Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky. arrives on Capitol Hill in
Washington, Thursday, Jan. 3, 2019, as the 116th Congress begins. (AP
Photo/Andrew Harnik)
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY.) accuses democrats of
hypocrisy over their stance border security as the partial government
shutdown continues.
Speaking from the Senate floor on Tuesday, McConnell gave examples of
numerous democrats saying they supported a physical barrier at the
southern border before President Trump took office.
He included Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and current Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.
McConnell referred to the Secure Fence Act of 2006, which was
supported by 90 democrat congress members, and included funding for
fencing along around 700 miles of the southern border.
The Act was backed by Obama, Clinton, and Schumer.
McConnell also rebuked Nancy Pelosi’s recent comments that walls are “immoral.”
He claimed walls and barriers are not immoral and questioned if
democrats are only opposing a barrier now because they want to oppose
the President.
The GOP leader indicated democrats are willing to go against the
President on any issue, for any reason, and went on to say the Senate
will only vote on funding legislation that can pass and the President
says he’ll sign.
Two members of Congress -- one a Republican, the other a Democrat --
who survived gunshot wounds in recent years shared an embrace on the
House floor Tuesday as they marked the eighth anniversary of the attack
against one of them.
The moment shared by U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise,
R-La., and former Rep. Gabby Giffords, D-Ariz., came shortly before
newly elected House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Mike Thompson,
D-Calif., unveiled a gun control bill that would require background checks for private gun sales.
Eight years ago, Giffords survived an assassination attempt outside a Tucson, Ariz. supermarket
where she was meeting with her constituents. Six other people were left
dead and Giffords suffered significant brain injuries. Since
recovering, Giffords has become one of the country’s most outspoken
gun-control advocates.
Scalise survived a shooting attempt in June 2017
when a gunman targeted him as Republicans practiced for a congressional
baseball game on a ballfield in Alexandria, Va. At the time he was the
third-ranking member of the House Republican leadership. He returned to
Congress in September of that year and said he was a “living example
that miracles really do happen.”
Giffords arrived in Washington to
join Pelosi and Thompson for the unveiling of the new gun control bill,
which would expand background checks for sales and transfers of
firearms.
Giffords,
who co-founded a gun safety group with her husband, former astronaut
Mark Kelly, said in a statement Friday she was thrilled that her former
House colleagues were responding to a gun-violence epidemic that killed
nearly 40,000 people in 2017.
The bill calling for expanded
background checks "marks a critical first step toward strengthening
America's gun laws and making our country a safer place to live, work,
study, worship and play," Giffords said. "I stand ready to do everything
in my power to get this legislation across the finish line."
But
National Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action spokeswoman
Jennifer Baker dismissed the Democrats' proposal, commenting that a
federal background check did not prevent Giffords' shooting.
"[S]o-called universal background checks will never be universal because criminals do not comply with the law," she said.
Rep.
Richard Hudson, R-N.C., who is one of the NRA's biggest supporters,
said the legislation "does nothing to prevent gun violence, yet
threatens the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens."
Despite
bipartisan support for gun control, the bill is unlikely to become law
given the GOP's control of the Senate and President Trump's promise to
"protect the Second Amendment."
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, left, and D-N.Y., Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., center, walk down the House steps.
(AP)
Newly-elected Democratic
House Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortex, D-N.Y., who despite tweeting last
month that members of Congress should ‘have some integrity’
and not take a paycheck during the government shutdown, has remained
silent on whether she’ll take a salary during the partial government
shutdown, despite 13 of her fellow congress members vowing that they
won’t.
Ocasio-Cortez’s office on Thursday reportedly refused to respond to The Daily Mail’s inquiry about whether she’ll be taking a salary, while approximately 800,000 federal workers are furloughed or working without pay.
It was not the first time she appeared to evade or ignore the question. When asked last week by The New York Post whether she would take a salary during the government shutdown, the 29-year-old representative said: “I’ve gotta run.” CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Congressional
staff and members of Congress are being paid through the shutdown
because the legislative branch was funded last year through fiscal year
2019. Ocasio-Cortez’s salary kicked in last Thursday after she was sworn
in as a Democratic lawmaker representing New York.
The
departments of justice, interior, transportation and homeland security
were either sent home or are working without pay. The first pay period
for those workers is Jan. 11.
