Is there dissension in the ranks of “The Squad”?
One day after reports emerged that the group of far-left House Democrats planned to endorse Sen. Bernie Sanders in the 2020 presidential race, it seemed only one of them – Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn. – was officially aboard the Bernie Bus:
As for the others:
-- Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
had made no official endorsement but was still rumored to be attending a
Sanders rally scheduled for this weekend in Queens, N.Y. – one of two
New York city boroughs that include a portion of Ocasio-Cortez’s home
district.
-- Rep. Rashida Tlaib,
D-Mich., clarified Wednesday that she had not yet endorsed a 2020
presidential candidate – even though CNN and Omar claimed Tlaib had
backed Sanders.
-- Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., also hadn’t made an endorsement.
Pressley’s
camp stressed that while the Squad members support one another in
Congress, they don’t necessarily speak with one voice on all issues.
“Ayanna has tremendous respect for her sisters-in-service,” a Pressley spokesperson told Vox. “Ultimately, these political decisions are made as individuals.”
“Ayanna has tremendous respect for her sisters-in-service. Ultimately, these political decisions are made as individuals.” — Spokeswoman for U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass.
One factor possibly stalling a Pressley endorsement of Sanders: She hails from the same state as Sen. Elizabeth Warren,
so she might not be as eager to oppose a presidential candidate from
her home area – the way that Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., for
example, backed former Vice President Joe Biden instead of her fellow Californian, Sen. Kamala Harris.
According
to Boston.com, Pressley’s ties to the Sanders campaign aren’t as strong
as those of Ocasio-Cortez and Omar, with Pressley having backed Hillary Clinton
over Sanders in 2016. In addition, Pressley has worked with Warren on
legislation in Congress and also has close relationships with Harris and
Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., who have been seeking her endorsement, the
report said.
Tlaib, meanwhile, hasn’t ruled out a Sanders endorsement down the road, telling the Detroit Free Press
she will host the U.S. senator from Vermont in her district later this
month – just as she recently did recently with Warren. (Warren posted
video from that visit online Wednesday -- and Tlaib retweeted it.)
"I
am looking forward to bringing Senator Sanders to Michigan on Oct.
27 for a tour of our district that will highlight economic justice
issues and corporate tax giveaways, and (include) a roundtable with
housing justice advocates,” Tlaib said. “I need to know that anyone I
choose to endorse will fight for my residents, and I appreciate the
opportunity for them to have a dialogue with Sen. Sanders about these
critically important issues.”
“I need to know that
anyone I choose to endorse will fight for my residents, and I appreciate
the opportunity for them to have a dialogue with Sen. Sanders about
these critically important issues.” — U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich.
But
regardless of what Tlaib and Pressley ultimately decide to do, the
Sanders endorsement by Omar – and rumored endorsement by Ocasio-Cortez –
were blows to the Warren campaign, coming on the same night that the
senator fended off fierce attacks from fellow Democrats at the party’s
presidential debate in Ohio.
As Boston.com noted, Warren has courted Ocasio-Cortez, having lunch with her
in March, writing a blurb for Ocasio-Cortez’s entry in Time magazine’s
“Time 100” listing, and filming a video with Ocasio-Cortez in which the
pair reviewed the final episode of “Game of Thrones.”
South Bend, Ind. Mayor Pete Buttigieg attacked Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s Medicare-for-all plan at Tuesday night’s Democratic debate, saying that his Medicare-"for-All-Who-Want-It" plan is "just better."
He has criticized single-payer at the last few debates, claiming it would "obliterate private plans."
But in a resurfaced tweet from last year, Buttigieg professed support for it.
"I,
Pete Buttigieg, politician, do henceforth and forthwith declare, most
affirmatively and indubitably, unto the ages, that I do favor Medicare
for all, as I do favor any measure that would help get all Americans
covered," Buttigieg wrote in a February 2018 tweet, responding to
whether he supported it.
