President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he would have to mobilize more
of the military at the U.S. border with Mexico after listening to
stories about migrants crossing the border from people attending a
Republican fundraiser.
"I'm going to have to call up more military," Trump said.
The president said some of the people crossing the border were ending
up dead from the journey on Americans' ranches. He interrupted his
discussion with Republican donors to bring in reporters to listen to the
stories about the border.
"Many, many dead people," Trump said, referring to migrants who he
said had died after making the journey. "Also they come in and raid
their houses, and it's very dangerous," Trump said, referring to locals
affected by the influx of migrants.
There are currently about 5,000 active-duty and National Guard troops near the border, though that number fluctuates.
"We support our federal partners," Pentagon spokesman Army Lieutenant
Colonel Jamie Davis said when asked about Trump's comments.
Trump in February had deployed an additional 3,750 U.S. troops to the
country's southwestern border to support Customs and Border Protection
agents.
Later that month, Democratic governors of states including Wisconsin,
New Mexico and California withdrew their National Guard troops, saying
there was not enough evidence of a security crisis to justify keeping
them there.
Trump, who drew sharp criticism for saying during the 2016
presidential campaign that Mexico was sending rapists and drug runners
to the United States, said on Wednesday that those comments were tame
compared to the stories he had heard since.
The president has made immigration a signature issue of his
presidency and of his re-election campaign. He declared a national
emergency over the issue earlier this year in an effort to redirect
funding from Congress to build a wall along the U.S. southern border.
Earlier this week he announced that Homeland Security Secretary
Kirstjen Nielsen was stepping down. White House officials said he wanted
new leadership at the department to focus more closely on what he has
called a border crisis.
Conservative commentator Candace Owens appeared on Fox News' "Ingraham Angle" Wednesday and talked about her explosive House Judiciary Committee hearing confrontation with Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., and called the entire hearing a hoax.
“I
think in many ways people on the Right felt vindicated. I know there
are a lot of moderate people that came over and realized that what I was
talking about were actually real issues in black America,” Owens said
on the “Ingraham Angle,” in her first interview since the hearing.
She
said African-Americans in the U.S. are facing a plethora of issues and
Democrats appear intent on trying to focus on items like white
nationalism.
Turning Point USA director of urban engagement Brandon Tatum
(left) with communications director Candace Owens (right). (Christopher
Howard/Fox News).
Owens' appearance on Fox was tense. Civil rights attorney Leo Terrell confronted her over her remarks about Democrats.
“So you did a great job of promoting yourself and playing the victim,” Terrell told Owens.
“I'm not going to play these playground tactics with you. I'm going to keep the focus on black America,” Owens retorted.
“Just
because you disagree with a Democrat you can not assume that Democrats
want black people to fail,” Terrell said, annoyed with Owen’s comments.
“I did and I believe that. And I will back it up with facts,” Owens said before Ingraham got control of the segment. Fox News' Gregg Re and The Associated Press contributed to thsi report.
Democratic 2020 candidate Andrew Yang said in an interview Wednesday that his “Freedom Dividend,” a proposal that would give $1,000 a month to Americans who are over 18 years old, will encourage citizens to work.
Yang
told TMZ that the plan is necessary to help American workers whose jobs
have become automized. When asked if giving the dividend would
incentivize workers, he cited the “Alaska Permanent Fund,” which was established in 1976 and pays residents a dividend from the state’s mineral revenue.
“In
Alaska it’s wildly popular, has created thousands of jobs, has improved
children’s health and has not decreased work levels in the slightest,”
the 44-year-old entrepreneur and investor said.
Presidential candidate and entrepreneur Andrew Yang speaks during
the National Action Network Convention in New York, Wednesday, April 3,
2019. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
With the exception of new moms who spent more time
with their kids and teenagers who graduated high school at a higher
level, numbers showed that most people continued to worked at the same
level as they did without the dividend, Yang told TMZ.
“Most people want to work and a little bit of money won’t make a difference,” he said.
The “Freedom Dividend”
would cost $1.8 trillion dollars a year, and planned to fund it with a
value added tax that would get the American people “a slice of” all
Amazon transactions, Google searches and robot truck miles, Yang
previously told MSNBC.
Yang's presidential candidacy has recieved
the support of some white nationalists, who believe he is "concerned
with halting the decline of the white race," the Verge reported. Yang has rejected their support.
Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, spoke to Shannon Bream on “Fox News @ Night” Wednesday about a Senate Judiciary Hearing where he confronted Twitter and Facebook officials about censoring and shadow banning conservatives.
