The top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee said Friday that a recent comment by
freshman U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., who also serves on the panel,
represented a "vile anti-Semitic slur," according to reports. U.S.
Rep. Eliot Engle, D-N.Y., chairman of the House panel, then called on
Omar to apologize for her remark, which was made at an event in
Washington earlier this week. “I want to talk about the political
influence in this country that says it is OK for people to push for
allegiance to a foreign country,” Omar, who is Muslim, said, in an
apparent reference to Israel. "I want to ask why is it OK for me to talk
about the influence of the NRA, of fossil fuel industries, or big
pharma, and not talk about a powerful lobbying movement that is
influencing policy." Engle issued his rebuke of her comment late Friday, saying it they amounted to a "vile anti-Semitic slur." Conservative critics had panned the remark earlier. Added
Engel, who is Jewish: “I welcome debate in Congress based on the merits
of policy, but it’s unacceptable and deeply offensive to call into
question the loyalty of fellow American citizens because of their
political views, including support for the U.S.-Israel relationship. Her
comments were outrageous and deeply hurtful, and I ask that she retract
them, apologize, and commit to making her case on policy issues without
resorting to attacks that have no place in the Foreign Affairs
Committee or the House of Representatives.” Omar also said at the event that she feared her religious affiliation would get in the way of meaningful discussions. “What
I’m fearful of [is] that a lot of our Jewish colleagues, a lot of our
constituents, a lot of our allies, go to thinking that everything we say
about Israel to be anti-Semitic because we are Muslim,” she said.
“But it’s almost as if, every single time we say something regardless
of what it is we say … we get to be labeled something. And that ends the
discussion.” The
event, called "Progressive Issues Town Hall," was held at Busboys and
Poets, a D.C. restaurant. Omar was joined by three fellow Democrats in
Congress: Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, Pramila Jayapal of Washington state
and Mark Pocan of Wisconsin. It was moderated by the venue's owner Andy
Shallal, who echoed Omar's sentiment. “I know that’s a very
sensitive topic and I know it’s an issue that has been out there and
it’s used oftentimes to quiet people, to disparage them, to isolate
them,” Shallal said, according to the New York Times.
The billboard appeared opposite CNN's Hollywood headquarters (pictured).
(istock)
A group of
conservative street artists hijacked a billboard in Hollywood on Friday
morning and took aim at CNN, which so happened to be across the street.
Known as The Faction, their latest project slammed CNN and its president Jeff Zucker for its coverage of this week’s summit in Hanoi, Vietnam between President Donald Trump and North Korean Dictator Kim Jong Un.
The
billboard, which referred to CNN as “Communist News Network,” dawned
the phrase “Keep Korea divided” with an asterisk that read “because
OrangeManBad.” It also featured an image of Jeff Zucker, whose title was
“CEO, CNNPC,” a reference to the “non-playable character” meme which
has depicted liberals as robotic.
“When Trump speaks glowingly of Kim Jong Un it's a tactic,” an anonymous member of The Faction told The Hollywood Reporter.
“Zucker and his journo-activists know this, but are more than willing
to try to torpedo the summit — the future of the long-suffering North
and South Korean people be damned.”
The anti-CNN sign lasted
roughly seven hours before it was taken down and an advertisement for a
marijuana dispensary was properly restored.
The
second summit between Trump and Kim ended earlier than expected as the
two leaders couldn’t agree on the terms of an agreement.
CNN
dedicated virtually no coverage to the summit on Wednesday as they
kept focus on the fiery congressional testimony of former Trump attorney
Michael Cohen.
