Archive for the ‘Democrat’ Category

The Memo: Democratic dissent over Israel grows, deepening Bidens dilemma – The Hill

President Biden is facing deepening political trouble as criticism of Israel’s assault on Gaza grows more widespread and a possible invasion of Rafah looms.

Discontent with Bidens substantive support for Israel has spread across the Democratic Party, even as the president has toughened his rhetoric criticizing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

At the same time, Republicans are upping their attacks on Biden as insufficiently supportive of Israel in its war with Hamas and amid rising tensions with Iran.

Democratic strife has been and continues to be the bigger political danger to the president, who has seen scores of primary voters reject him over his handling of Gaza.

One of the most striking political developments in recent weeks has been the willingness of mainstream Democratic figures to try to rein Israel in.

Former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), usually a stalwart supporter of Israel, is among almost 60 House Democrats who have signed a letter urging Biden to rethink weapons transfers.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) stunned many observers almost a month ago by criticizing Netanyahu and calling for new elections in Israel.

Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) has said that Palestinian children dying from lack of food are victims of a textbook war crime. Late last month, Van Hollen told The Washington Post the administration needs to be very careful not to get into a position of complicity with war crimes by supplying the weaponry Israel is using to bomb Gaza.

Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), a close Biden ally, told CNN recently that were at that point where the U.S. needs to think seriously about putting conditions on further military aid to Israel.

Biden has so far resisted the demands to impose conditions. 

The president backs a congressional proposal for $14 billion in new military aid to Israel. In addition, the administration in February asked Congress to approve the sale to Israel of F-15 fighter jets and munitions, worth about $18 billion. 

On Tuesday, the leading Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.), told CNN he needed more information before he would sign off on the F-15 sales.

Criticism of Bidens position is also seeping into liberal-leaning popular culture. Jon Stewart excoriated the administration for what he cast as double standards and timidity toward Israel during Comedy Centrals The Daily Show Monday.

More than 33,000 people have been killed in Gaza over the last six months, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry. The current phase of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was sparked by the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas that killed approximately 1,200 Israelis.

A shift in Bidens rhetoric first became notable in February when Biden called Israels response to the Oct. 7 attacks over the top. At the start of this month, Biden said he was outraged by an Israeli strike in Gaza that killed seven people working for the World Central Kitchen charity. In an interview broadcast Tuesday evening on Univision, Biden said of Netanyahu, What hes doing is a mistake. I dont agree with his approach.

However, during a Wednesday press conference with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in the White House Rose Garden, Biden again sidestepped a question about whether he would place conditions on more weapons. 

Instead, he talked about the shared support from Kishida and himself for a cease-fire and a hostage deal but added that U.S. backing of Israel against any threat from Iran was iron-clad.

The rhetorical machinations are doing nothing to endear Biden to critics who believe he has embraced Netanyahu too close and for too long.

For all intents and purposes, his position hasnt actually moved. Rhetoric isnt enough. He has not cut off weapons aid for Israel, said Natalia Latif, the communications director of the National Uncommitted Movement, a group that has pressed for Democratic primary voters to register protest votes against Bidens policy on Gaza.

The movements effort has proved powerful, with the uncommitted line garnering around 13 percent of the vote in Michigan and almost 19 percent in Minnesota.

Meanwhile, voices of criticism on the right are rising. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) wrote on social media Wednesday that Israel was facing the threat of imminent attack from Iran and its proxies. 

Biden must stop the harsh criticism of the only pro-American democracy in the region, Rubio insisted.

Also on Wednesday, former President Trump told reporters in Georgia that Jewish people who vote for Biden or the Democrats should have their head examined.

However, even Trump has acknowledged a downside to Israels conduct.

The former president told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt last week that Israel was absolutely losing the PR war and needs to get it over with fast.

American public opinion has gradually shifted against Israel as the death toll in Gaza has risen and the humanitarian crisis has grown near-catastrophic.

A Gallup poll late last month indicated that 55 percent of Americans now disapprove of Israels military actions in Gaza while only 36 percent approve.

Meanwhile. Bidens poll ratings on the topic, pinched by opposition from both left and right, are grim. An Economist/YouGov poll released Wednesday found only 23 percent of Americans approving of his handling of the conflict while 58 percent disapprove.

The electoral consequences may be severe, especially if a lasting cease-fire does not come to an end soon.