Other newly-elected lawmakers – both
democratic and republican – have said they will either refuse or donate
their paycheck during the shutdown, The Washington Post reported.
President
Trump used his first-ever prime time address from the Oval Office on
Tuesday night to make his case for funding a southern border wall -- as
well as to emphasize the human cost of what he called the "growing
humanitarian and security crisis" of surging illegal immigration.
The
speech, which was followed moments later by a rebuttal from Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, drew
seemingly deep lines in the sand as Republicans and Democrats plan to
meet Wednesday to continue negotiations to end the ongoing partial
federal government shutdown over border wall funding, now in its third
week. Trump has said the shutdown could last for "years" if no deal is reached.
Noting
that "more Americans will die from drugs this year than were killed in
the entire Vietnam War," the president, looking directly into the
camera, called for closing the pipeline that permits "vast quantities of
illegal drugs – including meth, heroin, cocaine and fentanyl" from
crossing the border.
"Every week, 300 of our citizens are killed
by heroin alone – 90 percent of which floods across from our southern
border," Trump, who signed a bipartisan opioid bill into law late last year, remarked at the beginning of his address.
He
continued: "This is a humanitarian crisis – a crisis of the heart and a
crisis of the soul. Last month, 20,000 migrant children were illegally
brought into the United States – a dramatic increase. These children are
used as human pawns by vicious coyotes and ruthless gangs. One in three
women are sexually assaulted on the dangerous trek up through
Mexico. Women and children are the biggest victims by far of our broken
system."
The president then paid tribute to several Americans killed by suspected illegal immigrants, including California police Cpl. Ronil Singh,
who was murdered the day after Christmas -- allegedly by an illegal
immigrant suspected of driving drunk. The suspect had multiple prior
arrests, and Republicans have charged that California's sanctuary laws
-- which prevent local law enforcement from cooperating with federal
immigration authorities -- led to Singh's murder.
"America’s
heart broke the day after Christmas when a young police officer in
California was savagely murdered in cold-blood by an illegal alien who
just came across the border," Trump said. "The life of an American hero
was stolen by someone who had no right to be in our country." TUCKER CARLSON: WHY DO SOME CONTINUE TO DENY ISSUES AT THE BORDER?
Trump
added: "In California, an Air Force Veteran was raped, murdered and
beaten to death with a hammer by an illegal alien with a long criminal
history. In Georgia, an illegal alien was recently charged with murder
for killing, beheading, and dismembering his neighbor. In Maryland,
MS-13 gang members who arrived in the United States as unaccompanied
minors were arrested and charged last year after viciously stabbing and
beating a 16-year-old girl.
"Wealthy politicians
... don’t build walls because they hate the people on the outside, but
because they love the people on the inside." — President Trump
"Over
the last several years, I’ve met with dozens of families whose loved
ones were stolen by illegal immigration," Trump continued. "I’ve held
the hands of the weeping mothers and embraced the grief-stricken
fathers. So sad. So terrible. I will never forget the pain in their
eyes, the tremble in their voices, or the sadness gripping their souls.
How much more American blood must be shed before Congress does its job?"
Apparently
responding to Pelosi's widely reported comment that a wall would be
immoral, Trump remarked: "Some have suggested a barrier is immoral.
Then why do wealthy politicians build walls, fences and gates around
their homes? They don’t build walls because they hate the people on the
outside, but because they love the people on the inside."
In a
joint, nationally televised response broadcast minutes later, Pelosi,
D-Calif., and Schumer, D-N.Y., condemned Trump's rhetoric and what they
called his "obsession" with building a border wall.
"Much of what
we have heard from President Trump throughout this senseless shutdown
has been full of misinformation and even malice," Pelosi, standing next
to Schumer, charged. "The President has chosen fear. We want to start
with the facts."
"The fact is: On the very first day of this
Congress, House Democrats passed Senate Republican legislation to
re-open government and fund smart, effective border security solutions,"
Pelosi said, referring to bills that did not include funding for
Trump's border wall.
"But, the president is rejecting these
bipartisan bills which would re-open government – over his obsession
with forcing American taxpayers to waste billions of dollars on an
expensive and ineffective wall – a wall he always promised Mexico would
pay for," Pelosi continued.
Schumer added afterward: "There is an
obvious solution: separate the shutdown from the arguments over border
security. There is bipartisan legislation – supported by Democrats and
Republicans – to re-open government while allowing debate over border
security to continue.