Chief Justice John Roberts'
recent votes aligning with the Supreme Court’s liberal wing have raised
questions about whether a widely anticipated "conservative revolution"
on the nation's highest court will materialize anytime soon. On
Wednesday, Roberts sided with a 5-3 majority decision to send a case
concerning a death row inmate back to a lower court. In February,
Roberts was the key vote in temporarily blocking a Louisiana law that would have placed restrictions on abortion clinics. And in December, Roberts voted to block President Trump from rejecting asylum to any immigrants who had crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally. The controversial nomination of Brett Kavanaugh
to succeed Justice Anthony Kennedy was widely expected to be the
beginning of a more rightward shift for the court. But Roberts’ recent
voting pattern seems to indicate otherwise. Nominated in 2005 by President George W. Bush,
Roberts, 64, quickly established himself as a solidly conservative
judge. From his nomination through the 2016-17 term, Roberts sided with
his liberal colleagues only four times – most notably in upholding the
Affordable Care Act in 2012. Still a proponent of protecting the
institutional integrity of the court, Roberts rebuked President Trump’s
description of a judge in November who ruled against Trump’s new migrant
asylum policy as an “Obama judge.” “We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges,” Roberts said after Trump's remark.
“What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their
level best to do equal right to those appearing before them." Roberts added: “That independent judiciary is something we should all be thankful for.” Erwin Chemerinsky, a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley, told Bloomberg
that Roberts’ recent voting record may indicate that he is taking his
role as the median justice “very seriously” and that the recent period
was “perhaps the beginning of his being the swing justice.” “But I would not come to that conclusion too quickly,” Chemerinsky added.
U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib,
D-Mich., is facing questions after campaign records revealed she paid
herself $17,500 as a salary after the midterm elections, in what
appeared to be a violation of campaign finance rules, a report said. Tlaib,
a firebrand freshman Democrat from Detroit, has been facing scrutiny
over her connections to radical anti-Israel activists and a profane call
to impeach President Trump. She caused uproar on Capitol Hill
earlier this week by insinuating that Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C. -- her
colleague on the House Oversight and Reform Committee -- had used Trump
family friend Lynne Patton, an African-American, as a racist “prop”
during former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen’s appearance before the panel.
(Later, Tlaib and Meadows were seen sharing an embrace on the House
floor, after apparently resolving their differences.) Yet the latest filings with
the Federal Election Commission (FEC) may land the radical
congresswoman into hot water with questions on whether her campaign
broke the rules after making salary payments to Tlaib after Election Day
last year. Tlaib’s campaign began paying her a salary of about
$4,000 every month since May 2018 up until the general election Nov. 6 –
a perfectly legal practice if the campaign chose to do so. But
according to the filings, as first spotted by the Washington Free Beacon,
Tlaib also paid herself $2,000 on Nov. 16 and a whopping $15,500 on
Dec. 1 – weeks after the election was over, in an apparent violation of
FEC statutes. The FEC rules state that a general election
candidate is allowed to dip into campaign coffers to give himself or
herself a salary only up to the election date. The candidate can no
longer draw a salary after the election date, or because of other
reasons that ended the campaign. “If the candidate loses the
primary, withdraws from the race, or otherwise ceases to be a candidate,
no salary payments may be paid beyond the date he or she is no longer a
candidate,” the rules state.
“If the candidate loses
the primary, withdraws from the race, or otherwise ceases to be a
candidate, no salary payments may be paid beyond the date he or she is
no longer a candidate.” — Federal Election Commission rules
'RADICAL' DEMS ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ, RHASIDA TLAIB EMBRACE THEIR REPUTATIONS, SLAM PRESIDENT TRUMP A Tlaib ally, U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., grabbed headlines last
year after saying that due to the rules that prohibit the use of
campaign funds to pay a salary after the election date, she would have
trouble finding an apartment in Washington, D.C. until she began
receiving a paycheck for her work in Congress. “I have three
months without a salary before I’m a member of Congress. So, how do I
get an apartment? Those little things are very real,” Ocasio-Cortez told
the New York Times at the time. Tlaib’s office didn’t respond to Fox News’ request for a comment and clarification of the nature of the salary payment. An
FEC spokesperson told the Washinton Free Beacon that candidates are
allowed to make payments to themselves after the election -- but only
for activities that happened during the election period. An
election law and government ethics lawyer also told the outlet that
Tlaib may have deflated her monthly payments during the campaign for
political purposes while “knowing full well that she would make up any
difference at the end by giving herself a lump sum payment.” “That
would let her skirt negative publicity, of the sort that Alan Keyes
generated when he paid himself a sizable salary. An after-the-fact,
lump-sum payment cuts against the purpose of the rule, which is to help
the candidate pay for daily living expenses while campaigning,” the
lawyer added.
