During
the protesters' month-long occupation of ICE facilities, Portland Mayor
Ted Wheeler announced his support for them and refused to have police
intervene. Now, the National ICE council has sent a cease-and-desist
letter demanding that their right to police protection be preserved.
#Tucker
Anarchists in Portland, Oreg., flooded the office of a local lawyer representing officers of the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency in an effort to intimidate him. The city has long been the epicenter of the so-called “Occupy ICE” movement and
other anarchist activities, culminating last year in a clash between
ICE officers and the protesters who then managed to shut down an ICE
facility. ICE UNION WANTS PORTLAND MAYOR TO FACE CRIMINAL PROBE OVER ACTIONS DURING OCCUPY ICE PROTESTS A
mob of anarchists continued their reign in the city last weekend,
pushing a garden hose through the mail slot at the law office of Sean
Riddell and flooding the building’s floor and basement, Willamette Week
reported. The water was not discovered until days later, resulting
in damage to the property, including its wooden floors, carpet and the
ceiling in the basement. The lawyer said the act of vandalism will cost
him thousands of dollars to repair, though the cost is likely to be
covered by insurance. Riddell has been representing the National
ICE Council, the union for federal immigration officers. Last year the
union grabbed headlines after sending letters to officials, asking them
to conduct a criminal investigation of Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler over
his handling of the 38-day Occupy ICE protests in the city last summer. The
group also filed claims that the city’s police declined to intervene
and disperse the protesters who were besieging an ICE facility. PORTLAND ICE FACILITY PROTEST CAMP BROKEN UP BY FEDS AS CROWDS SHOUT 'NO RACIST POLICE!' The anonymous anarchists claimed responsibility for the water damage in an email to Willamette Week on Monday, admitting that they did it because of Riddell's work with the federal immigration agency. “We
decided to congratulate him on his new building by unraveling his
garden hose, pushing it through his mail slot, and turning on the
water,” the anonymous email read. It added that Riddell’s office
was the target as he bought it with the money he received from
representing the ICE union and claimed that this is a warning to other
lawyers who are working or are planning to work with the agency. “Our
goal was to cause maximum economic damage, that should serve as a
warning to all individuals and businesses that profit off the human
misery perpetrated by ICE,” the email added.
“Our goal
was to cause maximum economic damage, that should serve as a warning to
all individuals and businesses that profit off the human misery
perpetrated by ICE.” — Anonymous email from supposed anarchists
Riddell
slammed the vandals, telling the Willamette Week that at least he
doesn’t hide behind the cloak of anonymity. “When I make a political
statement, or when I make a political statement on behalf of a client. I
sign my name,” he said. “I'm not a victim,” he said. “I'm just doing my job.”
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich on Tuesday said the report by the Washington Post that Special Counsel Robert Mueller reached out to Attorney General William Barr and
let him know that his summary “did not fully capture the context,
nature, and substance” of the Russia investigation was leaked by someone
seeking to “maximize the embarrassment” ahead of Wednesday’s hearings. "The
'Deep State' and Washington has played these games for the whole
history of the country, this is not something new,” Gingrich said on the
“Ingraham Angle.” In a late-breaking article, the Post reported that
Mueller contacted Barr-- in a letter and phone call-- to express
concerns after Barr released his own public summary of the report in
March. Mueller reportedly pushed Barr to release the executive summaries
written by his office. However, according to both the Post and
the Justice Department, Mueller made clear that he did not feel Barr's
summary was inaccurate. Instead, Mueller told Barr that media coverage
of the letter had "misinterpreted" the results of the probe concerning
obstruction of justice. Barr is expected to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee Thursday. The Post's headline was entitled, "Mueller complained that Barr’s letter did not capture ‘context’ of Trump probe" Gingrich brushed off the report. “After
all the noise you just shrug your shoulders and say, ‘so what?’ Mueller
had every opportunity to come out the day that Barr released his
letter. Mueller could have at any point decided to refute it and as I
understand the actual key sentences, the distortion is by the news
media. The distortion is not by Barr,” Gingrich said. Gingrich
added, "Think about this. The media that Mueller is complaining about
are the people who are now using Mueller’s complaint to further distort
what is going on. You couldn't make this up.” Fox News' Gregg Re contributed to this report.
