Examples of GOP Leadership

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Senate Republicans furious over Trump trying to derail FISA bill
Senate Republicans vented their frustration after former President Trump helped derail a compromise House bill to extend Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) authority, sending lawmakers scrambling to find a Plan B to keep the nation’s intelligence agencies from losing their ability to spy on adversaries and terrorists.

Republican senators are warning that the nation’s spy program is about to go “dark” and that much of the intelligence that goes into President Biden’s daily briefing could be lost, putting the nation at risk for surprise attacks.

“I’m very disappointed in President Trump’s assessment of FISA. It is an essential tool. It may need to be amended but it is absolutely essential, as everyone in the intelligence community will tell you,” said Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), a senior member of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

Senate Intelligence Committee Vice Chair Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) warned that failure to pass the bill would cripple the nation’s intelligence gathering. “If we can’t spy on foreign terrorists and foreign spies overseas, we’re out of the intelligence business,” he said.

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), another member of the Intelligence Committee, pointed out that much of the national security intelligence provided to Biden on a daily basis comes from information gathered under FISA’s Section 702. “So I think we need to reform it, not end it,” Cornyn said. Asked what it would mean for national security if Congress killed FISA’s warrantless surveillance authority under Section 702, Cornyn warned: “We’d go dark on a lot of threats. I’m hoping there can be a more extended conversation about what the reforms should look like.”

Trump effectively derailed a House bill to extend the expanded surveillance powers by urging Congress on Friday to “kill FISA.” “KILL FISA, IT WAS ILLEGALLY USED AGAINST ME, AND MANY OTHERS. THEY SPIED ON MY CAMPAIGN!!!” Trump fumed on his social media platform, Truth Social.

Nineteen House Republicans heeded that demand and blocked the bill from advancing on the House floor Wednesday. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and his allies scrambled Thursday to come up with a Plan B to reauthorize the program before the looming April 19 deadline, and the House Rules Committee met to tee up a similar version of the measure for a floor vote Friday.

A number of the GOP holdouts signaled that after negotiations, they were willing to help advance the measure on the House floor, but not all were ready to give it their OK, and Johnson can afford to lose only two votes.

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) knocked Trump for imperiling the future of the national security program because of his personal beef with the FBI and other intelligence agencies over the wiretapping of former Trump campaign aide Carter Page during the 2016 election. “I know that for President Trump much of what happens in the world, in his mind, revolves around him, but FISA is actually designed to prevent another 9/11 or worse, and it’s been used extensively by our law enforcement to protect Americans. And if FISA were eliminated, American lives are going to be lost,” he said. Romney said that Trump’s call to kill FISA is “a very dangerous position.” “If there are reforms that are necessary to avoid abuse, then by all means let’s enact those reforms, but let’s not throw out something that’s so essential to the life and well-being of our citizens,” he said.

Former Trump Attorney General William Barr told The Hill on Wednesday that Trump’s opposition to FISA seems to be more motivated by personal animus than a substantive policy disagreement or concern for Fourth Amendment protections. “I think President Trump’s opposition seems to have stemmed from personal pique rather than any logic and reason. The provision that he objects to has nothing to do with the provision on the floor,” he said, referring to the legislation reauthorizing Section 702 of FISA, which stalled in the House on Wednesday after 19 Republicans voted to defeat a rule to advance it.

Barr warned that allowing the program to lapse would put the nation at risk of attack. “I hope for Republicans’ sake that there are no attacks, because if there are, I think there will be blood on people’s hands for doing this. It’s reckless,” he said. Barr and multiple senators, including Rubio, pointed out that the FBI initiated a wiretap on Page, Trump’s former campaign aide, in 2016 under Section 1 of FISA, which is not at issue in the House reauthorization bill. And they noted that the FBI obtained a warrant from a FISA court to surveil Page.

Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) said the former president went too far in calling for the termination of FISA and Section 702. “I disagree with him,” he said. “I’ve worked with the FBI, I’ve seen the briefing on reforms, I believe that they’ve addressed concerns, and I think the world is far too dangerous now for us to go dark.” Tillis said Republican lawmakers have to work with the Biden administration to keep the nation safe, and if Trump wants additional changes to the program, he should work with Congress on new reforms if he’s elected president in November. “It’s our job to take care of the business today. We can have this discussion with a future President Trump, but I believe if we go dark, it will make this country and this world a lot more dangerous, and that’s why I support it, with all due respect to President Trump,” he said.

