The U.S. may be closer to a military conflict with Iran now more than ever.
But
this also means that Congress could be the closest it’s come in years
to considering a new resolution to authorize the use of military force.
Such a proposal could end the old authorizations Congress approved in
2001 to fight in Afghanistan and a 2002 blessing to invade Iraq.
Three presidents, including President Trump, have employed these
Authorizations for Use of Military Force (AUMFs) for a panoply of
military interventions spanning nearly two decades.
The
operations have gone beyond the scope of just Afghanistan and Iraq. The
U.S. has used those AUMFs to deploy military might in the Philippines,
Georgia, Yemen, Djibouti, Kenya, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia and Niger.
In fact, the House just approved a defense spending plan with a
provision to extinguish the old AUMFs within 240 days of the measure
becoming law.
Protesters hold signs spelling out, "No War," outside the White
House, Thursday June 20, 2019, in Washington, after President Donald
Trump tweeted that "Iran made a very big mistake" by shooting down a
U.S. surveillance drone over the Strait of Hormuz in Iran.
(AP)
Democratic leaders emphasized this
point when summoned to the White House Situation Room Thursday afternoon
for a briefing on Iran.
“We make it very clear that in order to
get engaged in any military activities, we must have a new Authorization
of Use of Military Force,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. “That is clear in our caucus.”
When
asked if members of the Trump Administration agree that the existing
AUMFs lack rationale for attacking Iran, Pelosi replied “No. They didn’t
say anything. They didn’t say yes. They didn’t say no.”
“We told
the room that the Democratic position is that Congressional approval
must be required before funding any conflict in Iran,” said Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “One of the best ways to avoid
bumbling into war - a war that nobody wants – is to have a robust, open
debate and for Congress to have a real say. We learned that lesson in
the run-up to the Iraq war.”
That’s
the fundamental difference here. The Administration of President George
W. Bush made a concerted case in 2002 and 2003 that Iraq harbored
weapons of mass destruction. In the shadow of 9/11, President Bush
argued that the U.S. needed to strike Iraq pre-emptively to stave off a
catastrophic terrorist attack. As it turned out, the U.S. relied on
faulty intelligence to appeal to Congress and the public for war. Less
than two years later, Congress concluded a post-mortem on the reasons
given for seeking war. Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., chaired the Senate
Intelligence Committee at the time. Based on what lawmakers learned
later, Roberts doubted that the Senate resolution to approve the Iraq
war could garner the 77 Senate yeas it commanded in 2003.
This is
why Congress has been reluctant to modify or refine the existing AUMFs –
let alone adopt new ones. Lawmakers know they lack the votes to get
everyone together to approve a modern AUMF. That would then leave any
presidential administration one option: go it alone. And if an
administration opts against acting? The U.S. could be vulnerable to
attack and lack the appetite to initiate justified reprisals.
So,
an administration could decide to send in military forces without a
Congressional blessing. Sure, lawmakers may howl that the president is
ignoring the Constitution. But at least Messrs. Bush, Obama and Trump
can point to some Congressional, tacit endorsement of war: the 2001 and 2002 AUMFs.
Even if it is a stretch…
In other words, had the Bush Administration not leaned on defective information to start a war, lawmakers today may have more confidence in building a case for battle under the proper circumstances.
But the Iraq experience was so onerous that many lawmakers lack the
conviction to cobble together a coalition to either endorse or oppose
the war option. Congress then reverts to relying on the old AUMFs.
Lawmakers diminish their own power, ceding authority to the executive
and incapacitated to legislate.
But no one is sure what is coming
on Iran – if anything. The Trump Administration again finds itself at a
familiar locus. It’s called the brink.
President Trump declared Thursday “you’ll soon find out” if the U.S. intends to strike Iran militarily.
Nearly
two years ago, the President warned North Korea it had better shape up
or Pyongyang would “be met with fire and fury like the world has never
seen.”
It wasn’t that long ago that Trump was threatening to slap devastating tariffs on Mexico.
Democrats may demand an AUMF. But many Republican leaders are more than willing to defer to President Trump.
House
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said it was “unacceptable”
for Iran to shoot down the American drone. But when asked what the U.S.
should do to retaliate, McCarthy replied that “the President will have
options before him.” When asked if the U.S. should use force, McCarthy
said “I will leave that to the experts in the military and those in the
intel community.” McCarthy reiterated that Trump “has the current
authority” to wage war if necessary, based on the 2001 and 2002 AUMFs.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said that the Trump Administration should proceed with “measured responses.”