South Bend mayor and Democratic presidential candidatePete Buttigieg drew some backlash for his stance on mandatory vaccinations. Buzzfeed reported that Buttigieg supports states' rights to mandate vaccinations, but also supports "some exceptions." "The
law of the land for more than a century has been that states may
enforce mandatory vaccination for public safety to prevent the spread of
a dangerous disease. Pete does support some exceptions, except during a
public health emergency to prevent an outbreak," a spokesman for the
South Bend mayor told Buzzfeed. The 37-year-old progressive listed
personal/religious exemptions, but reiterated that there must be "no
public health crisis" for the exemptions to be honored. "These
exemptions include medical exemptions in all cases (as in cases where it
is unsafe for the individual to get vaccinated), and personal/religious
exemptions if states can maintain local herd immunity and there is no
public health crisis," the spokesman added. Buttigieg's stance on vaccination exemptions caught some attention on social media. The 2020 candidiate was starting to generate negative press on Tuesday night. Mediaite's headline read "Buttigieg fumbles badly on vaccinations." Buttigieg has since modified his stance, offering a "clarifying statement" to Buzzfeed late Tuesday night. "Pete
believes vaccines are safe and effective and are necessary to
maintaining public health. There is no evidence that vaccines are
unsafe, and he believes children should be immunized to protect their
health. He is aware that in most states the law provides for some kinds
of exemptions. He believes only medical exemptions should be allowed,"
the spokesman said. Buzzfeed has been gathering the vaccination stances of all 2020 presidential candidates. Several candidates did not respond to Buzzfeed including Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn, former Obama HUD Secretary Julián Castro, and Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-HI.
The head of Venezuela's feared secret police has turned his back on disputed President Nicolas Maduro in an open letter made public Tuesday night. Meanwhile,
Maduro took to Venezuela's airwaves to proclaim that the uprising
sparked by opposition leader Juan Guaidó had been defeated. In a
rambling address, Maduro said his regime had responded to the rebellion
with "nerves of steel, maximum serenity and effective action" and
claimed that the leaders of the uprising were under arrest and being
questioned. "This cannot go unpunished," said Maduro, who added that "all of those involved must surrender." Manuel
Ricardo Cristopher Figuera, the head of the Bolivarian Intelligence
Service (SEBIN), is the highest-ranking member of the country's security
forces to break with Maduro since Guaidó called for a military uprising
Tuesday morning. In the letter, the authenticity of which was
confirmed to The Associated Press by a U.S. official, Figuera wrote that
while he always had been loyal to Maduro, "the time has come to seek
new ways of doing politics" to try and "rebuild the country." The letter
did not mention Guaidó by name but did say that Venezuela has
experienced a damaging decline. Earlier Tuesday, National Security
Adviser John Bolton said the Trump administration was waiting for three
key officials -- Maduro's defense minister, the chief judge of the
supreme court and the commander of Maduro's presidential guard -- to act
on what he said were private pledges to remove the beleaguered
Venezuelan leader. "All agreed that Maduro had to go. They need to
be able to act this afternoon, or this evening, to help bring other
military forces to the side of the interim president," Bolton said. "If
this effort fails, [Venezuela] will sink into a dictatorship from which
there are very few possible alternatives." The defense
minister, Vladimir Padrino López, publicly condemned Guaidó's move
Tuesday as a "terrorist" act and "coup attempt" that was bound to fail. "Those
who try to take Miraflores with violence will be met with violence," he
said on national television, referring to the presidential palace where
hundreds of government supporters, some of them brandishing firearms,
had gathered in response to a call to defend Maduro.
Opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez, center, is greeted by a supporter in Caracas Tuesday. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)
Guaidó has said that in the coming hours he would release a list of top commanders supporting the uprising. "The
armed forces have taken the right decision," said Guaidó. "With the
support of the Venezuelan people and the backing of our constitution
they are on the right side of history." Anti-government
demonstrators gathered in several other cities, although there were no
reports that Guaidó's supporters had taken control of any military
installations. The
SIBE was responsible for holding Leopoldo Lopez, Venezuela's most
prominent anti-Maduro activist, in custody since his arrest in 2014.