There are important electoral coalitions on both sides of this issue within the Democratic Party and Biden needs to turn them both out to win, said Todd Belt, the director of the political management program at the Graduate School of Political Management at the George Washington University. Appeasing one tends to alienate the other but trying to stay in the middle leaves everyone unhappy.

If theres a way out of that conundrum, Biden hasnt found it yet.

The Memo is a reported column by Niall Stanage.

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The Memo: Democratic dissent over Israel grows, deepening Bidens dilemma - The Hill

Ted Cruz angles for a bipartisan rebrand – The Texas Tribune

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WASHINGTON Heading into the heat of his reelection race against Dallas Congressman Colin Allred, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz is testing the waters with a rebrand.

Cruz, who has made a name for himself as an uncompromising conservative stalwart, is casting himself as a bipartisan lawmaker with a penchant for reaching across the aisle.

I actually have very good relationships with many of my colleagues across the aisle, Cruz told The Texas Tribune, citing his work with Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand, Cory Booker and Amy Klobuchar. I've worked with all three of them and all three are friends.

The interview was part of Cruzs recent media blitz highlighting his work with Democrats, off the heels of his Democrats for Cruz announcement which aims to attract left-leaning voters this November. He debuted that messaging during a Laredo meeting with the U.S. Hispanic Business Council, where he stressed the value of bipartisanship legislating and enumerated several bills hes written with Democratic senators. Meanwhile, Cruz is blasting Allred as not as bipartisan as he claims, citing the Democrats voting record with his partys leadership.

It is easy and probably more fun to cover the battles that I have waged against the Obama administration or the Biden administration, or [Senate Majority Leader] Chuck Schumer, Cruz said. Those may make for easy headlines, but often overlooked are now 99 different pieces of legislation that I've authored and passed into law in my time in the Senate.

The rhetorical shift comes as polls show another tight race for Cruz. A February poll by the University of Texas at Tyler showed the two candidates equally polling at 41%. Another poll conducted in March by Marist College found Cruz ahead by six percentage points.

His critics say hes trying to rewrite history, noting that Cruz has built a persona that demonizes Democrats. In his podcast, countless radio and television appearances, and his books, Cruz routinely blasts the other party as actively working to destroy the country.

Cruz consistently votes against some of the biggest bipartisan bills in Congress and is routinely ranked as one of the most conservative members in the Senate. He was ranked 91 out of 98 senators in 2021 in the Lugar Centers bipartisan index by Georgetown University (Two senators werent included in the ranking because they hadnt served for at least six months). Texas senior Sen. John Cornyn was ranked 8th.

I dont think Ted Cruz is fooling anybody, Allred said. He spent 12 years being the most divisive and proudly so partisan warrior in the United States. And I think its kind of laughable actually that at this point, when hes in a close race, that he wants to now stress, 'Oh, actually I have been working in a bipartisan way.'

Cruz has a lot of work cut out for him undoing his reputation as an enemy of the left. The senator launched himself to national fame by being one of the most antagonistic conservatives in Congress. In his first year in office, he led a 21-hour filibuster against former President Barack Obamas Affordable Care Act, then orchestrated a two-week federal shutdown to strip funding from the law. He was one of the senators who led a challenge to the 2020 election results ahead of the Jan. 6 insurrection, and Cruz says he will continue to back former President Donald Trump fully if he is elected president again.

Cruz doesnt deny that hes a cultural warrior and has often worn the personal dislike he invokes among Democrats with pride. He remains one of the most popular elected officials among conservative leaning voters in Texas. Cruz regularly calls President Joe Biden corrupt and supports House efforts to impeach him. Cruz endorses candidates who are hardline conservatives and do not care to compromise with Democrats. And he does not shy from attacking his Democratic colleagues.

"When I first arrived in the Senate 12 years ago, there was such a thing as moderate Democrats. They existed. You could work them," Cruz said at the Texas Public Policy Foundation's Texas Policy Summit last month. "There aren't any left. The Democrats, they hate Trump so much their brains have melted, and what's happened is they have gone crazy off the edge to the left."

But Cruz asserts that for all the ire, he still gets things done. He ranked the 16th most effective Republican senator during the 2021-2022 session of Congress by the Center for Effective Lawmaking at the University of Virginia and Vanderbilt University.

Campaigns are always about two things: the record of each candidate and the vision of the candidate for the state, Cruz said. And in terms of my record, I've spent 12 years fighting for the people of Texas and delivering major victories for the state of Texas over and over again.