“None
of us should be happy to have a handful of left-wing Silicon Valley
billionaires censoring what is said and silencing conservatives,
silencing Christians, silencing people of faith. That's not right. And
we've got to act to stop,” Cruz told Bream.
Cruz led off
Wednesday’s hearing of the panel's subcommittee on the Constitution by
saying that "a great many people agree that the pattern, the
anti-conservative bias and the pattern of censorship we're seeing from
big tech is disturbing.”
Bream
mentioned that the social media platforms were private companies
prompting Cruz to admit “the remedy is complicated” and bring up one
possible solution.
Cruz explained that “you can't sue Twitter and
Google and Facebook if they commit libel, if they commit slander”
because they’re viewed as “neutral public forums.”
Cruz added,
“Well they're now engaged as partisan left-wing political speakers have
no reason on earth they should have a special immunity from liability
that protects them in a way that nobody else does.”
Cruz
also reacted to Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, who said Republicans were
‘harassing’ big tech over conservative bias that didn’t exist.
“If conservatives have had their content removed, maybe they should look at the content they’re posting,” Hirono added.
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., on Tuesday appeared hesitant to jump on the progressive bandwagon to lower the voting age to 16.
During
a CNN Town Hall, Gillibrand was asked by an American University student
if she would consider lowering the voting age due the increased
involvement of young people in politics.
“I don’t know,” Gillibrand responded. “I really don’t know.”
She
said she liked the idea of lowering the voting age because it would
“inspire more young people,” but also made the argument to keep the
voting age at 18.
“I do like the fact that when you turn 18, you
earn this right. It’s a special right, a right of passage,” Gillibrand
said. “It’s also the time when you are independent from your parents as a
matter of law. And so I kind of like the simplicity of 18.”
She said she would give it more thought.
When
pressed by CNN anchor Erin Burnett, who noted that House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif, has endorsed the idea, Gillibrand doubled down, saying
that 18 you’re “an adult by law” and that you can do things like “serve
in the military.”
Among the 2020 candidates, Andrew Yang has come
forward in support of lowering the voting age, arguing that 16-year-olds
should “have a say in their own future.”
Tensions
at a heated House Judiciary Committee hearing on online hate speech
boiled over on Tuesday, when conservative commentator Candace Owens
accused Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., of distorting her comments on Hitler so
flagrantly for the sake of a smear that he must "believe black people
are stupid."
“In congressional hearings, the minority party gets
to select its own witnesses," Lieu began. "Of all the people the
Republicans could’ve selected, they picked Candace Owens. I don’t know
Miss Owens; I’m not going to characterize her; I’m going to let her own
words talk.”
Lieu then produced a cellphone and played a short clip of Owens' previous remarks at a conference in December, which were widely circulated in February:
“I actually don't have any problem with the word 'nationalism.' I think
the defintion gets poisoned by elites that want globalism. Globalism is
what I don't want. When we say ‘nationalism,’ the first thing people
think about — at least in America — is Hitler. You know, he was a
national socialist, but if Hitler just wanted to make Germany great and
have things run well, OK then, fine. The problem is, he had dreams
outside of Germany. He wanted to globalize. He wanted everyone to be
German. ..."
Owens' remarks echoed those of President Trump, who has repeatedly defended nationalism against progressive attacks that the concept is intrinsically racist.
Lieu
then asked committee witness Eileen Hershenov: “When people try to
legitimize Adolf Hitler, does that feed into white nationalist
ideology?”
But Owens soon made clear she felt Lieu had
intentionally misrepresented her views to drive a false narrative not
just against Owens, but also Trump and Republicans in general.
“I
think it’s pretty apparent that Mr. Lieu believes that black people are
stupid and will not pursue the full clip in its entirety,” Owens said.
Judiciary
Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-NY., interrupted, telling Owens, “It
is not proper to refer disparagingly to a member of the committee. The
witness will not do that again.”
After clarifying that she had
not, in fact, called Lieu stupid, Owens continued: "As I said, he is
assuming that black people will not go and pursue the full two-hour
clip. He purposefully cut off -- and you didn't hear the question that
was asked of me. He's trying to present as if I was launching a defense
of Hitler in Germany, when in fact the question that was presented to me
was pertaining to wheher I believed in nationalism, and
that nationalism was bad."
As Owens went on, Lieu tapped his hands together silently.
"And
what I responded is that I do not believe we should be characterizing
Hitler as a nationalist," Owens said. "He was a homicidal, psychopathic
maniac that killed his own people. A nationalist would not kill their
own people. ... That was unbelievably dishonest, and he did not allow me
to respond to it."