The
Senate aims to begin debate next week on the annual defense policy
bill. Sens. Tom Udall, D-N.M., and Tim Kaine, D-Va., have long implored
their colleagues to trash the calcified AUMFs and draft something new.
Udall and Kaine have prepped an amendment to the defense legislation
which would require Congressional signoff before going to war with Iran.
Of
course, this touches off the age-old question. What defines “going to
war?” Congress has only formally “declared war” five times against 11
nations. The last such declaration was against Romania in 1942. But what
constitutes “war?” If the U.S. bombs Iranian defense facilities or
engages Iranian aircraft and ships at sea, is the U.S. “at war?” Was the
U.S. “at war” in Niger when four American soldiers were killed in an
ambush two years ago? Few Americans even knew the U.S. had
forces in Niger. That’s why Democrats and some Republicans demand
Congressional consent. If the U.S. is going to be involved somewhere and
lawmakers are expected to foot the bill, they’d like to vote. That’s
because Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution grants Congress the
authority “to declare War.”
And,
if military action is unpopular politically or with the public,
lawmakers always to know why an administration is involved militarily
somewhere without Congressional imprimatur.
“I cannot
really predict what actions the White House will take,” said Pelosi
after returning to the Capitol following the White House briefing. “They
did consult with us today.”
But consultation is different from
the adoption of an AUMF or a declaration of war. And that’s something
Democrats are demanding if President Trump decides to strike.
Fox News' Sean Hannity didn't hold back Thursday night, calling out Democratic presidential frontrunner Joe Biden for his racially insensitive past.
"Now,
there's a pattern here because crazy uncle Joe came out hard against
busing...integration of public schools in the 1970s; he made
inflammatory comments when pushing the Clinton crime bill; he used the
phrase 'predators on our streets' talking about urban crime; he even
made excuses for segregationist Strom Thurmond calling him a product of
his time," Hannity said.
Biden faced criticism Wednesday
from his Democratic primary rivals for invoking his ability decades ago
to work with two segregationist southern senators to “get things done.”
“Apologize
for what?” Biden told reporters Wednesday night when asked about the
criticism over his remarks. “Not a racist bone in my body. I've been
involved in civil rights my whole career. Period. Period. Period.”
Hannity also talked about the presidential candidates 'flexible' opinions.
"Biden's
advisors are actually now even publicly begging him, stop talking about
your political past because it is a massive liability. He has no core
ideas, no solutions, eight years of failure. Willing to say and do
everything to try to appease the radical Democrat socialist party, but
is anyone buying it. Remember his Anita hill apology tour, the
flip-flopping on the Hyde amendment? He held that position for 40 years,
having to pander to the real speaker of the house, Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez," Hannity said.
The Fox News host blasted Biden for his current positions and his campaign chaos.
"And
he's adopted, yes, the crazy new green deal climate change nonsense,
he's averaging about a flip-flop a week making the campaign spin and
spin in a million different directions," Hannity said.
"Someone
with no plan for our future and he has to run on the Biden-Obama
record. $150 billion to mullahs in Iran, 13 million more Americans on
food stamps, 8 million more on poverty." Fox News' Alex Pappas contributed to this report.
President Trump acted responsibly after Iran shot down a U.S. Navy drone over a key strait in the Middle East, a former top National Security Council official told Fox News Thursday.
Former NSC chief of staff Fred Fleitz told "Tucker Carlson Tonight." that the president does not want war with Iran but is not afraid to defend American interests,
"I
don't want a war with Iran," Fleitz said. "I know that this president
was elected to get us out of wars and not to start new wars. The
president was right to pull us out of the fraudulent nuclear deal with
Iran.
"But the use of force is on the table if Iran threatens our interests."
Fleitz,
who also served as chief of staff to current National Security Adviser
John Bolton, claimed some observers believe they can fault Trump if Iran
uses violence in response to the U.S. withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear
accord.
"There's people saying right now [that] the president is
responsible if Iran responds with violence because we withdrew from that
deal," he said.
"That is a fraudulent argument. We don't stay in
an agreement because the other party threatens to respond with
violence. The president has responded with restraint. He has given
[Iran] an opportunity to deescalate the situation, and I think he
handled it right today."
The former CIA analyst added that the Trump administration beefed up American forces in the Middle East because he wants to defend American interests, not go on the offensive.