To prove the point, Cruz launched a group of Democrats for Cruz last month to highlight his work on Texas-specific issues that may not grab the national headlines. The group includes Democrats across the state, including local elected officials, law enforcement, business owners and industry advocates, who back Cruz in his reelection campaign. Cruzs campaign says the group continues to grow.

I know a different Ted Cruz. The Ted Cruz that never, never gets mentioned in our national media. The Ted Cruz that collaborated with me in trying to reform H1B high tech visas, said Javier Palomarez, president and CEO of the United States Hispanic Business Council, during a Laredo event with Cruz. Now we dont always get along, and we dont always agree, pobrecito, but Im working with you.

Palomarez, a lifelong Democrat who is part of Cruz coalition, formerly led the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce until 2018, when he stepped down over allegations of financial misconduct and sexual harassment. Palomarez later told The New York Times that his ouster was retaliation over his willingness to work with the Trump administration.

Other members of the group include former Laredo Mayor Pete Saenz, a conservative Democrat.

No members of Congress were highlighted in the video launching Democrats for Cruz. And no Democratic senators cited by Cruz as friends or collaborators agreed to speak for this story.

Democratic senators have similarly cited their ability to work with Cruz in their own campaigns. U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Georgia, released an ad in 2022 joking that he and Cruz worked surprisingly well together after the two collaborated to extend Interstate 14 from the Permian Basin to Georgias Atlantic Coast.

The corridor was passed unanimously in the Senate before being added to the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. Cruz voted against the IIJA, which was one of Bidens cornerstone legislative priorities.

We do a lot more together than people know, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Virginia, said in a Fox News interview. Cooperation isnt sexy. So when we do stuff together, its not likely to get the attention as when we have disagreements.

Kaine and Cruz are working together on legislation to track xylazine, commonly known as tranq, as it is smuggled into the country. The senators serve together on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Kaine is also up for reelection this year.

During the Laredo event, Cruz again highlighted working with Gillibrand on legislation to do away with a policy at service academies requiring pregnant cadets to either withdraw or give up their child. The bill was signed into law.

Cruz also worked with U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, to streamline the permitting process for bridges used to cross the Texas-Mexico border to encourage international trade. In his first term in Congress, he passed a law that would deny admission to U.N. representatives who had engaged in espionage.

He did a great job and we were able to pass it together, Cuellar said of Cruzs work on the international bridge legislation. Im willing to work with anybody thats willing to do bipartisan work.

When asked if he felt Cruz was a bipartisan lawmaker, Cuellar emphasized: Im saying just in this case, it was bipartisan.

But Cruz has also voted against nearly every major bill pushed by Biden, including bipartisan bills that garnered the support of other Texas Republicans. He opposed the CHIPS and Science Act and the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act both major bills that Cornyn worked on. The bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which he voted against, ended up investing billions into Texas roads and bridges.

Cruz said he supported and worked on parts of the CHIPS and Science Act and the IIJA, but voted against the bills because he had misgivings about the final forms of the massive packages. The CHIPS and Science Act would include billions in federal payments to semiconductor manufacturers, which Cruz said amounted to corporate welfare. Cruz said on the Senate floor at the time that the IIJA had far too high a price tag.

When bipartisan Senate negotiators unveiled a border plan that would put harder caps on the number of migrants admitted into the country, Cruz panned the deal as not going far enough and advocated instead for a hardline House-passed Republican border package. The deal died among Senate Republicans after Trump blasted it publicly.

This is what members of Congress do, said Dan Diller, policy director of the Lugar Center. Diller was formerly a legislative director for the late Republican Sen. Richard Lugar. They go through a primary promising all the most extreme things that appeal to their party's base. Then they get into a general election, and they pull out a few samples of bipartisanship and talk about them.

As he rehabs his own reputation, Cruz is also taking aim at Allred who has run on a ticket of moderation and bipartisanship since he first flipped his House seat in 2018. Beating Republican U.S. Rep. Pete Sessions that year in what was then a competitive district, Allred focused heavily on his endorsements from both organized labor and Dallas business community. He was endorsed by both the AFL-CIO union and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Allred has since been ranked the most bipartisan member of the Texas congressional delegation by the Common Ground Committee, a nonprofit organization dedicated to combating divisiveness in politics. All but one of the 43 bills hes cosponsored that got passed into law was with Republican buy-in and all but one were when Democrats had the majority. Of the bills he has introduced, about a third of them have buy-in from Republicans. He worked with Rep. Jake Ellzey, R-Midlothian, to bring federal funds for veterans health care to North Texas a bill that was eventually signed into law.