A
Buttigieg aide Wednesday said that he had not changed his position on
Medicare for all, explaining that he supports it as an end goal but he
wants to take a "glide path" to get there, The Hill reported.
“What
I'll say is that I've laid out a plan that now explains how we're going
to get there, that makes Medicare available to all and at the same time
doesn't do away with private plans," Buttigieg told a reporter
Wednesday who asked if his position had changed.
He added that he doesn’t think private plans need to be gotten rid of to make Medicare available to everyone, according to The Hill.
At the debate, Warren said Buttiegieg’s plan was really “Medicare-for-all-who-can-afford-it.”
Former
President Obama aide and "Pod Save America" host Jon Favreau tweeted
Wednesday that both Buttigieg and Kamala Harris have changed their
positions on Medicare-for-all.
"And there can be perfectly
legitimate reasons for that," he wrote. "The difference is, Harris
hasn’t been openly attacking her old position. Trickier to pull off!"
So you’ve committed a crime but received a pardon from the president of the United States.
That might no longer help you in New York state.
In what appeared to be an action aimed squarely at President Trump,
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed a bill into law Wednesday that lets
the state’s prosecutors bring charges against those who’ve received
presidential pardons for the crimes in question.
According
to Politico, the U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled that state
prosecutors can bring charges against people who have already faced
similar federal charges. But New York’s state law had included ways of
blocking the state-level trials.
Cuomo’s signature Wednesday helped erase those obstacles, the report said.
One
test of the new law could come if Trump attorney and former New York
City Mayor Rudy Giuliani eventually faces charges of lobbying violations
under the federal probe he is reportedly facing regarding business
dealing in Ukraine, Politico reported.
"This
critical new law closes a gaping loophole that could have allowed any
president to abuse the presidential pardon power by unfairly granting a
pardon to a family member or close associate and possibly allow that
individual to evade justice altogether,” New York state Attorney General
Tish James said in a statementWednesday. “No one is
above the law, and this commonsense measure will provide a reasonable
and necessary check on presidential power today and for all presidents
to come.”
In August, President Trump criticized The Washington Post
after the newspaper printed a story saying the president claimed he
would pardon aides if they broke the law in order to speed the process
for building a U.S.-Mexico border wall before the 2020 presidential
election.
“Another totally Fake story in the Amazon Washington
Post (lobbyist) which states that if my Aides broke the law to build the
Wall (which is going up rapidly), I would give them a Pardon,” Trump
wrote at the time. “This was made up by the Washington Post only in
order to demean and disparage - FAKE NEWS!”
Earlier this month Trump posthumously pardoned Zay Jeffries,
a World War II scientist who helped develop tank-piercing artillery
that helped defeat the Nazis. After the war, Jeffries was convicted of
business actions that violated Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
Other
recipients of Trump pardons have included Joe Arpaio, a former sheriff
in Arizona; Lewis “Scooter” Libby, a former chief of staff to former
Vice President Dick Cheney; Jack Johnson, a champion boxer; and Dinesh
D’Souza, a conservative author and filmmaker. Fox News' Danielle Wallace and Melissa Leon contributed to this story.
Rep. Elijah Cummings,
the powerful House Democrat who represented Baltimore for more than two
decades and was a vocal critic of President Trump, died early Thursday
after battling health problems, his office said in a statement
Cummings,
who was 68, died at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, his hometown.
As chair of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, he was one of the
most powerful Democrats in Washington, and played a key role in the
House Democrats' ongoing efforts to impeach Trump.
"This is a
terrible tragedy," Howard Dean, the former governor of Vermont,
tweeted. "Elijah is one of the most honest, thoughtful, decent people I
ever met in politics. His moral compass was unfailing throughout his
life in and out of politics. My deepest thanks to Elijah’s family for
lending him to our country for all these years."
Cummings has not returned to work after an undisclosed medical
procedure that he said would only keep him away for about a week.