Lopez appeared alongside Guaidó, his political protege, Tuesday and
claimed that he had been released from house arrest by security forces
adhering to an order from Guaidó. It was not immediately clear what role, if any, Figuera had played in Lopez's release. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
The economy is on fire right now, and that, more than anything, could be a major boost to President Trump's reelection chances. And
the Democrats are having a hard time figuring out how to run against
this steamroller at a time of 4 percent unemployment and soaring stocks. Of
course, things could cool off before the election, as many economists
predict a sharp slowdown in growth over the next two years. But
for now, the S&P and the Nasdaq just hit all-time highs, and the
newly announced rebound in first-quarter growth, to 3.2 percent,
trounced the market's all-important expectations. I've always felt
that a president presiding over strong growth is far more likely to win
a second term, even if other hot-button issues are dominating the news.
The flip side is that strong economic anxieties can derail a reelection
campaign, even if the economy is recovering from a recession, as
happened when George H.W. Bush lost to Bill Clinton in 1992. And the
Wall Street meltdown in the fall of 2008 helped put Barack Obama in the
White House. The nettlesome challenge for the Democratic
candidates is to avoid appearing that they're talking down a good
economy or getting traction when most people are satisfied with their
personal situation. During the 1982 midterms, Democrats privately hoped
the jobless rate under Ronald Reagan would top 10 percent, which it did,
but couldn't say so publicly on their way to picking up 27 House seats. Joe
Biden is touted for his ability to connect with white, working-class
voters in such industrial states as Michigan and Pennsylvania. But if
those workers, except in certain fields, are generally doing well, that
clearly undercuts the pitch. But don't take my word for it — ask Celinda Lake. She's a veteran Democratic pollster who told Politico
that "we really don't have a robust national message right now" on the
economy. "We will tend to talk about things like paid leave and equal
pay," which are popular but "don't add up to an economic message that is
robust enough to win the presidency." Lake also said that people
may not agree with Trump, but they know what his message is. "And
Democrats, you don't know what it is. And that's a recipe for disaster
in 2020." Look, many things will be at play in this election:
Immigration. Health care. The Mueller report. Terrorism. Race relations.
And Trump is underwater with key groups and has a 54 percent
disapproval rating in the latest ABC/Washington Post poll. And
even on the economic front, not everything is Rosy Scenario. By the
administration's own projections, we're looking at federal deficits over
$1 trillion for the next four years. That's what you get when you
combine only modest spending restraint with tax cuts, which many
Americans feel didn't help them. As the Politico piece notes, some
Democratic candidates are taking broad swipes at the Trump economy,
particularly on the subject of inequality. Kamala Harris: "We have an economy in this country that is not working for working people." Elizabeth Warren: "Let's make the zillionaires pay a fair share." Beto O'Rourke would undo the "worst excesses" of the GOP tax cuts. One
of the reasons that no economic message is breaking through is that
there are 20 Democratic candidates, each vying for a share of the
spotlight. That would matter less in hard times, but the Democrats don't
have that luxury. If "it's the economy, stupid" is as true today
as when James Carville coined it a quarter-century ago, beating Trump
will be harder than many Democrats think.
CNN anchor Don Lemon lashed out at former White House aide Cliff Sims over President Donald Trump’s
Charlottesville remarks and ended the segment early after he was
accused by his guest of "contributing" to the political divide in the
country. While covering the White House Correspondents’ Dinner and the rally
Trump held simultaneously in Green Bay, Wis. on Saturday night, CNN’s
Alisyn Camerota began the conversation by criticizing President Trump’s
pivot from his somber rally remarks about the deadly synagogue shooting
in Poway, Calif. to his fiery attacks against the Russia investigation. Sims
responded by saying all Americans are “watching the same movie” and how
they are “seeing dramatically different things” when it comes to the
Trump presidency. He used Lemon’s response to Charlottesville as an
example that his views of Trump’s remarks are “diametrically opposed” to
many others, including himself, adding that Trump “did condemn” white
supremacy. “Then you’re delusional. Then you’re delusional,
Cliff,” Lemon talked over Sims. “You’re saying because the president
says words that are hollow- because the president said ‘we should come
together.’” “I couldn’t hear anything you just said, Don, because
you insisted on talking over me,” Sims shot back. “So I really don’t
know what you’re saying right now.” “If you stop talking, then we won’t be talking over each other and I will let you respond,” Lemon said. “Well, you want to interview me!” Sims exclaimed. “You asked me to come on your program, so give me a chance to talk!”
