Archive for the ‘Rand Paul’ Category

Trump threatens Govt shutdown | Catch News

United States (US) President Donald Trump on Sunday said he was willing to shut down the government if the promises made by the Congress to fund his border wall were not fulfilled by September.

"I would be willing to 'shut down' government if the Democrats do not give us the votes for Border Security, which includes the Wall! Must get rid of Lottery, Catch & Release etc. and finally go to system of Immigration based on MERIT! We need great people coming into our Country!" Trump tweeted.

This comes in the light of similar threats that Trump has issued in the past, with him saying in March that he would be open to "closing up the country for a while" if he was not to get his wall, the CNN reported.

"They don't want the wall. But we're going to get the wall, even if we have to think about closing up the country for a while," Trump said.

Also, in February, Trump said that he'd "love to see a shutdown" if the government did not focus on immigration.

If a shutdown were to happen, it would be the third such instance in 2018, after a shutdown in January when the Trump Administration and Congressional Republicans wrestled with Democrats over protection for 'Dreamers', a group of young immigrants.

Another shutdown happened when Kentucky's Republican Senator Rand Paul impeded a spending vote.

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Trump threatens Govt shutdown | Catch News

Rand Paul shows stubborn streak in stampede over Trump and …

Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky is taking a load of grief for being one of the few Republicans standing up for President Donald Trump over that steaming mess in Helsinki.

Now even Trump doesnt stand up for Trump, lamely walking back his controversial comments after taking a merciless, and deserved, whipping in the media.

As Trump stood next to Putin at the summit in Helsinki, reporters asked him if Russia had meddled in the 2016 election. American intelligence services and Congress have determined that yes, the Russians meddled.

On Monday in Helsinki, Trump said he did not see why Russia would have meddled. On Tuesday, he offered this pathetic excuse.

I said would instead of wouldnt, Trump said in a failed attempt at sincerity, like when he was pretending to care about corrupt onetime Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich on The Celebrity Apprentice.

Yet, even during the Trump beatdown, Paul remained undaunted in supporting Trump for reaching out to Russia.

HUPPKE: Donald Trump thinks you're very, very stupid

I think that it is a good idea to have engagement, Paul told CNN. And I think that what is lost in this is that I think there's a bit of Trump Derangement Syndrome.

Paul noted similarities with how President Barack Obama tried to push a reset button with Russia early in his first administration in an effort toward better relations with Russia. And I think it's lost on people that they're a nuclear power. They have influence in Syria. They're in close proximity to the troops in Syria. They are close to the peninsula of North Korea and may have some influence that could help us there, Paul said.

Putins Russian oligarchs are being squeezed by U.S.-backed economic sanctions. That puts pressure on Putin. A worried bear is a dangerous bear, especially when it has a nuclear arsenal.

Paul stubbornly defied Trumps angriest critics, from those on the far left to former leaders of the so-called intelligence community and those of the Republican establishment who want to expand NATO and push that bear around. Paul dismissed them simply as people who hate the president.

I disagree with Paul on one key point.

Trumps public equivocation in Helsinki was disgusting and obsequious. It was also shocking, coming from a man who built his public persona on being unequivocal.

CHAPMAN: Trump is on Putin's side, not America's

While the left suffers Trump Derangement Syndrome, the Trumpian right is infected too, deranged in believing Trump plays 3-D chess while the rest of the world plays checkers.

Stop it. Trump humiliated himself. Stop defending it.

But Rand Pauls stubbornness on Russia also reminded me why I wanted him to win the Republican presidential primary. I hoped Paul would defeat the war-party neo-con enablers whove led us into needless, tragic and costly wars.

The GOP establishment loathed Paul, painting him as a dangerous isolationist. They were amused by Trump at first, thinking they could use Trump to flatten the field and insert Jeb Bush. They were wrong, as they were about Iraq.

And by the time they figured things out, Trump, the orange vulgarian, was at their establishments gates.

The thing about Paul is that he hates being stampeded. And thats whats happening here, with Trump and Russia, a media/political stampede.

Putin would skin you alive to keep power. The ruthless former KGB thug is the author of misery from Ukraine to Syria. His agents allegedly hacked Democratic National Committee servers to hurt Hillary Clintons campaign.

But Clinton didnt lose the election because of the Russians. She lost because she was a lousy candidate.