In
the House, Cummings built a substantial power base. At the time of his
death, he was chairman of the influential House Oversight Committee and a
leading voice in the Congressional Black Caucus. He played a key role
in the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump.
Cummings
was born on Jan. 18, 1951. In grade school, a counselor told Cummings
he was too slow to learn and spoke poorly, and he would never fulfill
his dream of becoming a lawyer.
"I was devastated," Cummings told
The Associated Press in 1996, shortly before he won his seat in
Congress. "My whole life changed. I became very determined."
Cummings,
a sharecropper's son-- one of seven children-- led multiple
investigations of the president's governmental dealings, including
probes in 2019 relating to the president's family members serving in the
White House.
He clashed with Trump after the president criticized
his district as a "rodent-infested mess" where "no human being would
want to live."
Cummings replied that government officials must
stop making "hateful, incendiary comments" that only serve to divide and
distract the nation from its real problems, including mass shootings
and white supremacy.
"Those in the highest levels of the
government must stop invoking fear, using racist language and
encouraging reprehensible behavior," Cummings said in a speech at the
National Press Club.
A dozen Democratic presidential candidates
participated in a spirited debate Tuesday over health care, taxes, gun
control and impeachment. Takeaways from the three-hour forum in
Westerville, Ohio.
WARREN’S RISE ATTRACTS ATTACKS
Sen.
Elizabeth Warren found Tuesday that her rise in the polls may come with
a steep cost. She’s now a clear target for attacks, particularly from
more moderate challengers, and her many plans are now being subjected to
much sharper scrutiny.
Minnesota Sen. Amy
Klobuchar and South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg slammed her for
not acknowledging, as Bernie Sanders has, that middle-class taxes would
increase under the single-payer health plan both she and Sanders favor.
“At least Bernie’s being honest with this,” Klobuchar said.
“I
don’t think the American people are wrong when they say what they want
is a choice,” Buttigieg told Warren. His plan maintains private
insurance but would allow people to buy into Medicare.
Candidates
also pounced on Warren’s suggestion that only she and Sanders want to
take on billionaires while the rest of the field wants to protect them.
Former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke told Warren it didn’t seem like she
wanted to lift people up and she is “more focused on being punitive.”
And
they piled onto her signature proposal, a 2% wealth tax to raise the
trillions needed for many of her ambitious proposals. Technology
entrepreneur Andrew Yang noted that such a measure has failed in almost
every European country where it’s been tried.
THAT 70s SHOW
The
stage included three 70-something candidates who would be the oldest
people ever elected to a first term as president — including 78-year-old
Sanders, who had a heart attack earlier this month. Moderators asked
all three how they could do the job. None really addressed the question.
Sanders
invited the public to a major rally he’s planning in New York City next
week and vowed to take the fight to corporate elites.
Biden
promised to release his medical records before the Iowa caucuses next
year and said he was running because the country needs an elder
statesman in the White House after Trump.
Warren,
whose campaign has highlighted her hours-long sessions posing for
selfies with supporters, promised to “out-organize and outlast” any
other candidate — including Trump. Then she pivoted to her campaign
argument that Democrats need to put forth big ideas rather than return
to the past, a dig at Biden.
__
ONE VOICE ON IMPEACHMENT
The opening question was a batting practice fastball for the Democratic candidates: Should Trump be impeached?
They were in steadfast agreement. All 12 of them. Largely with variations on the word “corrupt” to describe the president.
Warren
was asked first if voters should decide whether Trump should stay in
office. She responded, “There are decisions that are bigger than
politics.”
Biden, who followed Sanders, offered a rare admission: “I agree with Bernie.”
The
only hint of dissonance came from Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who was
one of the last Democratic House members to back an impeachment
inquiry. She lamented that some Democrats had been calling for Trump’s
impeachment since right after the 2016 election, undermining the party’s
case against him.
__
KLOBUCHAR: MINNESOTA NOT-SO-NICE
Klobuchar has faded into the background in previous debates, but she stood out on the crowded stage.