"I think it’s pretty apparent that Mr. Lieu believes that black people are stupid." — Candace Owens
Owens
concluded: "By the way, I would like to also add that I work for Prager
University, which is run by an orthodox Jew. Not a single Democrat
showed up to the embassy opening in Jerusalem. I sat on a plane for 18
hours to make sure I was there. I am deeply offended by the insinuation
of revealing that clip without the question that was asked of me."
Turning
to her 75-year old grandfather seated behind her, Owens remarked, “My
grandfather grew up on a sharecropping farm in the segregated South. He
grew up in an America where words like ‘racism’ and ‘white nationalism’
held real meaning.”
The hearing was separately derailed when a
YouTube livestream of the proceedings was bombarded with racist and
anti-Semitic comments from internet users.
YouTube disabled the
live chat section of the streaming video about 30 minutes into the
hearing because of what it called "hateful comments."
FILE - In this Dec. 17, 2018, file photo, a man using a mobile
phone walks past Google offices in New York. Executives from Google and
Facebook are facing Congress Tuesday, April 8, 2019, to answer questions
about their role in the hate crimes and the rise of white nationalism
in the U.S. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)
The incident came as executives from Google and
Facebook answered lawmakers' questions about the companies' role in the
spread of hate crimes and the purported rise of white nationalism in the
U.S. They were joined by leaders of such human rights organizations as
the Anti-Defamation League and the Equal Justice Society, along with
conservative commentator Candace Owens.
Neil
Potts, Facebook director of public policy, and Alexandria Walden,
counsel for free expression and human rights at Google, defended
policies at the two companies that prohibit material that incites
violence or hate. Google owns YouTube.
"There is no place for terrorism or hate on Facebook," Potts testified. "We remove any content that incites violence."
The
hearing broke down into partisan disagreement among the lawmakers and
among some of the witnesses, with Republican members of Congress
denouncing as hate speech Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar's criticism of
American supporters of Israel.
As the bickering went on, Nadler
was handed a news report that included the hateful comments about the
hearing on YouTube. He read them aloud, along with the users' screen
names, as the room quieted.
"This just illustrates part of the problem we're dealing with," Nadler said.
Monday's hearing
was prompted by the mosque shootings last month in Christchurch, New
Zealand, that left 50 people dead. The gunman livestreamed the
attacks on Facebook and published a long post online that espoused white
supremacist views.
Owens was named in the mosque shooter's
manifesto, along with eco-fascism, socialism, Trump, and other seemingly
unrelated actors. The shooter, who professed affection for divisive
online memes and sowing social discord, explicitly stated that his
intent was to gin up division and goad different factions into attacking
one another. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Attorney General William Barr
has assembled a "team" to investigate the origins of the FBI's
counterintelligence investigation into the Trump campaign, an
administration official briefed on the situation told Fox News on
Tuesday.
Republicans repeatedly have called for a thorough
investigation of the FBI's intelligence practices and the basis of the
since-discredited Russian collusion narrative following the conclusion
of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's probe -- and they now appear to have assurances that a comprehensive review was underway.
The FBI's
July 2016 counterintelligence investigation was formally opened by
anti-Trump former FBI agent Peter Strzok. Ex-FBI counsel Lisa Page, with
whom Strzok was romantically involved,
revealed during a closed-door congressional interview that the FBI
“knew so little” about whether allegations against the Trump campaign
were “true or not true” at the time they opened the probe, noting they
had just “a paucity of evidence because we are just starting down the
path” of vetting the allegations.
Page
later said that it was “entirely common” that the FBI would begin a
counterintelligence investigation with just a “small amount of
evidence.”
Former FBI Director James Comey would testify later
that when agency initiated its counterintelligence probe into
possible collusion between Trump campaign officials and the Russian
government, investigators "didn't know whether we had anything" and that
"in fact, when I was fired as director [in May 2017], I still didn't
know whether there was anything to it."
President Trump greeting then-FBI Director James Comey at the White House on January 22, 2017.
(Reuters, File)
Barr told lawmakers at a contentious hearing earlier
Tuesday that he was reviewing the bureau's “conduct” in particular
during the summer of 2016. The attorney general's explosive testimony
marked his first Capitol Hill appearance since he revealed the central
findings of Mueller’s investigation, and he indicated the full report --
with redactions -- would be made public within the week.
Mueller's
investigation completed last month without securing the indictment of a
single American for collusion with Russia or obstruction of justice, "despite multiple offers from Russian-affiliated individuals to assist the Trump campaign."