"It
doesn't mean that the president's going to do this, but the
president can't ignore clear intelligence that Iran is planning to
respond with violence to his policies," Fleitz said. "This president is
not going to give in to blackmail but he does not want to use force if
he doesn't have to."
The downing of the drone by a surface-to-air missile is only the most recent Iranian provocation in
the region. Thursday's incident comes on the heels of a disputed
attack on a pair of oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman last week. U.S.
officials say Iran was behind the tanker attacks, however, Tehran has not claimed responsibility and even suggested American involvement in the incident.
Similarly,
Iran claimed the U.S. drone shot down Thursday was over Iranian
airspace, but American officials stated unequivocally the incident
occurred in international airspace. U.S. Central Command said in a
statement that a U.S. Navy Broad Area Maritime Surveillance ISR
aircraft, known as a BAMS-D, was shot down at approximately 7:35 p.m.
ET Wednesday. Fox News' Edmund DeMarche and Lucas Tomlinson contributed to this report.
NBC "Meet the Press" host Chuck Todd called out U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for
doing migrants “a tremendous disservice” by comparing U.S. detention
camps at the U.S.-Mexico border to Nazi concentration camps.
Todd
said Wednesday that Nazi death and concentration camps are “not
comparable in the slightest” to what’s going on at the border.
“You
can call our government’s detention of migrants at our southern border
many things depending on how you see it. It’s a stain on our nation,
maybe. A necessary evil to others,” Todd said. “But do you know what you
can’t call it?” he asked, before airing a clip of Ocasio-Cortez’s
controversial remarks.
Todd said the New York Democrat's use of
the term “concentration camps” only distracts from the debate on how to
resolve the humanitarian crisis at the southern border.
Todd also
criticized other Democrats, such as House Judiciary Committee Chairman
Jerry Nadler of New York, who were reluctant to condemn Ocasio-Cortez’s
remarks.
“One of the lessons of the Holocaust is ‘Never Again,’
Nadler tweeted Tuesday. “We fail to learn that lesson when we don’t
callout such inhumanity right in front of us.”
“Why are we so
sheepish calling out people we agree with politically these days?” Todd
asked viewers. He claimed the issue exists on both sides of the aisle —
among both Republicans and Democrats.
"Are
we really so ensconced in our political bubbles, liberal versus
conservative, that we cannot talk about right versus wrong anymore? Some
things are bigger than partisanship, or at least they used to be."
When President Trump kicked off his reelection campaign in Orlando, two of the three cable news networks chose to blow it off.
MSNBC
didn't air any of the speech, and CNN dumped out of it after a few
brief minutes (just as Trump started bashing the press and the crowd
chanted "CNN sucks"). Instead, they had their own pundits and
prognosticators talk throughout the event and spent yesterday critiquing
the speech that they decided not to share with viewers.
This is an important moment.
In
passing up the speech (which was carried in its entirety by Fox), the
networks were, intentionally or otherwise, making a statement. They were
saying that what we have to say is more important than letting you hear
from the leader of the free world as he makes his case for a second
term.
That, in my view, plays into the old Steve Bannon charge about the media acting as the opposition party.
I'm
not saying that the cable news channels need to air every Trump rally,
even though Fox carries many of them. And the Orlando speech did turn
out to be highly partisan, with the president ripping not just the media
but the Mueller "witch hunt," "18 angry Democrats," "Crooked
Hillary," and "radical" Democrats "driven by hatred, prejudice and
rage." That's how he chose to frame his launch, with little about what
he'd do in a second term.
So run the speech and then your anchors,
reporters, commentators, and analysts can rip it any way they want. If
it's important enough to cover on program after program, why isn't it
important enough to air?
Can anyone imagine CNN and MSNBC not
carrying Barack Obama's reelection launch? When he held his first
official 2012 campaign rally in Columbus, they covered it, along with
Fox.
When
Hillary Clinton gave her 2015 kickoff speech on New York's Roosevelt
Island — I was there and part of the coverage — Fox carried it live
along with the other news channels.
(In a mirror-image move, South
Carolina Democrats have barred CNN, Fox and even C-SPAN from covering
this weekend's party convention, giving exclusive rights to MSNBC. This
is a dumb move that will limit the exposure of the 21 presidential
candidates who are slated to speak.)
The
whole question of air time and balance is going to be a tricky one for
television networks and the press as this campaign unfolds. That's
because Trump's mighty media megaphone is such a powerful force — and a
dilemma for the Democrats.