Some Republicans, however, applauded Trump’s intervention on the issue. “I agree completely,” said Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), a libertarian-leaning conservative, of Trump’s call to “kill FISA.” “I’ve never felt like you can evade the Constitution to get information on Americans,” he said. “Inside the country, the Constitution applies, and this enormous 702 database I would guess has tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of bits of information on Americans. “I think 702 is a terrible program as applied to Americans,” he said.

It’s just the latest example of Trump undercutting Republican leaders on Capitol Hill at the last minute and putting high-priority legislation into a tailspin. Trump killed the bipartisan Senate border security deal in February, telling GOP lawmakers at the time to oppose it because he didn’t want to give Biden a legislative victory on border security. And the former president made a run at derailing a $95 billion emergency foreign aid package that included $60 billion for Ukraine, which the Senate passed in February with 70 votes. Trump made phone calls to GOP senators urging them to vote against the legislation, depriving it of majority support within the Senate Republican Conference.

But Republican senators are flummoxed that U.S. intelligence agencies may lose critical intelligence-gathering authority in a few days because Trump helped quash a House bill to extend that authority. “There are a lot of reason why we can’t let it go dark. There are things that need to be fixed and reformed, and I think that’s what the focus should be. But it’s a tool that we really need to keep America safe,” Senate Republican Whip John Thune (S.D.) said.

Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.), a member of the Intelligence Committee, pointed out that an individual who was threatening to shoot up churches in Idaho was recently arrested before he could carry out any attacks. “If that individual had gone in and murdered a bunch of people and then the news came out later, ‘We saw it, we knew about it, but couldn’t do anything about it,’ the whole country would be up in arms about it,” he said. Lankford acknowledged he doesn’t know if that particular threat was stopped because of expanded FISA surveillance authority, but he argued: “It’s not occasional. There are threats coming at our country all the time.”

“Stop surveilling our enemies, especially while they’re conspiring with me.”
 

printer

Well-Known Member
The Lord has spoken.

Trump tells Arizona Legislature to act after GOP blocks bills to repeal 1864 abortion ban
Former President Trump on Friday urged Arizona lawmakers to act “as fast as possible” to adjust the state’s abortion policy after a state Supreme Court ruling upheld an 1864 law and made performing the procedure a felony.

The comments marked the latest fallout of the decision, which has left Republicans scrambling to respond as Democrats relentlessly hammer Trump on the issue of abortion.

“The Supreme Court in Arizona went too far on their Abortion Ruling, enacting and approving an inappropriate Law from 1864,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “So now the Governor and the Arizona Legislature must use HEART, COMMON SENSE, and ACT IMMEDIATELY, to remedy what has happened.”

“Remember, it is now up to the States and the Good Will of those that represent THE PEOPLE,” Trump added, saying there would “ideally” be exceptions for cases of rape, incest and instances where the life of the mother is at risk.

Trump’s plea came after Republicans in the Arizona Legislature earlier in the week blocked attempts from Democrats to undo the court-imposed ban on abortions.

The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that the Civil War-era law passed before Arizona was even a state should be enforced. The court ruled to lift a stay on the law, meaning it goes into effect in 14 days.

However, the justices also sent the case back to a lower trial court to sort out questions about the law’s constitutionality.

The century-old law makes abortion a felony punishable by two to five years in prison for anyone who performs or helps a woman obtain an abortion. It includes an extremely narrow exception allowing for an abortion “when it is necessary” to save a pregnant person’s life.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs (D) called for the 1864 ban to be repealed, and the state’s Democratic attorney general has said she will not enforce any bans on abortion.

Hobbs on Friday scoffed at Trump’s rhetoric around the issue.

“I am pretty tired of cleaning up Donald Trump’s messes in Arizona,” she told “The View” on ABC. “This is really nothing but political opportunism coming from these folks who wanted this. This is what they wanted when they worked to overturn Roe v. Wade.”

Trump earlier this week said it should be left up to the states to determine abortion policy, while appearing to say he would not sign a federal ban.

Trump has frequently expressed pride in appointing the Supreme Court justices who overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022, and his White House supported GOP legislation that passed the House during his first term that would have banned most abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

Vice President Harris traveled Friday to Arizona, where she was set to blame Trump directly for the situation unfolding in Arizona and to warn a second Trump term would lead to more abortion bans.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Eating their own.