"The
symbol of America should be the Statue of Liberty, not a thirty-foot
wall," Schumer concluded. "So, our suggestion is a simple one, Mr.
President: Re-open the government and we can work to resolve our
differences over border security. But end this shutdown now."
On social media, the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) called out Schumer and Pelosi's previously strong support for border wall funding, and appeared to join in with other Twitter users mocking the two senators' demeanor during their response address.
Conservative commentator Ben Shaprio compared Pelosi and Schumer's look to that of the nefarious fictional villains from the James Bond spy franchise, before reposting another Twitter user's image depicting Schumer as a used car salesman. Others likened Pelosi to the aristocratic character Lucille Bluth in the television comedy series "Arrested Development."
Vermont
Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders, widely considered a potential 2020
presidential contender, delivered his own rebuttal that asserted climate
change and health care are more urgent crises than illegal immigration.
Sanders listed a variety of people who will potentially suffer if the
shutdown continues.
"Security at our nation’s airports could be
threatened if TSA employees and air traffic controllers are not getting
paid," Sanders said. "You want a national emergency? 30 million
Americans have no health insurance and many more are under-insured."
Negotiations
are slated to continue throughout the week to resolve the
shutdown, which has furloughed 380,000 federal workers and forced an
additional 420,000 to work without pay. On Wednesday, Fox News learned,
Trump will head to Capitol Hill for a policy lunch with Senate
Republicans. Congressional leaders from both parties have been invited
to the White House for a 3 p.m. ET sit-down afterward.
The
president, during his address Tuesday, vowed that the wall "would very
quickly pay for itself" in part because the cost of "illegal drugs
exceeds $500 billion dollars a year – vastly more than the $5.7 billion
dollars we have requested from Congress." Trump added that "the wall
will also be paid for, indirectly, by the great new trade deal we have
made with Mexico."
Migrants running as U.S. Border Protection officers threw tear gas
to the Mexican side of the border fence on Jan. 1, 2019. (AP
Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)
On Thursday, Trump plans a personal visit to the
Mexican border, where his administration said an illegal immigration
"crisis" has been worsening by the day.
Reacting to Trump's
speech, Senate Republican leaders -- who have said they will not pass
Democrats' spending bills without border wall funding -- reaffirmed that
they've stood by the White House's position.
“Tonight, President
Trump reaffirmed his commitment to addressing the humanitarian and
security crisis at our nation’s southern border," Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said in a statement. "His proposal to increase
security through physical barriers suits the reality on the ground. It’s
what career Border Patrol experts support and are asking for. And it
simply builds on earlier legislation that Senate Democrats like
then-Senator Obama, then-Senator Clinton, and Senator Schumer previously
supported with enthusiasm."
McConnell
continued: “The past eighteen days have shown that Democrats’ refusal
to negotiate is not due to any principled objection, but simply due to
partisan spite for the president. For the men and women of the Border
Patrol, for the safety of American families, and for all Americans who
deserve a fully operational federal government, I sincerely hope my
Democratic colleagues will come to the table and help deliver a
solution.”
Some legal and political analysts were less
enthusiastic. “As expected, [Trump's address] was laden with emotional
appeals, with the president presenting a parade of horribles," John
Cerone, Professor of International Law at The Fletcher School, told Fox
News. He added that a wall would have only "limited efficacy" compared
to other options.
"Ultimately, the only way to stop irregular
migration is to give people some hope of regular migration," Cerone
said. "Expanding pathways for regular migration, in particular by
creating new employment visas and raising the limits on existing
categories, is a win-win situation."
The number of illegal border
crossings is down from 1.6 million in 2000 to less than 400,000 last
year. But, the number of families coming over the border has risen
sharply, putting a strain on health care and immigration services that
came into sharp focus with the deaths of two migrant children in
December.
Administration figures have shown that 161,000 family
units crossed the border in fiscal 2018, a 50 percent increase from the
year before. Homeland Security officials also have said 60,000
unaccompanied children crossed the border last year, a 25 percent
increase.
Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, left, Vice President
Mike Pence, White House legislative affairs aide Ja'Ron Smith, followed
by White House Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, and others, after a
meeting with staff members of House and Senate leadership last Saturday
in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
After a sit-down with Democrats over the weekend, the
White House issued a series of budget demands, including a new request
for $800,000 for humanitarian needs. But, mostly, Trump still wants his
wall, which Democrats have described as immoral as well as no solution
to illegal immigration.