Denuclearization talks between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will continue despite the abrupt end to this week's summit, Associated Press Pyongyang bureau chief Eric Talmadge insisted Thursday. Negotiations
between the two leaders collapsed earlier in the day in Hanoi, Vietnam,
where Trump had hoped to assure that North Korea would end its nuclear
and missile programs while Kim was looking to convince the U.S. to
remove economic sanctions against his country. The points were
considered critical to any potential agreement. During Thursday's "Special Report" All-Star panel
in Hanoi, Talmadge and Daily Mail deputy U.S. political editor Geoff
Earle weighed in on the political fallout of this week’s summit -- and
speculated on how Trump and Kim would go forward. Talmadge
began by expressing that North Korea was “certainly surprised” and
“disappointed” by the outcome of the summit and held a historic news
conference afterward to get its message out. “The North Koreans
came out with a really 'big ask' right from the beginning, and so it’s
not really surprising that it didn’t work out,” Talmadge said about
North Korea’s desire to have all sanctions lifted. “We should keep in
mind that Kim also vowed to maintain his moratorium on missile launches
and nuclear tests and that’s a really big deal. So we don’t need to go
right back into crisis mode. We can continue talks and I think the door
was left open for that. So that’s an important outcome.” Earle
shared a bit more pessimism, telling the panel that President Trump
“invested a lot in his personal diplomacy” and “doesn’t have anything to
show for it.” The Daily Mail editor added that Trunp’s walk away
from the summit was a “classic negotiation tactic,” but added that North
Korea was still “trying to make a bid here.”
Democratic Reps. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., left, and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan. (Associated Press)
Two outspoken freshmen congressional
Democrats appeared at a progressive town hall this week, where they
accused some of their Jewish colleagues of leveling anti-Semitism
charges following their criticisms of Israel in order to shut down any
debate over that U.S. ally's policies. Speaking at the Busboys and Poets restaurant in Washington, U.S. Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan also touched on a variety of other issues. “It is about the Benjamins!,” an audience member shouted at one point, referring to Omar’s now-deleted tweet
linking U.S. congressional support for Israel to Jewish influence and
lobbying. She apologized after a firestorm of criticism from both
Republicans and Democrats. “I
want to talk about the political influence in this country that says it
is OK to push for allegiance to a foreign country,” Omar stated
afterward, according to New York magazine. Omar, 37, an immigrant
from Somalia, and Tlaib, 42, a Palestinian-American from Detroit, have
been criticized since taking office in January over their comments about
Israel, support for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS)
movement and remarks that some have deemed anti-Semitic. Tlaib in January was accused of invoking an anti-Semitic slur
when she criticized legislation designed to punish companies that
participate in the BDS movement, which aims to pressure Israel through
economic means. The moderator began the discussion by asking what
“we as a community here can do to support you criticizing Israel for
some of the war crimes that it has done so that it’s not seen as ‘you’re
anti-Semitic’? Because you’re not criticizing the religion, you’re not
criticizing Jewish people, you’re criticizing the government policies,”
according to Jewish Insider. “What
I’m fearful of — because Rashida and I are Muslim — that a lot of our
Jewish colleagues, a lot of our constituents, a lot of our allies, go to
thinking that everything we say about Israel to be anti-Semitic because
we are Muslim,” Omar said. “To
me, it’s something that becomes designed to end the debate because you
get in this space of – yes, I know what intolerance looks like and I’m
sensitive when someone says, ‘The words you used Ilhan, are resemblance
of intolerance.’ And I am cautious of that and I feel pained by that,"
she continued. "But it’s almost as if, every single time we say
something -- regardless of what it is we say -- … we get to be labeled
something and that ends the discussion. Because we end up defending that
and nobody ever gets to have the broader debate of what is happening
with Palestine.”
"It’s almost as if, every single time
we say something -- regardless of what it is we say -- … we get to be
labeled something and that ends the discussion. — U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.