The Lugar Center ranked Allred 119th out of 435 members in its bipartisanship index. The Lugar Centers metrics do not include messaging bills such as those renaming a post office and bases its rankings on bills members have sponsored and cosponsored with members of the opposite party.

Bipartisanship remains a central element to his campaign message as he takes on Cruz, whom he casts as more occupied with being a conservative celebrity than a serious legislator.

I do want to find a way to actually get things done. And in my experience, the best way to do that, and to make sure that's effective and can last is to be bipartisan, Allred said in a recent interview. That's what we're looking for, somebody who will actually try and bridge some of these divides and actually deliver instead of just pulling off political stunts that don't help anybody.

Allred beat the more progressive state Sen. Roland Gutierrez of San Antonio in the Democratic primary. His openness to work with Republicans and at times buck his own party to do so led to criticisms from Gutierrez of handholding with Republicans.

Gutierrez took particular issue with Allreds support for a nonbinding Republican resolution condemning the Biden administrations handling of the southern border. Allred defended his vote as expressing dissatisfaction with the status quo of migration policy.

Still, Allred is a loyal Democratic voter on major legislation, voting 100% in line with then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi during the four years Democrats were in the majority. Cruz claims voting so closely with Democratic leadership is antithetical to being a truly bipartisan lawmaker.

He's fond of describing himself as bipartisan, by which he means that he votes for bills that most or all the Democrats are voting for and some Republicans are voting for, Cruz said. It's a little bit like someone who arrives at the parade and waves in the parade and then claims credit for the parade.

But the criticism goes both ways. Cruz has voted 92% in line with Trumps positions, including 100% aligning himself with the former presidents agenda after Trump left office, according to a FiveThirtyEight analysis.

There have been instances where Cruzs conservative fighter ethos has staved off would-be partners. U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a progressive New York Democrat, spurned Cruzs invitation to collaborate on securities trading legislation after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

I am happy to work with Republicans on this issue where theres common ground, but you almost had me murdered 3 weeks ago so you can sit this one out, Ocasio-Cortez wrote on social media at the time.

Disclosure: Texas Public Policy Foundation, New York Times and US Chamber of Commerce have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Ted Cruz angles for a bipartisan rebrand - The Texas Tribune

ENTERTAINMENT: ‘Disney On Ice’ skates in to Simmons Bank Arena | Arkansas Democrat Gazette – Arkansas Online

FUN

Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy and friends from the Disney Kingdom don their skates and search for the true meaning of what it means to be a hero as "Disney On Ice presents Find Your Hero" takes over North Little Rock's Simmons Bank Arena, 7 p.m. today and Friday; 11 a.m., 3 and 7 p.m. Saturday; and 2 p.m. Sunday. Mirabel ("Encanto"); Moana ("Moana"); Anna, Elsa and snowman Olaf ("Frozen"); Ariel ("The Little Mermaid"); Rapunzel ("Tangled"); and Belle ("Beauty and the Beast") discover that courage, determination and heart are all part of being a hero.

Tickets are $22-$87 ("subject to change based on market demand") via Ticketmaster.com. A pre-show Character Experience includes a dance party, crafting and interactive time with Moana.

THEATER

'POLI POP'

BRUSH Theatre, a theatrical performing arts company based in Seoul, South Korea, brings its production of "POLI POP" to the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts, 501 E. Ninth St., Little Rock, for shows at 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday. Playful siblings Poli and Pola refuse to go to sleep and decide to embark on imaginary adventures (via technology and special effects), traveling to faraway islands and seeing the roaring seas, having a dance party and even seeing the Milky Way. Tickets are $20, $15 for museum members, free for children 2 and younger if seated in an adult's lap. Visit events.arkmfa.org/series/ poli-pop.