She
also went on the attack. She chided entrepreneur Andrew Yang for
seeming to compare Russian interference in the 2016 election to U.S.
foreign policy. But her main barbs were reserved for Warren. “I
appreciate Elizabeth’s work but, again, the difference between a plan
and a pipe dream is something you can actually get done,” she said.
After
Warren seemed to suggest other candidates were protecting billionaires,
Klobuchar pounced. “No one on this stage wants to protect
billionaires,” Klobuchar said. “Even the billionaire doesn’t want to
protect billionaires.”
That was a reference
to investor Tom Steyer, who had agreed with Sanders’ condemnation of
billionaires and called for a wealth tax — despite the fact that his
wealth funded his last-minute campaign to clear the debate thresholds
and appear Tuesday night.
Klobuchar also forcefully condemned Trump’s abandonment of the Kurds in Syria.
__
BOOKER THE PEACEMAKER
New
Jersey Sen. Cory Booker has been trying to campaign on the power of
love and unity. It hasn’t vaulted him to the top of the polls, but it
drew perhaps the biggest cheers from the crowd Tuesday night.
As
candidates bickered over their tax plans, Booker shut it down. “We’ve
got one shot to make Donald Trump a one-term president and how we talk
about each other in this debate actually really matters,” he said.
“Tearing each other down because we have a different plan is
unacceptable.”
Later, as candidates tussled
over foreign policy and Syria, Booker again tried to bring the debate
back to morals. “This president is turning the moral leadership of this
country into a dumpster fire,” he said, before launching into a furious
condemnation of Trump’s foreign policy.
The
New Jersey senator’s inability to break out of the pack has puzzled
Democrats who long saw him as a top-tier presidential candidate.
Rising Democratic co-frontrunner Sen. Elizabeth Warren came under attack from all sides during Tuesday night's presidential debate, as former Vice President Joe Biden defiantly defended his son's business practices overseas and vehemently denied any wrongdoing.
All of the 12 Democrats onstage in Westerville, Ohio,
meanwhile, backed the ongoing impeachment inquiry against President
Trump. In a sign of apparent disunity and hesitation among Democrats,
though, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said only minutes before the debate began that there would be no vote on formally commencing the inquiry.
The
debate marked the first time the candidates met since Pelosi's news
conference last month at which she unilaterally declared the inquiry had
begun -- a move that the White House has said is legally insufficient.
The candidate lineup set a record for most politicians on a single
debate stage, topping the 11 Republican candidates who assembled in
2016. JOE BIDEN DEFENDS SON HUNTER'S UKRAINE WORK: 'MY SON DID NOTHING WRONG. I DID NOTHING WRONG'
"Sometimes
there are issues that are bigger than politics, and I think that's the
case with this impeachment inquiry," Warren, D-Mass., asserted at the
outset of the debate, when asked why Congress should bother with the
process given the impending election.
Biden has been at the top of
the crowded field for months, but has come under withering assault from
the White House concerning his son Hunter's lucrative overseas business
dealings.
The elder Biden faced something of a timid
confrontation over the issue during the debate, when CNN anchor and
debate moderator Anderson Cooper broached the topic by stating, without
evidence, that President Trump's accusations of misconduct by the Bidens
were "false."
But Cooper pressed Joe Biden on Hunter's admission in a televised interview earlier in the day that he made a mistake by obtaining a lucrative role on the board of a Ukraine
company, with no relevant expertise, while his father was vice
president and handled Ukraine policy. (“I know I did nothing wrong at
all. Was it poor judgment to be in the middle of something that is a
swamp in many ways? Yeah,” the younger Biden said Tuesday morning.)
Joe
Biden recently pledged that no members of his family would engage in
foreign deals if he were to be elected president -- a tacit admission,
Republicans said, of previous poor judgment or even wrongdoing.
"Look,
my son's statement speaks for itself," Biden said. “My son did nothing
wrong. I did nothing wrong. I carried out the policy of the United
States government which was to root out corruption in Ukraine, and
that’s what we should be focusing on.”