In a pre-emptive move, the White House
said Monday that tax refunds would be paid despite the shutdown. That
shutdown exemption would break from past practice and could be
challenged.
Emphasizing that he was not abandoning his security
argument, Trump said in a fundraising email Tuesday: "I want to make one
thing clear to Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi: Your safety is not a
political game or a negotiation tactic!"
Pelosi,
for her part, has also sparred openly with the White House. She
reportedly engaged in a tense confrontation with Nielsen on Wednesday in
the Situation Room, interrupting Nielsen’s presentation on border
security and illegal immigration, telling her, “I reject your facts.”
In
her brief response address on Tuesday night, Pelosi used the word
"facts" six times, in an effort to contrast with what she called Trump's
rhetoric of "fear."
Democratic leaders on Monday night called for equal airtime in response to President Donald Trump's primetime address to the nation on southern border security scheduled for Tuesday evening.
Speaker
of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer, D-N.Y., argued that since Trump's speech will be broadcast, the
other side of the aisle should have their fair share of broadcast time,
too.
“Now
that the television networks have decided to air the President’s
address, which if his past statements are any indication will be full of
malice and misinformation, Democrats must immediately be given equal
airtime," they said in a statement.
Trump said he'll be talking at 9 p.m. ET about the U.S.-Mexico border — the fight over which sparked the partial government shutdown. The address will be carried live by ABC, CBS, CNN, Fox Broadcasting, Fox News Channel, Fox Business Network, MSNBC and NBC.
Pelosi
and Schumer said that Democrats "and an increasing number of
Republicans in Congress" have urged Trump and Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to "re-open the government while Congress
debates the President’s expensive and ineffective wall."
The government is on day 16 of the partial shutdown — the second-longest in history slated to become the longest this weekend.
Trump
told congressional Democratic leaders during a meeting on Friday that
he was willing to keep the government shutdown for as long as necessary —
possibly months or even years — in order to get the border funding he
wants.
After a weekend filled with meetings about the shutdown,
the president moved to call for a steel wall, rather than a concrete
barrier, at the southern border. Trump framed the pitch for a steel wall
as a concession to Democrats to move negotiations along, although they
do not appear moved by the president's message.
"President
Trump keeps rejecting the bipartisan House-passed bills, which have
already received strong bipartisan support in the Senate, to re-open the
government," Pelosi and Schumer's statement read. "Instead, he is still
demanding that American taxpayers pay at least $5.7 billion for his
wall, which can’t pass either chamber of Congress and of course Mexico
is not paying for."
Shortly after he took office on Monday, California's Democratic Gov.
Gavin Newsom unearthed an unprecedented new health care agenda for his
state, aimed at offering dramatically more benefits to illegal
immigrants and protecting the embattled Affordable Care Act, which a
federal judge recently struck down as unconstitutional.
The
sweeping proposal appeared destined to push California -- already one
of the nation's most liberal states -- even further to the left, as
progressive Democrats there won a veto-proof supermajority in the state
legislature in November and control all statewide offices.
"People's
lives, freedom, security, the water we drink, the air we breathe — they
all hang in the balance," Newsom, 51, told supporters Monday in a tent
outside the state Capitol building, as he discussed his plans to address
issues from homelessness to criminal justice and the environment. "The
country is watching us, the world is watching us. The future depends on
us, and we will seize this moment."
Newsom unveiled his new
health-care plan hours after a protester interrupted his swearing-in
ceremony to protest the murder of police Cpl. Ronil Singh shortly after
Christmas Day. The suspect in Singh's killing is an illegal immigrant with
several prior arrests, and Republicans have charged that so-called
"sanctuary state" policies, like the ones Newsom has championed,
contributed to the murder by prohibiting state police from cooperating
with federal immigration officials.