CNN anchor Don Lemon (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)
Lemon accused the “Team of Vipers” author of saying
that “the president’s words don’t matter,” which Sims denied. Sims then
challenged Lemon to give an example of Trump “being a white
supremacist.” “I never called the president a white supremacist,
so you’re watching the wrong program or you’re not hearing what I’m
saying. What I have called the president is a racist,” the CNN anchor
said. “When you call nations ‘s---hole countries,’ when you call
African-American players ‘sons of b--hes, when you say there are ‘fine
people on both sides,’ when you lie about it afterwards --“ Sims
attempted to explain that Trump was saying there were “fine people on
both sides” of the debate over Confederate statues, but Lemon insisted
that’s not what the president said. After another heated exchange,
the former Trump aide accused Lemon of “contributing” to stoking
division by re-litigating the Charlottesville remarks. “I’m not
the person who said that they were ‘fine people on both sides,’” Lemon
fired back. “I’m not the person who called countries ‘sh--hole
countries.’” “You actually don’t even know if he said that because
that’s another one of those based on anonymous and people in the room
say blah, blah, blah, you actually don’t know if he said that,” Sims
told Lemon. “Yes, I do know that he said that,” Lemon claimed. “And it’s not ‘blah, blah, blah.” The “CNN Tonight” host had enough of Sims and cut the segment short, shifting to someone he says “tried to bring this country together.” “And that’s you, Don. You do a great job at that,” Sims sarcastically added before his mic was cut. Lemon was actually referring to President Barack Obama. Joseph A. Wulfsohn is a media reporter for Fox News. Follow him on Twitter @JosephWulfsohn.
Counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway appeared on “Hannity” Monday where she explained why she attacked Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., for not tweeting about the Sri Lanka Easter massacre and referred to media who haven’t pressed the freshman congresswoman as “fangirls.” “I
usually leave Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and some of these other freshmen
like Ilhan Omar, [Rashida] Tlaib alone because basically when they
speak, it's a gift to conservatives and to the Republican Party,” Conway
said. But she told Sean Hannity that while she is pressed consistently
on everything President Trump says, Ocasio-Cortez is treated like a
‘hero' and goes unchallenged in the media. “But
I really had to call her out here because I am on television shows, and
I'm asked constantly, ‘Why didn't Donald Trump say this, why did he use
that word? Where is the semi-colon in this tweet where I believe it
should be.’ And I said hey, does anybody ask Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
who you give a hero's welcome to? All you fangirls ever bother to ask
her why she’s been completely silent on the massacre against Sri Lanka
on Easter Sunday?” Conway said. Conway on Sunday criticized the freshman congresswoman for not tweeting about the bombings targeting Christians in Sri Lanka. "I
see officials who get a lot of airtime and ink like Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez, congresswoman, who tweets many times about the mosque and
never once about the Christians being killed in Sri Lanka," Conway said
on CNN's "State of the Union." Ocasio-Cortez responded on Twitter
accusing Conway Sunday of attempting to "stoke suspicion" regarding the
freshman lawmaker's religion. The New York congresswoman also noted she
was visiting her grandmother in Puerto Rico for Easter and “away from
tech.” Conway criticized Ocasio-Cortez Monday while on
'Hannity" for not tweeting about Sri Lanka the next day, and instead
promoted a documentary about herself. “The
very next day, still picking through the rubble in Sri Lanka, looking
for survivors or of the deceased. She had time to tweet about a Netflix
documentary about her,” Conway said. The Daily Caller pointed
out that her tweets did end on April 18, and there were no tweets on
Easter Sunday, but "her account did include both a tweet and a retweet
about the upcoming movie “Knock Down The House.” Conway reiterated the issue was not about her faith. “It’s not about her faith, it’s about her selectivity,” Conway told Hannity.