Hard-liners vow retaliation against Republicans who sank FISA warrant mandate
Hard-line conservatives are turning up the heat on their GOP colleagues who voted Friday to kill a proposed warrant requirement for domestic communications caught up in foreign surveillance operations.

That provision — offered as an amendment to a larger bill renewing a key section of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) — went down on the House floor in a 212-212 vote, with 86 Republicans and 126 Democrats voting against it. By House rules, a tie vote fails.

The outcome infuriated the conservative champions of the warrant mandate, who accused its opponents in both parties of empowering the “deep state” while undermining constitutional liberties. Their anger was aimed most squarely at fellow Republicans, including Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), who voted against the warrant requirement and in favor of the final FISA package.

Some hard-liners said they’re ready to travel to GOP districts to campaign against those who tanked the amendment.

“Every one of these members who voted against a warrant requirement, they are the deciding vote. They own it,” Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) said after the vote. “And some of them may see me showing up in their districts very soon to campaign against them and to stand for the Constitution.”

Although the broader FISA package passed through the House easily — the bipartisan vote was 273 to 147 — the hard-liners demanding new warrant protections immediately blocked its transmission to the Senate. The move will have no bearing on the fate of the underlying bill, which the House is expected to send along to the upper chamber when lawmakers return to Washington on Monday.

But the weekend delay is designed to draw attention to Friday’s floor action, stir up conservative voters who might support the additional warrant protection and pile pressure on Republicans who voted against the measure this week.

“This is not off of the House floor, so everybody’s got to go home and answer their constituents over the next 72 hours about why they are siding with the intelligence agencies and the deep state and the swamp over the rights and the liberties of the American people,” Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) said.

“That was the choice today,” he continued. “And every single person in this body, no matter if you’re a Republican or a Democrat, voted against an amendment to protect Americans, to protect them with a warrant, and they’ve got to answer to it.”

Reauthorization of the nation’s warranty spying powers has been a months-long headache for Johnson, who had been a vocal critic of FISA’s Section 702 as a member of the Judiciary Committee, but he reversed course upon taking the Speaker’s gavel.

Section 702 empowers the nation’s intelligence agencies to spy only on noncitizens living abroad. But in the course of those operations, the government frequently sweeps up communications from Americans in contact with the foreigners under surveillance.

Privacy hawks in both parties — including many on the Judiciary Committee — maintain that it’s unconstitutional for the government to peruse those communications without securing a warrant from a judge.

“Current law allows the government to collect sensitive and personal information on private citizens without a warrant. That is blatantly unconstitutional,” Rep. Andrea Salinas (D-Ore.) said.

Yet supporters of Section 702 — including those on the Intelligence Committee — say it’s one of the government’s greatest national security weapons. The new warrant requirement, they warn, would put the country at much greater risk.


“They now want to apply — which we’ve never done in U.S. law before — a warrant on searching a database of lawfully collected data,” said Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), a member of the Intelligence panel. “That’s [like] saying a police department can’t walk into their own evidence locker without getting a warrant — even though everything that’s inside was already collected via warrant.”

Johnson has defended his shift from 702 critic to 702 champion, saying he was simply given more information about the nature of the program after his rise to Speaker.

“When I was a member of Judiciary, I saw all of the abuses of the FBI — there were terrible abuses, over and over and over,” Johnson told reporters earlier in the week. “And then when I became Speaker, I … got the confidential briefing from sort of the other perspective on that, to understand the necessity of Section 702 of FISA and how important it is for national security.”

That explanation has done little to appease Johnson’s conservative critics, who are accusing him of abandoning his roots as a constitutionalist.

“We’re very disappointed that when we sent Mike Johnson away from the Judiciary Committee, he departed from some of the views that he held deeply,” Gaetz said. “We made Mike Johnson Speaker so that the Speakership would be more like Mike Johnson, not so Mike Johnson could be more like the Speakership.”

Still, Gaetz — who led the effort to remove former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) from power last year — said he’s not ready to launch the same attack on Johnson.

“I think a motion to vacate right now would almost certainly turn the House over to Democrats, and that’s why I won’t support it,” he said.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) — a staunch FISA critic — has already introduced a motion to vacate, though she hasn’t said what might compel her to force a vote on it.

Whatever the ultimate backlash of Johnson’s support for FISA, its immediate effect was to ruffle the feathers of the conservative rabble-rousers already upset with the Speaker’s handling of the office.