California Governor Gavin Newsom taking the oath of office from
state Supreme Court Chief Justice Tani Gorre Cantil-Sakauye during his
inauguration Monday in Sacramento, Calif. Looking on: Newsom's wife,
Jennifer Siebel Newsom and their sons, Dutch, second from right, and
Hunter, right. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
As one of his first orders of business, Newsom -- who
also on Monday requested that the Trump administration cooperate in the
state's efforts to convert to a single-payer system, even as he bashed
the White House as corrupt and immoral -- declared his intent to
reinstate the ObamaCare individual mandate at the state level. ANALYSIS: AS CALIFORNIA'S PROGRESSIVE POLICIES GET CRAZIER, WHAT'S THE SILVER LINING FOR THE GOP?
The
mandate forces individuals to purchase health care coverage or pay a
fee that the Supreme Court described in 2012 as a "tax," rather than a
"penalty" that would have run afoul of Congress' authority under the
Commerce Clause of the Constitution. Last month, though, a federal judge
in Texas ruled the
individual mandate no longer was a constitutional exercise of Congress'
taxing power because Republicans had passed legislation eliminating the
tax entirely -- a move, the judge said, that rendered the entire
health-care law unworkable.
As that ruling works its way to what
analysts say will be an inevitable Supreme Court showdown, Newsom said
he would reimpose it in order to subsidize state health care.
Medi-Cal,
the state's health insurance program, now will let illegal immigrants
remain on the rolls until they are 26, according to Newsom's new agenda.
The previous age cutoff was 19, as The Sacramento Bee reported.
Additionally,
Newsom announced he would sign an executive order dramatically
expanding the state's Department of Health Care Services authority
to negotiate drug prices, in the hopes of lowering prescription drug
costs.
In his inaugural remarks, Newsom hinted that he intended to
abandon the relative fiscal restraint that marked the most recent
tenure of his predecessor, Jerry Brown, from 2011 to 2019. Brown
sometimes rebuked progressive efforts to spend big on various social
programs.
"For eight years, California has built a foundation of
rock," Newsom said. "Our job now is not to rest on that foundation. It
is to build our house upon it."
Newsom added that California will
not have "one house for the rich and one for the poor, or one for the
native-born and one for the rest."
"The country is watching us, the world is watching us." — California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom
In a statement, the California Immigrant Policy Center backed Newsom's agenda.
“Making
sure healthcare is affordable and accessible for every Californian,
including undocumented community members whom the federal government has
unjustly shut out of care, is essential to reaching that vision for our
future,” the organization said. “Today’s announcement is an historic
step on the road toward health justice for all.”
The
Sacramento Bee reported on several of Newsom's recent hires, which
seemingly signaled he's serious about his push to bring universal health
care to California. Chief of Staff Ann O’Leary worked in former
President Bill Clinton's administration on the Children’s Health
Insurance Program (CHIP), which offers affordable health care to
children in families who exceed the financial threshold to qualify for
Medicaid, but who are too poor to buy private insurance.
And,
Cabinet Secretary Ana Matosantos, who worked in the administrations of
Brown and former GOP Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, has worked extensively
to implement ObamaCare in California and also worked with the
legislature to expand health-care coverage for low-income Californians.
Kellyanne Conway, the senior counselor to President Trump, told Fox
News on Monday that lawyers inside the White House are researching the
legal implications of declaring a national emergency to build the border
wall, and placed the blame squarely on Congress and courts for the
crisis at the Southern Border.
In a wide-ranging interview on "The
Ingraham Angle," Conway said the president is "considering" using a
national emergency declaration to circumvent Congress and the budget
stalemate in Washington. Trump wants $5.6 billion to fund the wall.
Declaring a national emergency would
draw legal challenges, and Trump — who told lawmakers he would be
willing to keep the government closed for months or even years — has
said he would like to continue negotiations for now.
"There are
probably some people who want him (Trump) to declare it (the emergency)
so that Congress, again, can fail to do its job," she said. "The
Congress and the courts have failed to do their jobs. They’ve given us
this crisis."
Conway defended the use of the word "crisis" to
describe the situation at the border, and talked about illegal drugs
that enter the U.S. from Mexico.
The talks over ending the
shutdown have been at an impasse over Trump’s demand for the wall. He
has offered to build the barrier with steel rather than concrete,
billing that as a concession to Democrats’ objections. They "don't like
concrete, so we'll give them steel," he said.
But Democrats have
made clear that they object to the wall itself, not how it’s
constructed. They see it as immoral and ineffective and prefer other
types of border security funded at already agreed-upon levels. Trump announced that he
will address the nation on Tuesday night before traveling later in the
week to the U.S.-Mexico border, as he seeks to highlight border security
and presses Democrats for wall funding amid the protracted standoff
that triggered a partial government shutdown now stretching into its
17th day.