“I
am reviewing the conduct of the investigation and trying to get my arms
around all the aspects of the counterintelligence investigation that
was conducted during the summer of 2016,” Barr said at the hearing.
Barr
also was questioned about the initial Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA) warrants approved to surveil members of the Trump campaign,
including former Trump aide Carter Page.
Republicans have called
for a careful review as to whether the FBI, in violation of Page's
constitutional rights and FBI procedures, misled the FISA court or
withheld exculpatory information, and Barr testified that a DOJ review
of the FBI's FISA practices was in progress.
The FBI's ultimately successful October 2016 warrant application
to surveil Page, which relied in part on information from British
ex-spy Christopher Steele – whose anti-Trump views are now
well-documented – flatly accused Page of conspiring with Russians. Page
has never been charged with any wrongdoing, and he since has sued the
Democratic National Committee (DNC) for defamation.
The FBI assured
the FISA court on numerous occasions -- in the October 2016 warrant
application and in subsequent renewals -- that other sources, including a
Yahoo News article, independently corroborated Steele's claims, without
evidence to back it up. It later emerged that Steele was also the
source of the Yahoo News article, written by reporter Michael Isikoff.
The FBI also quoted directly from a disputed Washington Post opinion piece
to argue that Trump's views on providing lethal arms to Ukraine, and
working towards better relations with Russia, was a possible indicator
that the campaign had been compromised.
The Trump campaign, at the
time, supported only providing only defensive arms to Ukrainians, and
rejected a single Republican delegate's proposed platform amendment that
called for providing lethal arms. Later, the Trump administration
changed course and approved lethal arms sales to Ukraine.
The
FBI did not provide its own independent assessment of whether the
Washington Post opinion piece contained accurate information, and did
not mention that the Obama administration had the same policy towards
arming Ukraine as the one Trump's team supported.
The FBI also did
not clearly state that Steele worked for a firm hired by Hillary
Clinton's campaign. Instead, the FBI only indicated that Steele's
dossier was prepared in conjunction with a presidential campaign.
Fox News exclusively obtained internal FBI text messages
last month showing that just nine days before the FBI applied for the
Page FISA warrant, bureau officials were battling with a senior Justice
Department official who had "continued concerns" about the "possible
bias" of a source pivotal to the application.
Fox
News also has been told the Justice Department's Inspector General (IG)
was looking separately into whether Comey mishandled classified
information by including a variety of sensitive matters in his private
memos.
A DOJ court filing on Monday night revealed that Comey incorporated into his private documents, among other key details, the name and code name of a confidential human source. Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., claimed climate change is a “major factor” of the global migrant crisis after
earlier suggesting that the United States would have “blood on our
hands” if legislation is not passed to tackle climate change.
“The
far-right loves to drum up fear & resistance to immigrants,” the
freshman congresswoman tweeted on Tuesday. “But have you ever noticed
they never talk about what‘s causing people to flee their homes in the
first place?
“Perhaps that’s bc they’d be forced to confront 1 major factor fueling global migration: Climate change.”
But for many migrants traveling from Central America, violent crime and extreme poverty are the driving forces of migration.
El Salvador has one of the highest murder rates in the world,
due in part, to gangs like MS-13, which was started by Salvadoran
immigrants in the U.S. and spread to El Salvador and other countries.
In Honduras, nearly two-thirds of the population, or almost 5.5 million people, live in poverty, according to the World Bank. Per capita income averages just $120 per month.
Earlier Tuesday, Ocasio-Cortez discussed the role of global warming and national security
at a House Oversight Committee hearing with John Kerry, the former
Secretary of State, and Chuck Hagel, the former Secretary of Defense.
“So
I think what we have laid out here is a very clear moral problem and in
terms of leadership, if we fail to act or even if we delay in acting,
we will have blood on our hands?” asked Ocasio-Cortez. “I don’t know if
you’re allowed to agree with that Secretary Kerry or Secretary Hagel,
but would you agree with that assessment?”
Kerry responded that “we are complicit” as long as nothing is done to stem climate change.
“And
we’re going to contribute to people dying, we’re going to contribute to
trillions of dollars of damage to property and we will change the face
of life on this planet,” he said.
Ocasio-Cortez has championed the Green New Deal,
a radical measure that calls for a massive overhaul of the nation’s
economy and energy use to cut emissions. It is estimated to cost up to
$93 trillion or $600,000 per household, according to studies.
A test vote on the proposal recently failed in the Senate with no senator voting to begin debate on the legislation. Fox News' Chris Irvine and Frank Miles contributed to this report.