President Trump called Monday night for a sweeping overhaul to an asylum system
he has long said is rife with fraud -- including a new fee to
process asylum applicants, and the capacity to rapidly adjudicate
applicants' claims while also barring them from working in the U.S. in
the meantime. In a presidential memorandum, Trump specifically
told Attorney General William Barr and acting Homeland Security
Secretary Kevin McAleenan that the move was necessary to address a
"crisis" at the border. In an article published earlier this month, The New York Times acknowledged that the humanitarian crisis of illegal immigration has hit a "breaking point." Arrests
along the southern border have skyrocketed in recent months, with
border agents making more than 100,000 arrests or denials of entry in
March, a 12-year high. Immigration courts that process asylum claims
currently have a backlog of more than 800,000 cases, and asylum
applicants are increasingly staying in the U.S. even after their claims
for asylum have been denied. “That
emergency continues to grow increasingly severe,” Trump's memo read.
“The extensive resources required to process and care for these
individuals pulls U.S. Customs and Border Protection personnel away from
securing our Nation’s borders.” According to a White House fact
sheet released Monday, on average, "out of every 100 aliens subject to
expedited removal who claim a fear of persecution, only about 12 will
ultimately be granted asylum." And "around half of all aliens who
make a credible fear claim and are subsequently placed in removal
proceedings do not actually apply for asylum."
Honduran asylum seekers are taken into custody by U.S. Border
Patrol agents in San Diego this past Demceber. (AP Photo/Moises
Castillo, File)
Thought the vast majority of asylum applications are
ultimately unsuccessful, they still take months and even years to fully
process. Asylum law is intended to provide harbor only to refugees
fleeing personal persecution based on a limited number of factors --
such as political belief or religion -- and does not protect
individuals fleeing bad living conditions or poverty. The Trump administration last year rolled back an
Obama-era expansion of potential asylum justifications, which extended
protections to those alleging domestic abuse or gang-related attacks
back home. White House officials said at the time that those categories
were prone to abuse and expanded asylum law beyond its original intent. In
his memorandum, Trump gave his deputies 90 days to propose regulations
so that all asylum applications are adjudicated within 180 days, except
for those representing exceptional circumstances. The White House
and DHS officials did not immediately respond to questions about how
much applicants might be forced to pay in asylum fees, and it is unclear
how many families fleeing poverty would be able to afford such a
payment. The memo says the price would not exceed the cost of
processing applications, but officials did not immediately provide an
estimate for what that might be.
A Central American migrant takes a nap in the shade under a
freight train car, last week in Oaxaca State, Mexico. (AP Photo/Moises
Castillo)
Trump also wants to bar anyone who has entered or
tried to enter the country illegally from receiving a provisional work
permit and is calling on officials to immediately revoke work
authorizations when individuals are denied asylum and ordered removed
from the country. Immigration officials say one reason asylum
claims are booming is that migrants know they will be able to live and
work in the U.S. while their cases play out -- and, in many cases, even
after their claims have been rejected. According to the White
House, the number of "aliens who do not show up to court and are ordered
removed in absentia has soared, with 17,200 removal orders issued in
absentia in the first quarter of fiscal year (FY) 2019. ... If this pace
continues, in absentia removal orders would more than triple the 2013
total." For asylum cases originating in a credible fear claim, "in
absentia removal orders are on pace to increase to 17,636 in FY 2019,
around 20 times more than the total in FY 2010." And
since September 2018, "1 out of every 6 family unit cases filed on
special expedited dockets at 10 immigration courts has ended with an in
absentia removal order," the White House said. Trump is also
calling on DHS to reassign immigration officers and any other staff "to
improve the integrity of adjudications of credible and reasonable fear
claims, to strengthen the enforcement of the immigration laws, and to
ensure compliance with the law by those aliens who have final orders of
removal." Fox News' Shannon Bream and The Associated Press contributed to this report.