The Washington Post has just documented Trump's dominance:
"Through
the first five months of the year, Trump has received about three times
as much Google search interest in the United States, on average, as all
his Democratic rivals put together.
"He has been having about
75 percent more social media interactions on Facebook, Twitter and
Instagram than his rivals combined since February.
"And when it
comes to CNN, MSNBC and Fox News Channel, Trump was mentioned nearly
twice as often as the 23 Democrats last month."
The Democrats, the paper says, are trying to figure out how to get higher ratings, even if they're not at Trumpian levels.
The
highest-rated town hall — Bernie Sanders on Fox — drew over 2.5 million
viewers. But that pales next to the 24 million who tuned into the first
debate between Trump and other Republicans, also on Fox, back in August
2015.
During that campaign, according to a Harvard study cited by
the Post, Trump drew 63 percent of the primary coverage in a field of
17 candidates, and 15 percent more than Hillary Clinton that fall. I
said over and over during that campaign that even negative coverage
benefits Trump because it means he's dominating the agenda.
Guy
Cecil, chairman of an anti-Trump super PAC, is quoted as saying: "We
have a culture that rewards the clown show at the expense of real
issues." But that's been true for decades, and successful politicians
adapt to the culture.
The current crop of 2020 Dems is doing plenty of interviews, but these are diluted by the sheer size of the field.
They
will have one advantage in the coming months: the Democrats will be
engaged in a race, with no contest on the GOP side. But they'll still be
competing for ink and air time with an incumbent president who can make
news at will. Footnote:
Donald Trump has called much of the media fake, dishonest and
treasonous, but he was outdone in Orlando by his "spiritual adviser."
Paula
White said, during an opening prayer no less: "Let every demonic
network that has aligned itself against the purpose, against the calling
of President Trump, let it be broken, let it be torn down in the name
of Jesus."
Do we really need this kind of demonizing, literally, in the name of religion?
Fox News' Sean Hannity
unloaded on the mainstream media Wednesday night for their coverage of
President Trump's Florida campaign rally warning them that they are
underestimating the concerns of the president's supporters.
"The
Americans who showed up last night in flip-flops and cargo shorts, they
will be the people who choose the next president, they are the ones who
were right in 2016 and all of you were wrong," Hannity said.
He
was reacting to a montage of media clips from CNN and MSNBC that showed
hosts and their guests mocking those who attended the Orlando rally.
Hannity
accused the media of ignoring the impact of the Obama administration's
policies and noted that the president's supporters did not "buy into"
the Russia investigation.
"The forgotten men and women in this
country, the one that suffered the most under Biden-Obama, the people
who make this country great every day. They didn't buy into your lies,
your conspiracy theories," Hannity said.
Hannity also blasted CNN's Don Lemon for comparing Trump and Adolf Hitler Tuesday night while arguing that such "bad people" shouldn't be given a platform.
"You let your 'journalist' Don Lemon say this on your network last night? You should be ashamed of yourself," Hannity told CNN boss Jeff Zucker.
The Fox News' host accused CNN of being unable to take the criticism responding to Lemon's comments.
"What
really happened was this. When the president was 6 minutes into the
speech last night, said all of those fake news people in the back and
the crowd started... telling the truth about fake news CNN, that CNN
sucks, CNN couldn't take the criticism and they turned it off," Hannity
said.
A U.S. high-altitude drone was shot down Thursday by an Iranian surface-to-air missile over the Strait of Hormuz amid heightened tensions in the region after last week’s attacks on two oil tankers, a source told Fox News.
A
commander for Iran's Revolutionary Guard said the shooting sends `a
clear message' to the U.S. He said while Iran has no intention of war
with anyone, it's "ready for war."
The U.S. Navy’s MQ-4C drone, ,
which has the same wingspan as a Boeing 737, was over international
airspace at the time and about 17 miles from Iran, the source said.
Capt.
Bill Urban, a U.S. Central Command spokesman, declined to comment on
the reported attack when reached by the AP, but he said no drone was
over Iranian territory.
IRNA news agency, the country’s state-run
news arm, identified the drone as an RQ-4 Global Hawk. Iran’s
Revolutionary Guard confirmed the shooting and said it occurred when the
drone entered into its airspace in southern Iran’s Hormozgan province.
The U.S. said Iran fired a missile at another drone last week that responded to the attack on two oil tankers near the Gulf.