"I am pleased to inform you that I will Address the
Nation on the Humanitarian and National Security crisis on our Southern
Border. Tuesday night at 9:00 P.M. Eastern," Trump tweeted on Monday.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer called on the networks to give Democrats a chance to respond.
“Now
that the television networks have decided to air the President’s
address, which if his past statements are any indication will be full of
malice and misinformation, Democrats must immediately be given equal
airtime,” they wrote in a joint statement released Monday night.
Less than a week after issuing
a profanity-infused call to impeach President Trump on her first day in
office, Michigan Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib is under fire from
Republican politicians and commentators for openly posting what they
call an anti-Semitic dog whistle on Twitter.
Top Republicans in
the Senate are also alleging that Democratic leaders are hoping to hide
the fact that Tlaib is just one of many new Democratic politicians in
Congress who harbor deeply anti-Israel views.
Tlaib, responding to
a post by Vermont Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders on Monday, suggested
that Senate Republicans were more loyal to Israel than the U.S., amid a
report that GOP leaders were planning to introduce a bill that would
punish companies that participate in the so-called "Boycott, Divestment,
and Sanctions" (BDS) global movement against Israel. BDS proponents
seek to pressure Israel through economic and other means -- often, until
Israel ceases to exist in its current form.
"They forgot what
country they represent," Tlaib, a Palestinian-American who made history
last week by becoming one of the first two Muslim women to ever serve in
Congress, wrote.
"This is the U.S. where boycotting is a right
& part of our historical fight for freedom & equality. Maybe a
refresher on our U.S. Constitution is in order, then get back to opening
up our government instead of taking our rights away," she added.
Florida
Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, one of the Republican senators to
introduce the anti-BDS bill, immediately called Tlaib's post an
"anti-Semitic line" that perpetuates a longstanding "dual loyalty"
conspiracy that holds that Israel effectively controls Washington
politicians.
The accusation that Jewish politicians could be
vulnerable to having "dual loyalties" has been made for centuries in
various contexts, and has been seen widely as a religious-based attack
intent on undermining their leadership.
The posts by Sanders and
Tlaib specifically criticized Senate Republicans for planning to
introduce the "Strengthening America’s Security in the Middle East Act
of 2019," a pro-Israel series of bills, instead of legislation to end
the ongoing partial federal government shutdown, which entered its 17th
day on Monday.
The package of legislation
includes provisions reauthorizing the United States-Jordan Defense
Cooperation Act of 2015, and providing for new sanctions against Bashar
al-Assad's regime in Syria.
One of the bills in the package, the
Rubio-Manchin Combating BDS Act of 2018, also would "increase
protections for state and local governments in the United States that
decide to divest from, prohibit investment in, and restrict contracting
with companies knowingly engaged in commerce-related or
investment-related BDS activity targeting Israel," according to Senate
Republicans.
Critics have charged that the bill amounts to an
unconstitutional First Amendment violation, because it involves an
impermissible government punishment of speech based on its content.
(Similar laws restricting boycotts of Israel have been ruled unconstitutional.)
Rubio
wrote that the real reason Democrats were criticizing Republicans for
introducing the pro-Israel bill is that "a significant # of Senate
Democrats now support #BDS & Dem leaders want to avoid a floor vote
that reveals that."
In addition to Sanders, who caucuses with Democrats, Maryland Democratic Sens. Ben Cardin
and Chris Van Hollen have called on Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., to resolve the shutdown before pressing on with a vote
on the pro-Israel bill. READ JUDGE JEANINE PIRRO'S MESSAGE TO TLAIB
"The
shutdown is not the reason Senate Democrats don’t want to move to
Middle East Security Bill," Rubio wrote, noting that "a huge argument"
had broken out last week over the issue.
Hours later, Tlaib
responded on Twitter: "Sen. Rubio, it's clear my earlier tweet was
critical of U.S. Senators like yourself, who are seeking to strip
Americans of their Constitutional right to free speech," she wrote. "The
American people need Trump and Republican Senators to focus on ending
the shutdown instead of inventing controversy to distract from your
inaction."