“The will of the majority in there was to have a warrant provision, and he was on the other side of that,” Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), another FISA critic, said Friday. “There’s no red lines here. I just think he lost a lot of capital with that vote.”
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Instead of passing Ukraine aid, the House is voting on bills to shield home appliances from government regulations

As Ukraine aid continues to stall, the House of Representatives announced plans to address legislation barring government regulations on home appliances.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Instead of passing Ukraine aid, the House is voting on bills to shield home appliances from government regulations

As Ukraine aid continues to stall, the House of Representatives announced plans to address legislation barring government regulations on home appliances.
Then who is suppose to regulate home appliances?
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Voter data expert hired by Trump on Johnson election claims: ‘He should know better’
A voter data expert who was hired by the Trump campaign in 2020 to look for voter fraud criticized claims by House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) about election integrity Friday.

“Speaker Johnson is an attorney, and he should know better,” Ken Block told CNN anchor Jim Sciutto during a Friday appearance on “Erin Burnett OutFront”. “He should understand that hearsay evidence… what he’s talking about, does not stand up in court and it should not ever rise to the level that it is right now, where we’re impugning our election integrity and our infrastructure, based on hearsay, which is what he’s doing.”

Johnson has previously backed former President Trump’s unfounded claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

“I have just called President Trump to say this: ‘Stay strong and keep fighting, sir! The nation is depending upon your resolve. We must exhaust every available legal remedy to restore Americans’ trust in the fairness of our election system,” Johnson said in a post to social platform X the day after the 2020 election.

Johnson also headed up an amicus brief signed by more than 100 House Republicans backing a filed by Texas to the U.S. Supreme Court that aimed to overturn the 2020 election results in states including Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Johnson and Trump appeared together for a press conference at the former president’s Mar-a-Lago resort, where they unveiled a bill that would bar those who are not U.S. citizens from voting, something that is already illegal. In the press conference, Trump said Johnson is “doing a very good job” when asked about a motion to oust Johnson from his current role as Speaker by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).

“I think he’s doing a very good job, he’s doing about as good as you’re going to do and I’m sure that Marjorie understands that,” he continued. “She’s a very good friend of mine and I know she has a lot of respect for the Speaker.”
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Instead of passing Ukraine aid, the House is voting on bills to shield home appliances from government regulations

As Ukraine aid continues to stall, the House of Representatives announced plans to address legislation barring government regulations on home appliances.
The list of protections that our busy little beavers are working on:

  • Hands Off Our Home Appliances Act
  • Liberty in Laundry Act
  • Clothes Dryers Reliability Act
  • Refrigerator Freedom Act
  • Affordable Air Conditioning Act
  • Stop Unaffordable Dishwasher Standards Act
Seriously? The refrigerator freedom act? This looks like an article from The Onion. But its not.

Is the consumer's right to own refrigerators threatened? I can't help but pull this up to see what it does:


If the people who enacted this were not anti science fossil fuel industry toadies, I'd be less skeptical of the umbrage they display in their rhetoric:

The text of the bill said, "To prohibit the Secretary of Energy from prescribing or
enforcing energy conservation standards for refrigerators, refrigerator-freezers, and freezers that are not cost-effective or technologically feasible, and for other purposes."


Was this bill needed? But then again, They are monkeying with the administration enacting regulations authorized under previously enacted bills that address consumer safety, reducing fossil fuel emissions and promote energy efficiency, all of which Republican benefactors such as Enron and their ilk oppose. Somebody thought it was useful to them. Follow the money as they say.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
The list of protections that our busy little beavers are working on:

  • Hands Off Our Home Appliances Act
  • Liberty in Laundry Act
  • Clothes Dryers Reliability Act
  • Refrigerator Freedom Act
  • Affordable Air Conditioning Act
  • Stop Unaffordable Dishwasher Standards Act
Seriously? The refrigerator freedom act? This looks like an article from The Onion. But its not.

Is the consumer's right to own refrigerators threatened? I can't help but pull this up to see what it does:


If the people who enacted this were not anti science fossil fuel industry toadies, I'd be less skeptical of the umbrage they display in their rhetoric:

The text of the bill said, "To prohibit the Secretary of Energy from prescribing or
enforcing energy conservation standards for refrigerators, refrigerator-freezers, and freezers that are not cost-effective or technologically feasible, and for other purposes."