Trumps sin is that he defies the foreign policy establishment and neo-cons who dangerously seek to expand NATO, pushing confrontation with Russia. Thats heretical.

EDITORIAL: Trumps Putin pivot: Following a blunder, a dubious disavowal

With so many disparate voices shrieking that Trump is a traitor, Paul let fly his stubborn streak.

Ive said this before, and Ill say it again, Paul told CNN. Any country that can spy, does, and any country that can meddle in foreign elections, does. All countries are doing this. But weve elevated this to a higher degree, and we have made this all about the sour grapes of Hillary Clinton losing the election and it's all about partisan politics now. This is truly the Trump Derangement Syndrome that motivates all of this.

Helsinki was a gift to the presidents domestic political enemies, among Republicans and on the left, sending a thrill up and down their legs.

Is there good reason to critique master intriguers such as former CIA boss John Brennan, a bad actor, and onetime National Intelligence Director James Clapper, who lied to Congress about surveillance of the American people? Yes.

But Helsinki wasnt the place to do it. In Trump world, its all about Trump, and all about insisting he had nothing to do with the Russians in 2016, all about defending himself from the charge that his presidency was illegitimate.

In Helsinki, his task was to put the nation first. He put his wounded ego first.

And still, there is that stubborn Rand Paul.

I think people have gotten over top on this and lost the big picture. The big picture is that we should be engaged with Russia, Paul said. We have serious conflicts in various parts of the globe. It would be a mistake not to have open lines of communication with them to make sure that we dont accidentally stumble into war.

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Rand Paul shows stubborn streak in stampede over Trump and ...

Rand Paul says he ‘absolutely’ stands by Trump after …

Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky and CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer. CNN

While President Donald Trump's statements on Russia at a joint press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin were widely condemned by a group of bipartisan lawmakers, at least one US senator took a stand and said he was "absolutely" with the president.

"I think engagement with our adversaries, conversations with our adversaries, is a good idea," Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky said during an interview with CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer. "Even in the height of the Cold War, I think it was a good thing that [President John F. Kennedy] had a direct line to [Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev]."

Paul then went beyond backing Trump's comments and blamed partisan leanings for the ongoing outrage.

"I think there is a bit of Trump-derangement syndrome," Paul said. "I think there are people who hate the president so much that this could've easily been President Obama early in his first administration setting the reset button and trying to have better relations with Russia."

Paul added that Russia was a valuable intelligence asset and could be helpful in establishing diplomatic relations with other adversaries, such as North Korea.

"All those things are good," Paul said. "But because people hate Trump so much, all of that's being lost."

Paul's interview with Blitzer became testy at times, as the CNN anchor interjected with a few follow-up questions.

"If you're going to interrupt me on every question, Wolf, we can't really have an interview," Paul said. "If you want to have an interview, you got to let me answer the question."

"You're usually better than this ... at doing an interview."

The response comes shortly after Trump and Putin conducted their first summit in Helsinki, Finland on Monday. During a joint press conference with Putin, Trump refused to back the US intelligence community's assessment on Russia and railed against the FBI and his political opponents.

While referring to Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, Trump indicated he had no reason to believe Russia had meddled with the presidential election: "My people came to me Dan Coats came to me, some others they said they think it's Russia. I have President Putin. He just said it's not Russia. I will say this: I don't see any reason why it would be."

The meeting was held just three days after special counsel Robert Mueller indicted a dozen Russian intelligence officers who were suspected of interfering in the 2016 US presidential election.

Following Trump's remarks at the press conference, several Republican lawmakers, including Sen. John McCain of Arizona, criticized what they believed was "one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory."

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Rand Paul says he 'absolutely' stands by Trump after ...

Rand Paul: The Only Person We Know Colluded With The …

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) says the only person whomhe and others actually know colluded with the Russians is former Democrat presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

Rand was on Fox News Wednesday morning clarifying his stance on Russias election meddling and the intelligence community.

President Trump faced broad outrage over comments he made during the Helsinki, Finland, summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin Monday. Trump was criticized for not being more forceful with the Russian leader and for not backing up U.S. intelligence findings of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. Trump clarified his comments in a short statement at the White House on Tuesday.

When asked to explain the controversy, Rand said that the president thinks the Muller investigation is tainted by partisan Democrats that also colluded with Russia.