Nevertheless, there are visible signs that Tlaib's
approach may be becoming more mainstream among the Democratic Party's
progressive wing. The other Muslim woman to make history by winning her
election with Tlaib last year, Minnesota Democratic Rep. Illhan Omar, tweeted in 2012 that "Israel has hypnotized the world." Omar added: "May Allah awaken the peoople and help them see the evil doings of Israel."
Other
commentators similarly sounded the alarm about Tlaib's comments, and
noted that the media reaction was conspicuously minimal. (Trump, late
last year, was lambasted repeatedly in the media for allegedly issuing anti-Semitic "dog whistles" because of his criticisms of liberal billionaire George Soros.)
"Oddly,
many of those who hear dog whistles for a living aren't exactly perking
up at Tlaib accusing her critics of dual loyalty," Washington Free
Beacon editor Alex Griswold wrote on Twitter. "Nor, for that matter, did they have much to say about Omar's 'Israel has hypnotized the world' tweet."
Conservative commentator Ben Shapiro went further, alleging in an op-ed that "Democrats have soured on Israel and warmed to anti-Semitism."
"The
truth is that the Democratic Party has been flirting with, and in some
cases openly embracing, anti-Semitism for years," Shapiro wrote. "That’s
why top members of the Democratic Party continue to kowtow to open
anti-Semites like Linda Sarsour and Louis Farrakhan; it’s why the
Democrats booed Jerusalem in the 2012 Democratic National Committee
platform; it’s why the Obama administration routinely played public
relations arm for the Iranian government; it’s why no major Democrat
will go on record condemning Tlaib or Ilhan Omar." MEDIA SPREAD FALSE NARRATIVE THAT CONSERVATIVES WERE OFFENDED BY OCASIO-CORTEZ DANCING
Tlaib
was photographed last week wearing Palestinian robes with Sarsour, a
proponent of Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam. Farrakhan has
compared Jews to termites and praised Hitler.
Late last year, Tlaib publicly bucked Democratic Party leaders
by openly endorsing a one-state solution in the Middle East, and
calling for Israeli withdrawals and reduced military aid to Israel.
“It
has to be one state," Tlaib told In These Times magazine. "Separate but
equal does not work. I’m only 42 years old, but my teachers were of
that generation that marched with Martin Luther King. This whole idea of
a two-state solution, it doesn’t work.”
She added, referring to
Israel: "Americans should not be aiding any country that doesn’t support
human rights. I’ve been very clear. I will not support racist countries
that pick and choose who gets access to justice.”
Tlaib's
comments on Israel threatened to create new headaches for
Democrats already wrangling to control the party's fresh new progressive
wing. During a progressive MoveOn.org reception Thursday night,
Tlaib drew widespread condemnation by calling for Trump's impeachment using vulgar language as her son looked on.
"People
love you and you win," Tlaib shouted. "And when your son looks at you
and says, 'Momma, look you won. Bullies don't win.' And I said, 'Baby,
they don't, because we’re gonna go in there and we’re gonna impeach the
mother****er.'”
Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) poses with Speaker of the House Nancy
Pelosi (D-CA) for a ceremonial swearing-in picture on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., January 3, 2019. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts - RC1717918ED0
The next day, Tlaib stood by her comments but repeatedly attempted to avoid reporters asking her to clarify her remarks.
Speaking
at the White House, Trump called Tlaib's comments "disgraceful" and
said she had "dishonored herself and dishonored her family." But
Democrats offered a muted reaction, with some offering support for
Tlaib.
House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, speaking on CNN,
remarked on Friday: “I don't like really like that kind of language. But
more to the point, I disagree with what she said. It is too early to
talk about that intelligently. We have to follow the facts." The
Judiciary committee would oversee any impeachment proceedings against
Trump.
But New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
tweeted that criticism of Tlaib' remarks was "Republican hypocrisy at
its finest" given Trump's rhetoric, adding that "GOP lost entitlement to
policing women’s behavior a long time ago."
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, sitting on an MSNBC panel, largely agreed.
"I
probably have a generational reaction to it," Pelosi said. "But in any
event, I'm not in the censorship business. I don't like that language, I
wouldn't use that language. I don’t … establish any language standards
for my colleagues, but I don’t think it’s anything worse than what the
president has said."
She added, "Generationally, that would not be
language I would use, but nonetheless, I don’t think we should make a
big deal of it."
Tlaib's office did not return Fox News' request for comment.