Biden insisted he never
discussed Ukraine matters with Hunter, although Hunter separately told
The New Yorker magazine that the dealings had come up in one instance.
He concluded: "The fact of the matter is, this is about Trump's corruption. That's what we should be focused on."
Devon Archer, far left, with former Vice President Joe Biden and
his son Hunter, far right, in 2014. Archer served on the board of the
Ukrainian company Burisma Holdings with Hunter, and began serving before
this picture was taken. Joe Biden has denied ever speaking to his son
about his overseas business dealings.
Later on, as the debate heated up, Biden remarked:
“These debates are kinda crazy." In a head-turning moment, he also
stumbled over his words, saying wealthy individuals might be found
"clipping coupons in the stock market."
Separately, asked about
Trump's policy in Syria, Biden appeared to give an extended answer in
which he meant to talk about Turkish President Recep ErdoÄŸan -- but kept
referencing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad instead.
Asked
about his health toward the end of the debate, Biden vowed to release
his medical records before the Iowa caucuses are held, and said his age
(76) gives him "wisdom."
Hunter Biden obtained other
high-paying board positions domestically and internationally, with no
relevant expertise, while his father was a senator and vice president.
For example, Hunter became an executive at the financial services
company MBNA just two years after leaving law school. MBNA sources told Fox News
this week that the company was trying to curry favor with Joe Biden,
who was shepherding a bill favored by MBNA to passage in the Senate.
Meanwhile,
Warren has climbed to co-front runner status but faces new questions
about her dubious claims to Native American ancestry.
She was
under attack from all sides at the debate for refusing to answer whether
her "Medicare for All" plan would raise taxes for the middle
class. Warren once again dodged the issue, insisting only that "costs
will go down" for the middle class.
"I appreciate Elizabeth's
work, but again, the difference between a plan and a pipe dream is
something you can actually get done," Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., said
to Warren. "At least Bernie’s being honest here. ... I’m sorry,
Elizabeth.”
“These debates are kinda crazy." — Joe Biden
South
Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg also lambasted Warren on health care:
“Your signature is to have a plan for everything, except this," he said.
Buttigieg
specifically knocked Warren for the nonanswer, saying her failure to
offer a direct answer is "why people are so frustrated with politicians"
and arguing that "Medicare-for-All" would "unnecessarily divide this
country."
"We heard it tonight," Buttigieg said. "A yes-or-no
question that didn't get a yes-or-no answer." He said he wanted a plan
that could be summed up as "Medicare-for-All" if you choose it, not
whether you want it or not.
Former U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke also
pressed Warren on the tax issue, to no avail. (Later on, O'Rourke had no
answer when Cooper asked how he could confiscate Americans'
firearms, given that the government has no way of knowing where the vast
majority of AR-15s are located. He said only that he believes Americans
"will do the right thing" voluntarily.)
Sen. Bernie Sanders, who
wrote the "Medicare-for-All" legislation that Warren has embraced, said
it was "appropriate to acknowledge taxes will go up."
Sanders, who Fox News has confirmed will soon be endorsed by New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
also spoke about his recent heart attack: “But let me take this moment,
if I might, to thank so many people from all over this country,
including many of my colleagues up here, for their love, for their
prayers, for their well wishes. ... And I just want to thank you from
the bottom of my heart, and I'm so happy to be back here with you this
evening.”
Also during the debate, Democrats also piled onto Warren
for her signature proposal, a 2 percent wealth tax to raise the
trillions needed for many of her ambitious proposals. Technology
entrepreneur Andrew Yang noted that such a measure has failed in almost
every European country where it's been tried.
The event, hosted by
CNN and The New York Times, was on the campus of Otterbein University,
just outside Columbus in Ohio, a state that has long helped decide
presidential elections but has drifted away from Democrats in recent
years.