Another senior U.S. official told Fox News last week that an MQ9 Reaper drone was fired on by the Iranians shortly after it arrived at the scene where the MV Altair tanker sent out a distress signal.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has blamed Iran for the "blatant assault" on oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman.
After
the tanker incident, Pompeo said his assessment was based on
"intelligence, the weapons used, the level of expertise needed to
execute the operation, recent similar Iranian attacks on shipping, and
the fact that no proxy group operating in the area has the resources and
proficiency to act with such a high degree of sophistication.” Fox News' Lukas Mikelionis and The Associated Press contributed to this report
President
Trump formally launched his 2020 re-election campaign Tuesday night
before a jam-packed crowd in Orlando's Amway Center arena, and quickly
unloaded on the media organizations and government actors he said tried
their hardest with "everything they had" to bring down both his
candidacy and presidency.
To chants of "USA," Trump took the stage
after brief remarks by Vice President Mike Pence and first lady Melania
Trump, and recalled his unlikely rise to power.
"We stared down
the unholy alliance of lobbyists and donors and special interests who
made a living bleeding our country dry," Trump said. "The swamp is
fighting back so viciously and violently. For the last two and a half
years, we have been under siege.”
And after polling the boisterous crowd, Trump appeared to settle on a new campaign slogan: "Keep America Great."
He
went on to tout the economy and the planned Space Force, celebrate the
"obliteration" of ISIS, and declare that "Republicans believe that every
life is a sacred gift from God" amid a newly energized national
pro-life movement.
Just over four years ago, Trump descended
through the pink marble and brass atrium of Trump Tower to announce his
candidacy for president, the first step on a journey few analysts
believed would take him all the way to the White House.
This time, thousands of Trump supporters arrived more than 40 hours in advance to secure a spot in the Amway Center, despite sweltering heat. Some had been camped in chairs for several nights.
Trump
told attendees he had begun not only a "great political campaign but a
great movement" committed to the idea that a government must "care for
its own citizens first."
He called his election that year as a
"defining moment in American history" -- and then directed the crowd to
"ask them, right there," referring to the media assembled in the back,
which many in the crowd jeered.
In one of the most dramatic
moments of the rally, Trump charged that Democrats want a "do-over" of
Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report -- and then, his voice
approaching a shout, Trump blasted Democrats' apparent lack of interest
in misconduct within their party.
Supporters of President Trump waiting in line hours before the
arena doors opened Tuesday in Orlando. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
"Our patriotic movement has been under assault from the very first day," Trump said. He specifically called out the "phony" dossier used by the FBI to secure a secret surveillance warrant to surveil one of his former aides, Carter Page.
After
Trump noted that the dossier was funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign
and Democratic National Committee (DNC), the crowd again broke into a
chant, this time cheering, "Lock her up."
"If you want to know how
the system is rigged, just look at how they came at us for three years
with everything they had, versus the free pass they gave to Hillary and
her aides after they set up an illegal server, destroyed evidence,
deleted and acid-washed 33,000 emails, exposed classified information,
and turned the State Department into a pay-for-play cash machine," Trump
said, his voice rising with the crowd's.
"Lock her up," the crowd responded again.
"33,000
emails deleted, think of it!" Trump said. "You know, there was a lot of
corruption on the other side. But, you know, they get a subpoena from
the United States Congress, and they decide they're not gonna give it,
so, Lindsey Graham, they delete and they acid wash -- which is very expensive, nobody does it -- those emails, never to be seen again!
"But
we may find them again somewhere deep in the State Department," Trump
mused. "Can you imagine if I got a subpoena? Think of this -- if I
deleted one email, like a love note to Melania, it's the electric chair
for Trump."
For
the most part, the rally focused on Trump's policy successes, on a
range of matters including criminal justice reform and the economy.
"Our
country is soaring to incredible new heights," Trump asserted, to loud
applause. "Our economy is the envy of the world, perhaps the greatest
economy we've had in the history of our country, and as long as you keep
this team in place -- we have a tremendous way to go -- our future has
never, ever looked brighter or sharper."
Trump continued: "The fact is, the American Dream is back. It's bigger, and better, and stronger than ever before."
The
president emphasized his success in appointing federal judges,
and lamented Democrats' treatment of now-Justice Brett Kavanuagh,
telling the crowd, "They didnt just try to win, they tried to destroy
him with false and malicious accusations" in the name of "political
dominance and control."