Was this bill needed? But then again, They are monkeying with the administration enacting regulations authorized under previously enacted bills that address consumer safety, reducing fossil fuel emissions and promote energy efficiency, all of which Republican benefactors such as Enron and their ilk oppose. Somebody thought it was useful to them. Follow the money as they say.
"But I have to flush five times."
 

printer

Well-Known Member
"I only want people that kneel to me."
Trump throws support behind challenger of Washington Republican who voted to impeach him
Former President Trump endorsed a challenger to Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.) Friday, calling the incumbent House lawmaker a “weak and pathetic RINO” in a social media post.

Trump threw his support behind Jerrod Sessler, the U.S. Navy veteran and former NASCAR driver running against Newhouse to represent the 4th Congressional District of Washington.

“Jerrod Sessler is a fantastic candidate and will be a GREAT Congressman for Washington State’s 4th Congressional District,’ Trump said in a Truth Social post. “A Navy Veteran, Entrepreneur, Loving Father and Husband, Jerrod will fight hard every day to secure the Border, stand for the Rule of Law, strengthen our Military, take care of our Vets, Defend our Nation, and protect our always under siege Second Amendment.”

“He is running against a weak and pathetic RINO named Newhouse, who voted to, for no reason, Impeach me,” Trump continued. “Newhouse has to go! Jerrod Sessler is MAGA all the way, and has my Complete and Total Endorsement – He will never let you down!!!”

Newhouse was one of 10 Republicans who voted to impeach Trump in the wake of the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol. He was reelected in 2022, despite Trump’s endorsement of another candidate.

Sessler welcomed Trump’s endorsement in a post on the social platform X.

“#honored,” Sessler said in his post, which featured a screenshot of Trump’s Truth Social post backing him.

Newhouse floated the idea of invoking the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office after the Jan. 6 riot, according to the book “This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America’s Future” by New York Times reporters Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns. He brought up the suggestion amid a virtual meeting of House Republicans following the Capitol riot, according to the book.

Newhouse’s fellow Washington Republican, then-Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, also suggested that top Republican figures ask Trump to resign in the same meeting.

“I think another way out that we should consider as a conference,” Herrera Beutler said, according to the book, “is asking our own leadership to join with the Republican leadership in the Senate and asking this president to resign.”
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
"I only want people that kneel to me."
Trump throws support behind challenger of Washington Republican who voted to impeach him
Former President Trump endorsed a challenger to Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.) Friday, calling the incumbent House lawmaker a “weak and pathetic RINO” in a social media post.

Trump threw his support behind Jerrod Sessler, the U.S. Navy veteran and former NASCAR driver running against Newhouse to represent the 4th Congressional District of Washington.

“Jerrod Sessler is a fantastic candidate and will be a GREAT Congressman for Washington State’s 4th Congressional District,’ Trump said in a Truth Social post. “A Navy Veteran, Entrepreneur, Loving Father and Husband, Jerrod will fight hard every day to secure the Border, stand for the Rule of Law, strengthen our Military, take care of our Vets, Defend our Nation, and protect our always under siege Second Amendment.”

“He is running against a weak and pathetic RINO named Newhouse, who voted to, for no reason, Impeach me,” Trump continued. “Newhouse has to go! Jerrod Sessler is MAGA all the way, and has my Complete and Total Endorsement – He will never let you down!!!”

Newhouse was one of 10 Republicans who voted to impeach Trump in the wake of the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol. He was reelected in 2022, despite Trump’s endorsement of another candidate.

Sessler welcomed Trump’s endorsement in a post on the social platform X.

“#honored,” Sessler said in his post, which featured a screenshot of Trump’s Truth Social post backing him.

Newhouse floated the idea of invoking the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office after the Jan. 6 riot, according to the book “This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America’s Future” by New York Times reporters Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns. He brought up the suggestion amid a virtual meeting of House Republicans following the Capitol riot, according to the book.

Newhouse’s fellow Washington Republican, then-Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, also suggested that top Republican figures ask Trump to resign in the same meeting.

“I think another way out that we should consider as a conference,” Herrera Beutler said, according to the book, “is asking our own leadership to join with the Republican leadership in the Senate and asking this president to resign.”
With so many others that tRump has endorsed not winning their elections in the past you'd think it would be something to fear and not desired.

Hopefully another house member or two abandon the sinking Maga ship giving the Dems a better shot at moving things along like support for Ukraine which seems to be lost under all the Gaza stuff.

I don't like to hate on anyone but I'm sure getting a hate-on for the republipukes these days.

:peace:
 
Top