Playful siblings turn their refusal to go to sleep into a set of imaginary adventures in BRUSH Theatre's "POLI POP" this weekend April 13-14 at Little Rock's Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts. (Special to the Democrat-Gazette/courtesy of BRUSH Theatre)

Young 'Anastasia'

The Foundation of Arts is staging "Anastasia the Musical," Youth Edition (music by Stephen Flaherty, lyrics by Lynn Ahrens, book by Terrence McNally), 7:30 p.m. Friday and April 19, 10:30 a.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday and April 21 and 6 p.m. April 20 at the Forum Theater, 115 E. Monroe Ave., Jonesboro. Presenter is First National Bank. Tickets are $15-$17; $14-$16 for those 65 and older, military and Arkansas State University students, faculty and staff, $13-$15 for children 3-12. Cast members will take part in a "Princess Meet and Greet," 9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Stage Too, 33 S. Main St., Jonesboro. Tickets are $10 per household, separate from tickets for the show. Call (870) 935-2726 or visit foajonesboro.org.

MUSIC

Chorus makes 'Connections'

The River City Men's Chorus concludes its 20th anniversary season with a program titled "Connections," 3 p.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. Monday and April 18 in the main sanctuary at St. James United Methodist Church, 321 Pleasant Valley Drive, Little Rock. David Glaze conducts. Admission is free. Visit rivercitymenschorus.com or facebook.com/River-City-Mens-Chorus-35531191118.

Chancellor's Concert

Student ensembles and soloists from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Literary and Performing Arts perform for UALR's third annual Chancellor's Concert, 7:30 p.m. today in the Stella Boyle Smith Concert Hall, Fine Arts Building, UALR, 2801 S. University Ave. Admission is free. Call (501) 916-3291 or visit ualr.edu/litperforming.

The program: Concert Choir, "The Last Words of David" by Randall Thompson; Piano Ensemble, "Spanish Dance," op.12 No. 1, by Moritz Moszkowski; Chamber Singers, "And So It Goes" by Billy Joel, arranged by Bob Chilcott, and "In Noctem" by Nicholas Hooper; Jazz Ensemble, "Buckjump" by Troy Andrews and Mike Ballard, arranged by John Wasson; Clarinet Ensemble, "Caprice for Clarinets" by Clare Grundman; Percussion Ensemble, "Watercolor Sun" by Ivan Trevino; Women's Choir, "Las Amarillas" arranged by Stephen Hatfield, and "Dies Irae" by Z. Randall Stroope; and the Wind Ensemble, "Dusk" by Steven Bryant and "Waltz No. 2" by Dmitri Shostakovich, arranged by Michael Brown.

Flutist Max Reyes performs "Hypnosis" by Ian Clarke; soprano Val Bell-Ovwiomoriemu sings "La Diva de l'Empire" by Erik Satie. Soprano Shelby Loftis sings "There's a Fine, Fine Line" from "Avenue Q" by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx. Soprano Kyndal Collins performs "Chanson d'amour" by Gabriel Faur. And pianist Nakira Bates plays the "Grand Waltz in A-flat major, op.34 No. 1, by Frdric Chopin.

Coterie concert

Little Rock Musical Coterie award winners will perform for the coterie's April meeting/concert, 2 p.m. Sunday at Trinity United Methodist Church, 1101 N. Mississippi St., Little Rock. Admission is free. Call (501) 422-8355.

Pianist Jane Fetterly, homeschool student (headed for the University of Central Arkansas in the fall) and winner of the Wang Coterie Award, will play the Prelude and Fugue in c minor, BWV 847, by Johann Sebastian Bach and George Gershwin's Prelude No. 1. Pianist William Baker, recipient of the coterie's Queen Award and a student at Harding University, will play the first movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 9 in E major, op.14 No. 1; Frederic Chopin's Polonaise in c-sharp minor, op.26 No. 1; and three of the Preludes, op.38 -- No. 22 in g minor, No. 8 in f-sharp minor and No. 6 in b minor -- by Dmitri Kabalevsky. And violinist Abraham Brito, a student at UCA and the Coterie Award recipient, will play the "Chaconne" from Bach's Partita for solo violin No. 2 in d minor and the Praeludium and Allegro in the Style of Paganini by Fritz Kreisler.

ART

Mixed-media works

Mixed-media works with an abstract style by Tifany Hamlin go on display with a 5-7 p.m. reception Friday in the Parish House Gallery at Christ Episcopal Church, 509 Scott St., Little Rock. The show will be up and Hamlin's works will be available for sale through June 30. Admission is free. Gallery hours are 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 9 a.m.-noon Friday and 7:30 a.m.-noon Sunday. Email lallyrbrown@gmail.com.

