go caucus to support a raging
moderate.”
And his spokeswoman “compared a potential Hickenlooper-Trump election to ‘a “Revenge of the Nerds”-type situation.’”
Running as a nerd doesn’t strike me as a winning formula in the Trump era.
Liberal Washington Post
columnist Paul Waldman says that “in a different year he might have
been a strong contender” as a “reasonably successful and well-liked
governor, middle-aged white guy.” But he argues that it’s as though
Hickenlooper “parachuted in from a few decades ago and has no idea how
politics works in 2019 or what sorts of impediments the next Democratic
president is going to face”—namely, fierce Republican opposition.
Inslee,
a former congressman, is running with climate change as his overriding
priority, trying to separate himself from the rest of the field. But as
the Post noted, “despite his calls for drastic action to combat climate
change, Inslee’s most ambitious climate initiative — the institution of a
tax on carbon emissions — was voted down in the state’s November
elections amid massive opposition spending from oil companies.”
A Seattle Times story
observes that “it remains to seen whether Inslee can stand out even on
his signature issue, given that other Democratic candidates have
expressed support, at least in principle, for a shift to a clean energy
economy dubbed the Green New Deal.”
The Cuomo chatter is fueled by an Atlantic piece that featured several hours of interviews with the third-term New York governor.
Cuomo
keeps dodging the question of whether he’d like to be president, and
then says Joe Biden is running anyway. And if Biden doesn’t run? “Call
me back,” says Cuomo.
On paper, Cuomo would be a strong candidate,
having accomplished such liberal goals as same-sex marriage and gun
control in one of the biggest blue states. But at home he’s often
criticized for not being liberal enough.
“Cuomo made it clear that
he thinks most of the Democrats running for president are going off a
cliff, feeling out how far left they can go while still saying Sanders
is too far left.”
In other words, he’s kinda sorta making the case for himself without doing so.
I
covered his father, Mario Cuomo, who was also a third-term governor in
1991 when he left a plane on a runway rather than fly to New Hampshire
on the last day of the filing deadline to challenge Bill Clinton and
others.
My sense is that the current governor shares that aversion
to a White House bid, or he would have done more to lay the groundwork
before now.
The
governors provide a fascinating counterpoint to all the Democratic
senators already in the campaign. There was a time when the country
liked elevating governors to the White House: Carter, Reagan, Clinton,
Bush.
But that was before Donald Trump transformed the political landscape.
Bianca Ocasio-Cortez and US House Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (Photo credit should read SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)
The mother of soak-the-rich congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said that she was forced to flee the Big Apple and move to Florida because the property taxes were so high.
“I
was paying $10,000 a year in real estate taxes up north. I’m paying
$600 a year in Florida. It’s stress-free down here,” Blanca
Ocasio-Cortez told the Daily Mail from her home in Eustis, a town of
less than 20,000 in central Florida north of Orlando.
The
mother-of-two — who calls herself BOC — said she picked Eustis because a
relative already lived there and right before Christmas 2016 she paid
$87,000 for an 860-square-foot home on a quiet street that dead-ends at a
cemetery.
Her daughter raised eyebrows with her pitch to raise the top marginal tax rate on income earned above $10 million to 70 percent.
She
has also gotten behind the so-called Green New Deal, that would see a
massive and costly government effort to address climate change the way
Franklin D. Roosevelt launched the New Deal to rescue the US economy
during the Depression. This story was originally published by the New York Post.