The president sees the Mueller investigation. He sees all these accusations from partisan Democrats, Hillary Clinton, saying Oh, he colluded with the Russians, Rand said. The only people who we actually know colluded with the Russians were Hillary Clinton who paid a British agent who paid Russians for information for the dossier.

Rand was referring to the infamous unverified Steele dossier compiled by Fusion GPS and paid for by the Clinton campaign.

[Trump] feels like the intelligence community cooked up a political and partisan investigation,Rand continued, but also, part of the Mueller investigation is something that should have investigated, and that is: Who hacked into Hillary Clintons emails?

Rand concluded, There is part of the Mueller investigation that is legitimate and part of it that is a partisan attack on the president.

Rand went on to say that he lost faith in the intelligence community after the NSA spying and data collection scandal during the Obama years.

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Rand Paul breaks with Republicans as he doubts Trump …

Breaking with many Republican colleagues, the Kentucky senator Rand Paul has revealed his concern over Donald Trumps nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to replace Anthony Kennedy on the supreme court.

Paul told Fox and Friends on Sunday he was worried Kavanaugh, a judge on the DC circuit court of appeals, could cancel out supreme court justice Neil Gorsuchs vote on fourth amendment cases and allow the federal government to collect the phone records of millions of Americans.

Kavanaughs confirmation rests on a knife edge. Republicans hold a 51-49 advantage in the Senate. They need a simple majority or a tie broken by Vice-President Mike Pence to confirm Kavanaugh as Trumps second supreme court pick, after Gorsuch.

With John McCain absent through illness and Democrats promising all-out opposition to a pick that could tilt the court to the conservatives for a generation, public attention has focused on three Democrats facing re-election in Republican states and two moderate GOP senators. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska are considered possible opponents of Kavanaugh, based on his position on abortion rights.

Democrats may not put too much faith in Paul as an ally. In March, the Kentucky senator said he would do whatever it takes to block the approval of Mike Pompeo as secretary of state, over the former congressmans views on the Iraq war and interventionist foreign policy. In April, Paul flipped and approved the nomination.

Furthermore, in 2016 Paul called Trump a delusional narcissist and an orange-faced windbag and said a speck of dirt is way more qualified to be president. Since Trump won the White House, Paul has become a presidential golf partner.

Immediately after Trump nominated Kavanaugh, Paul, who often positions himself as a civil liberties champion, released a statement in which he pledged to review the judges record and keep an open mind.

On Sunday, he drew attention to a 2015 opinion regarding NSA actions in which Kavanaugh wrote that sometimes the special needs of law enforcement outweighs the intrusion on individual liberty.

Im undecided but Im trying weigh this from the perspective of a Clinton nominee v a Trump nominee, Paul said. I am worried though, and perhaps disappointed, that Kavanaugh will cancel out Gorsuchs vote on the fourth amendment.

Paul warned of the consequences of damaging the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, in modern terms including the collection of phone records.

He said: Basically Kavanaugh ruled he was just fine with it and basically national security required it. I disagree completely if we give up our liberty for security then we could end up with neither, neither liberty nor security.

Asked if he could support Kavanaugh, Paul said: Basically there are 10 amendments listed in the bill of rights, so were down one. So lets see how he does on the other nine.

The senator said he would continue to review Kavanaughs record and would be willing to meet him and have a frank discussion.

He said: I dont think anyone in America believes that when you use a cellphone company, or you use Visa or use a bank, that youve given up your right to privacy. But hopefully were going to get an open, long and far-ranging conversation about this.

Neither Collins nor Murkowski has signalled their opposition to Trumps pick. Utah senator Orrin Hatch, a senior member of the judiciary committee, has predicted both will support it.

I cant speak for them, but Im just pretty sure theyll be there, Hatch told the Hill. [Kavanaughs] a good guy. Theres nothing controversial about him other than hes a Republican and a conservative.

Collins and Murkowski are facing pressure from pro-choice groups, such as Naral Pro-Choice America and Protect Our Care. On Thursday, Collins said that pressure would not have any effect on her vote.

Im going to make my own decision, as I always have, she told reporters. If the Democrats think the pressure campaign that they unleashed in Maine, including $3m for the television, radio and online ads is going to have an impact on me, theyre sorely mistaken. It would be better if they put that money to better use.

She described Kavanaughs credentials as impressive.

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