Democratic presidential candidate businessman Tom Steyer, left,
and Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., right, listen as Sen. Cory Booker,
D-N.J., speaks during a Democratic presidential primary debate hosted by
CNN/New York Times at Otterbein University, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2019, in
Westerville, Ohio. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)
Many of the candidates were struggling just to get
noticed — trying to make up ground in a race that kicks off officially
in just over three months with the Iowa caucuses on Feb. 3. Buttigieg
and Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., are trying to crack the top tier.
In
one possible indicator the debate was a lengthy one, Harris briefly
mentioned her proposal to have Twitter take Trump's account down, and
demanded that Warren explain why she felt that approach was unwise.
Warren, who last week laughed openly when informed by a reporter of
Harris' idea, responded that she wants Trump out of the White House, not
just banned from Twitter.
Progressives and right-wing
commentators alike were aghast at Harris' decision to again bring up the
unrealistic and unpopular idea of somehow suspending Trump from
Twitter.
"I cannot believe @KamalaHarris
is pushing this suspend Donald Trump's twitter account bullshit at a
presidential debate," former Obama administration official and Pod Save
America cohost Tommy Vietor wrote on Twitter. "It's so small ball. She
is bigger and better than this."
Fellow Obama administration alumnus and podcast host Ben Rhodes added: "Seems like there are bigger issues in the world."
Also
debating were Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, former Obama housing
chief Julián Castro and Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii. Making his debate
debut — and likely angling for a splash — was billionaire activist Tom
Steyer.
Gabbard hit The New York Times and CNN for waging what she
called a propaganda campaign against her, while also promoting endless
"regime-change wars."
"The New York Times and CNN have smeared
veterans like myself for calling for an end to this regime change war,"
Gabbard said. "Just two days ago, The New York Times put out an article saying I'm a Russian asset and an Assad apologist, and all these different smears. This morning, a CNN commentator said on national television that I'm an asset of Russia. Completely despicable."
Gabbard
has criticized Trump for how he's conducted the withdrawal in Syria,
but said Tuesday that while Trump has "the blood of the Kurds on his
hands. ... So do many of the politicians in both parties who supported
this regime change war."
Gabbard, who was one of the last
Democratic House members to back an impeachment inquiry, additionally
lamented that some Democrats had been calling for Trump's impeachment
since right after the 2016 election, undermining the party's case
against him.
The debate's foreign policy discussion concluded
without any mention by the moderators of the ongoing push by China to
censor American companies, including the NBA and Blizzard Entertainment,
from making or tolerating pro-Hong Kong statements. Buttigieg briefly
mentioned that the Hong Kong protests were not receiving support from
the White House.
Yang's plan for a universal basic income spurred a
discussion onstage concerning whether a federal jobs guarantee is a
better plan -- something of a remarkable achievement for Yang, who has
struggled in the polls while advancing his own unique agenda.
On
abortion, the Democrats agreed they would support a federal law
"codifying" the Supreme Court's holding in Roe v. Wade, which found a
constitutional right to abortion, as a kind of defense in case the
Supreme Court overturned Roe. At the same time, Biden emphasized he
would not support "court packing," or passing a federal law to expand
the size of the Supreme Court to load it with Democratic justices.
Buttigieg
then said he did not support court packing, but wanted "reforms" to
make the court less significant -- including possibly a "fifteen member
court, where five of the members can only be appointed by unanimous
agreement of the other ten." A similar idea was being debated in the
Yale Law Journal, Buttigieg said, in a shout-out to the left-wing
student publication.
Gabbard said that Democrats were right decades ago when they said abortion should be "safe, legal, and rare" -- highlighting a shift to the left among Democrats.
The
2020 field, which once had swelled to two dozen, has been shrinking as
the Democratic Party's rules have mandated that candidates meet higher
donor and fundraising thresholds to debate.
Just 10 White House contenders qualified for September's debate, but Gabbard and Steyer made Tuesday's lineup a record.
Earlier contests featuring 20 candidates were divided between two nights.