Omar
elaborated that she doesn’t equate her Jewish colleagues' criticism of
Palestinians as Islamophobic and that longtime members of Congress
fought against apartheid in South Africa but still turn against her and
Tlaib when they bring up support for Palestinians. “So I know many
[members of Congress] were fighting for people to be free, for people
to live in dignity in South Africa… So I know that they care about these
things. But now that you have two Muslims who are saying, here is a
group of people that we want to make sure that they have the dignity
that you want everybody else to have, we get to be called names and we
get to be labeled as hateful. No, we know what hate looks like!” The
restaurant made news when a waitress was given a $450 tip on a $72.60
bill by a group of Trump supporters following his inauguration.
It may be more proof that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez isn’t the darling of all Democrats in New York.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo, D-N.Y., has reportedly penned a full-page letter to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos
as he clings to hope that he can win back the tech giant and lure it to
New York City, where it recently scrapped plans to build a second
headquarters campus, a report said Thursday. AMAZON PULLS OUT OF PLAN TO BUILD NYC HEADQUARTERS AFTER BACKLASH
The
open letter, signed in support by more than 70 unions and politicians,
including former Mayor David Dinkins, urged Bezos and Amazon executives
to reconsider its decision to pull out of the project, the New York Times reported. The letter, paid for by the Partnership for New York City, was set to appear in Friday’s edition of the Times.
“We
know the public debate that followed the announcement of the Long
Island City project was rough and not very welcoming,” the letter reads.
“But when we commit to a project as important as this, we figure out
how to get it done in a way that works for everyone.”
Gov. Andrew Cuomo, D-N.Y., has reached out to Amazon founder Jeff
Bezos in a plea to win back the tech company, a report said Thursday.
(Associated Press)
Amazon pulled out of the deal early last month after
facing harsh, vocal opposition from several of the state’s lawmakers,
most notably from freshman congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez.
Criticism included tax breaks and subsidies worth up to $3 billion for
the company and the potential for rising real estate costs in the area.
The letter went on to state that Cuomo “will take personal responsibility for the project’s state approval,” and Mayor Bill de Blasio “will work together with the governor to manage the community development process.”
Cuomo
and de Blasio were largely responsible for helping bring Amazon to New
York in a deal that would have seen 25,000 jobs, paying approximately
$150,000 per year enter Long Island City. To some, it appeared to be a
remarkable collaboration by two Democrats who rarely seem to get along.
According
to a December Quinnipiac University poll, 57 percent of New York City
residents support Amazon’s arrival in the region, compared to just 26
percent who oppose the deal, Fox Business previously reported.
Cuomo has also reached out to Bezos directly by phone since the deal fell through, according to the Wall Street Journal.
“I’ve
had many conversations with Amazon. I hope that they reconsider,” Cuomo
said Thursday at an unrelated event on Long Island, the paper reported.
But the governor added that Amazon has yet to show any signs it has changed its mind, according to the paper. Fox News' Chris Ciaccia contributed to this report.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., listens to questioning
of Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump's former personal lawyer, at
the House Oversight and Reform Committee. (Associated Press)
After more than two dozen moderate
Democrats broke from their party's progressive wing and sided with
Republicans on a legislative amendment Wednesday, New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez reportedly sounded the alarm in a closed-door meeting Thursday and said those Democrats were "putting themselves on a list." The legislation that prompted the infighting was a bill that would expand federal background checks for gun purchases, the Washington Post reported.
But a key provision requiring U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) to be notified if illegal immigrants attempt to purchase guns saw
26 moderate Democrats side with Republicans. According
to the Post, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi scolded her wayward
center-leaning colleagues, telling them: "We are either a team or we’re
not, and we have to make that decision.” But Ocasio-Cortez
reportedly took it a step further. She said she would help progressive
activists unseat those moderates in their districts in the 2020
elections, the report said. Her spokesman Corbin Trent told the paper
that she made the "list" comment during the meeting. “She
said that when activists ask her why she had to vote for a gun safety
bill that also further empowers an agency that forcibly injects kids
with psychotropic drugs, they’re going to want a list of names and she’s
going to give it to them,” Trent said, referring to ICE.