"I Want Candy," "Only Love Can Do That" and "Some Other Spring" by Tifany Hamlin go on display Friday at Little Rock's Christ Episcopal Church. (Special to the Democrat-Gazette)

ETC.

Student winners

Three high school students in each of six categories took home top honors and cash prizes in the Arts Across Arkansas finals, March 30 at the Westwind School for Performing Arts in Maumelle. It's the Arkansas Arts Council's mentorship and support program for young "creatives."

Literary Arts -- First place: JJ Stone, El Dorado High School; second place, Laynee DeJarnette, Eureka Springs High School; third place, Caroline Buxton, Siloam Springs High School and home school

Music Composition -- First place, Alexander Back, and second place, Grace Adams, both from Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts; third place, Ethan Chen, Maumelle Charter High School/Studio of Linda Kennedy

Film -- First place, Corbin Pitts, North Little Rock High School; second place, Calen Long, Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts; third place, Madelyn Terry, Star City High School

Dance Choreography -- First place, Madison Robinson, Little Rock Central High School; second place, Catherine McCraw, Parkview Arts and Science Magnet High School; third place, Jamisyn Johnson, North Little Rock High School

Photography -- First and third place, Clint Newton and Cadyn Mizell, both from Star City High School; second place, Keith Massey, Hillcrest High School

Visual Arts -- First and second place, Gwendolyn Oliver and Olivia Busby, Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts; third place, Addison Reibling, Thaden School.

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ENTERTAINMENT: 'Disney On Ice' skates in to Simmons Bank Arena | Arkansas Democrat Gazette - Arkansas Online

A Republican and a Democrat make the case for civility in politics – MPR News

Given the polarization of the American electorate, one might wonder if bipartisan civil discourse is still possible.

Former North Dakota U.S. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, a Democrat, and former North Dakota Gov. Ed Schafer, a Republican, have been in the political trenches for years. And they say not only is that kind of old-style, decent conversation possible, its necessary.

The two recently hosted a free talk at Concordia College in Moorhead to encourage people to break out of a cycle of cultural divisions, public outrage and mistrust. They talked with MPR News host Cathy Wurzer as part of our Talking Sense project, which helps Minnesotans have better political conversations.

This conversation has been edited for clarity and style. Click on the audio player for the full interview.

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Schafer: Theres so much political rancor today. When this opportunity came up, it made a lot of sense since Sen. Heitkamp, then Attorney General Heitcamp, and I worked together in the Capitol for the people of North Dakota and focused on getting something done for the people.

Heitkamp: Well, let me tell you what Im seeing, because I spend a lot of time with students. Im currently the director of the Institute of Politics in Chicago. And what I hear from students is they dont want to be involved in politics.

They think its a mean business, they think you have to hate the person on the other side. And my concern is theyve not experienced the kind of relationship that Gov. Schafer and I had when we were both in state government. And Im not saying it was always Kumbaya, but we figured out how to get along and actually have fun on many occasions.

Im hoping we can model that and tell people: You dont have to buy into the rancor, you can conduct yourself differently. And that means that you can run for office, you can engage in public service.

Heitkamp: I think youre always going to have the 20 to 30 percent that are the loudest, and they get the most airtime. Then the people in the middle say, just get your job done. I think that were just listening to people who see the opposition as the enemy, and not as an opponent that needs to be listened to.

Schafer: I think that the difficult thing is to separate that public policy discussion from the political discussions. If you focus on the public policy, its good. If you want to develop something thats best for the people, you have to understand the humaneness of all this.

Its just not someone that youre fighting with over politics theres a real person there. We need to get out of our cubicles, get off of social media. Community is built with a handshake and a hug, and a slap on the back.

We have to bring people together face to face, which then allows you to understand youre both human beings, youre both caring, you both arrive at your conclusions in a good way. And they might be different. But that doesnt mean theyre wrong.

Heitkamp: The advice that I give people when they say, so and so is mad at me, or, this person is my political opponent, and they go, what should I do? I say, go to some event that theyre at and stand next to them. Because its really hard to be that mad at somebody who is right there.

The other advice I would give to young people is: It doesnt have to be that way. Dont get caught up in other peoples ideas of how you should conduct your business. Live your values, and then even if it doesnt work out, if you dont get reelected, you hold your head up high and you figure out another way to be of service.