Author
Marianne Williamson, who was not physically present at the debate on
Tuesday because she failed to meet polling thresholds, remarked on
Twitter as it unfolded: "No, they're not the only Democratic candidates
for President of the United States." Fox News' Paul Steinhauser and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
At least three members of the “Squad” of far-left freshman members of Congress will reportedly endorse Sen. Bernie Sanders for president.
Fox News has learned that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
D-N.Y., will appear with Sanders on Saturday in Queens, N.Y., at a
“Bernie’s Back” rally designed to generate excitement for the senator’s
campaign following his recent heart procedure. Rep. Ihan Omar, D-Minn.,
will also endorse the candidate, Fox News confirmed.
In addition, CNN reported that Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., will endorse Sanders as well. It was not immediately clear if Omar and Tlaib will appear at the same Sanders event.
"Bernie
is leading a working class movement to defeat Donald Trump that
transcends generation, ethnicity and geography," Omar was quoted as
saying in a statement posted on Twitter by the Sanders campaign -- and
that Omar retweeted on her own Twitter page.
"I believe Bernie Sanders is the best candidate to take on Donald Trump in 2020," Omar added.
"I believe Bernie Sanders is the best candidate to take on Donald Trump in 2020."
— U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.
The endorsements would be a significant blow to the campaign of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who like Sanders has been representing the party’s progressive wing.
Word of the endorsements also followed Tuesday night’s Democratic debate in Ohio, where Warren was under attack from multiple candidates after rising in the polls in recent weeks.
Winning
the OK of the “Squad” members was also viewed as crucial in attracting
young voters, as the top three Democrats in the polls are all senior
citizens – Sanders is 78, former Vice President Joe Biden is 76 and
Warren is 70.
There was no indication that the fourth member of
the Squad, Rep. Ayannna Pressley, D-Mass., was ready to make an
endorsement – either of Sanders or any other candidate. Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser and Andrew Craft contributed to this report.
Rep. Dan Crenshaw, the freshman Republican congressman from Texas, and a former Navy SEAL who was wounded in combat, defended himself Tuesday after a video showed an Illinois Democrat calling him “a racist.”
The
Democrat, Rep. Sean Casten, an Irish-born lawmaker whose district
covers suburbs west of Chicago, told an audience earlier this month that
Crenshaw was “a racist” because the Texan proposed an amendment in
Congress to prevent illegal immigrants from voting.
“The
last amendment on the floor that day … came from Dan Crenshaw, the new
Republican, the Navy SEAL with the eyepatch," Casten said, according to
the Washington Free Beacon. “He came up with an amendment to say, ‘We're
going to add a rider on this bill that says that illegals can't vote.'
And I sat there and I said, ‘You know what? You're not allowed to vote
if you're not a citizen.’ … Why are you doing that? The reason you're
doing that is because you are a racist. Because you are trying to appeal
to people who will vote for you if you stand up and oppose brown
people."
Crenshaw responded Tuesday on Twitter, after video from Casten’s Oct. 5 remarks surfaced.
“When
you can’t articulate a coherent argument, you resort to calling your
political opponents racist,” Crenshaw wrote. “Can’t say I’m surprised.
Just another day in Washington with the Democrat Party.”
Later, a Crenshaw spokeswoman added, in a statement to the Free Beacon:
“If Rep. Casten is so deeply offended that our laws prohibit
non-citizens from voting in federal elections, then he should be honest
with his constituents and let them know how little he values the power
of their vote.”
In a party-line vote, the Democrat-controlled House defeated Crenshaw’s proposal, the outlet reported.
Casten previously made headlines in June when he came out in support of the impeachment effort against President Trump.
The Democrat also drew criticism last year when he said Trump and 9/11 mastermind Usama bin Laden “have a tremendous amount in common.”
Crenshaw, during a September appearance on Fox & Friends, accused Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders of deliberately tweeting about veterans issues in order to “make people angry.”