Trump called Kavanaugh a "great gentleman"
who is "highly respected" throughout the judiciary, and said Democrats
also targeted his family. Kavanuagh, speaking to Fox News last year,
said his wife had received numerous death threats.
"Just imagine what this angry left-wing mob would do if they were in charge of this country," Trump said.
"We
just finished [confirming judge] number 107, already approved, sitting
on the bench -- how about that?" Trump then asked. "By the time we're
finished with the rest, we will have record percentages [of judges
appointed] -- our percentage will be a record, except for one person.
One person has a higher percentage ... George Washington."
At one point, outgoing Press Secretary Sarah Sanders took the stage, bringing the crowd to its feet.
"We
want people to come into our country based on merit," Trump said, after
praising Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials as
underappreciated heroes securing the border.
He went on to condemn "crazy" Bernie Sanders, and vowed again that America would "never" become a socialist country.
The
festive and lively environment was evident both outside and inside the
arena. Caps and shirts and mugs and ponchos were being hawked in corners
far and wide in Orlando, with slogans ranging from "God, Guns and
Trump" to "Trump’s Deplorables" to "Working to Defeat Liberals since
1854."
"Think of this -- if I deleted one email, like a love note to Melania, it's the electric chair for Trump." — President Trump
"Bikers
For Trump" volunteer security members managed traffic in and out of the
rally areas as jubilant Trump devotees partied to a band while in line,
occasionally breaking into "USA, USA" chants.
Others wandered the blocks around the venue urging people to sign a petition to "prevent voter fraud."
"Only U.S. citizens should be able to vote," explained Donny, a Jacksonville native. "That’s what we want in Florida."
Joe
Biden, the frontrunner among Democrats in both polling and fundraising,
sought to blunt the momentum from the Tuesday launch shortly before
Trump took the stage.
"Donald
Trump is launching his campaign for re-election tonight and the
American people face a choice -- we can make Trump an aberration or let
him fundamentally and forever alter the character of this nation," Biden
Deputy Campaign Manager Kate Bedingfield said in a statement.
Hats and other merchandise were flying off the racks Tuesday
afternoon in Orlando, ahead of Trump's rally. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
"Our country cannot afford four more years of Trump
diminishing America's role on the world stage, cutting access to health
care, ignoring the climate emergency that is an unprecedented threat to
our national security, tearing children from their parents at the
border, giving enormous new tax breaks to big corporations and the
wealthy at the expense of working families, and dividing our country by
embracing toxic bigotry and racism that's antithetical to who we are,"
Bedingfield added.
Sanders, meanwhile, hosted an "Ask Me Anything" open forum
on Reddit on Tuesday. The self-described democratic socialist condemned
what he called Trump's "rejection of science," and lamented the
"incredible attacks against working families that have taken place under
unfettered capitalism."
Sanders, in a video response to Trump's address later in the day, issued a series of personal insults. He called Trump a "racist" and "sexist," among other attacks.
"The
working class of this country has been decimated for decades by a
coordinated attack from corporate America," Sanders told one Reddit
user. "Bad trade deals have allowed corporations to ship millions of
jobs abroad, companies have bitterly resisted unionization and the
minimum wage has not been raised for almost 10 years."
Not all of
the participants in Sanders' Reddit event gave him a warm welcome,
however, with some pointing out Sanders' recent, dramatic rise to
wealth.
"People
like you have destroyed the working class by taking more of their taxes
to fund a corporate-run utopia that never can exist," one user replied.
"Wealth is decided by the rarity of your skill set, not how hard you
work, Mr. 3 mansions and an Audi R8." Trump is ahead of his Democrat rivals in key battleground states and "voters overall" support re-electing him, a Republican National Committee (RNC) memo
obtained by Fox News claimed. The memo came amid reports of the
president struggling in polls putting him up against potential 2020
opponents, including Biden. A Fox News poll showed similar numbers.
But, according to the RNC, its own massive data operation told
a different story. According to the committee's numbers, Trump has a
higher approval than disapproval rating in the battleground states of Ohio and Pennsylvania while a majority of Florida voters (53 percent) supported re-electing him.
Trump
has an unprecedented $40.8 million in cash-on-hand, as of the start of
the second quarter of fundraising on April 1. While that would be a
massive war chest on its own, the Trump campaign, the Republican
National Committee and their joint fundraising committees had a combined
$82 million cash-on-hand going into the second quarter. Fox News' Mike Emanuel, Hollie McKay, Sam Dorman, Paul Steinhauser, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.