Schafer: There are many, many people out there who are models of good public servants. The problem is we dont see them. The media focuses on the bad folks and the rancor and the angst.

Heitkamp: There are people like Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, who was behind every major piece of legislation that passed, whether it was CHIPS, whether it was the Inflation Reduction Act. She frustrated a lot of more progressive Democrats, but yet she was in the arena, working to get things done. I dont know that the infrastructure bill would have happened without her.

On the other side, theres a guy named Sen. Todd Young. To Eds point, youve not heard of him. And probably the best example I can give people is Sen. Patty Murray, from Washington. And Sen. Susan Collins literally led the appropriations committee and got almost unanimous support for the 12 funding bills, but that didnt get focused on.

All of the rancor gets focused on. There are people who are doing the work. There are unsung heroes, and I have to say, I would throw Sen. Amy Klobuchar into that mix.

Heitkamp: You love the people in your life, the people who are in your family. Dont let a political belief, for voting for one side or the other, dont let them separate you. And talk less, listen more. Thats always a good piece of advice. My dad used to say, God gave you one mouth and two ears and that you should use them proportionally.

Schafer: We take this stuff much too seriously. You got to have this belief that we have a great system, that its going to work out, that were resilient, that we can have hope out there, that things move forward.

You know, that this is a discussion to have, theres differences of opinion. But you know, its not the most important thing in the history of the world. Focus on your family and your care and your love for each other and have civil good conversations.

For a recording of the event, go to http://www.lorentzsencenter.com.

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A Republican and a Democrat make the case for civility in politics - MPR News

Top Democrat says Johnson in good position to remain Speaker if he stages Ukraine vote – The Hill

The head of the House Democratic Caucus suggested Wednesday that Democratic lawmakers stand ready to rescue Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) from a potential GOP coup  if he ushers Ukraine aid through the lower chamber and on to President Biden’s desk. 

Rep. Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.) stopped short of saying he would vote personally to save Johnson from a motion to vacate resolution. But echoing an earlier message from House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), Aguilar noted a number of Democrats are already on record saying they’d help keep Johnson in power if he stages a vote on the Ukraine package that passed through the Senate in February.

That willingness by Democrats to cross the aisle, Aguilar suggested, should be enough to overcome the number of Republicans who might try to topple Johnson.

“The Speaker needs to put that bill on the floor,” Aguilar said during a press briefing in the Capitol. “You have also heard me say, you have also heard Leader Jeffries say and he has pointed out that it was an observation, not a declaration that we feel that if the Speaker does the right thing that he is in a good position.

“But look, we’ve got to do the right thing. We’ve got to pass these bills. We’ve got to have some sanity under this dome. And that means putting bills on the floor that have 300 votes.”

The comments arrive as Johnson is scrambling for a strategy to move a Ukraine package though the lower chamber, where conservatives in his conference are ardently opposed to sending billions of dollars more to Kyiv. Some of those critics want to secure the U.S. border first. Others want assurances that the costs will be covered by changes elsewhere in the budget, so they don’t add to the debt. And still others, like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), simply oppose the concept of Ukraine aid, saying it would only prolong a war that’s already a lost cause.

Greene has already introduced a resolution to vacate the Speakership, and although she has so far opted not to force a vote on the measure, she’s strongly suggested she’ll do so if Johnson puts a Ukraine bill on the floor. 

Funding Ukraine is probably one of the most egregious things that he can do, Greene told CNN last week.

It’s unclear how many other Republicans would support Greene’s motion if she forces it to the floor.

A number of conservatives are already furious with Johnson for cutting a deal with Biden last month to fund the government. And many are also up in arms over Johnson’s endorsement of legislation to extend the government’s domestic surveillance powers. But no Republican has come out publicly in support of Greene’s vacate resolution.

Aguilar said he doesn’t know of any direct talks between Johnson and Democratic lawmakers over the potential vote a conversation he said is best left between the Speaker and Jeffries. 

“If the Speaker wants to have a conversation with Leader Jeffries about that, that is where the discussion should be had,” Aguilar said. “Members want to see the Speaker do the right thing. House Democratic members want to see the Speaker put this bill on the floor so we can send it to the president’s desk so we can deliver the important aid to Ukraine. 

“That’s what we want done.”

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Top Democrat says Johnson in good position to remain Speaker if he stages Ukraine vote - The Hill