Archive for the ‘Republican’ Category

Mitt Romney booed and called traitor at Utah Republican convention – The Guardian

Mitt Romney was loudly booed at the Utah Republican party convention on Saturday and called a traitor and a communist as he tried to speak.

Arent you embarrassed? the Salt Lake City Tribune reported the Utah senator asking the crowd of 2,100 delegates at the Maverik Center in West Valley City. Im a man who says what he means, and you know I was not a fan of our last presidents character issues.

Romney was the sole Republican to vote to impeach Donald Trump twice for seeking political dirt on opponents from Ukraine and for inciting the deadly insurrection at the Capitol on 6 January, before which Trump told supporters to fight like hell in support of his lie that the presidential election was stolen by Joe Biden.

Six other Republican senators voted to convict Trump in his second impeachment.

You can boo all you like, Romney told a crowd the Tribune said spat insults like so many poison darts.

Ive been a Republican all my life. My dad was the governor of Michigan and I was the Republican nominee for president in 2012.

Romney, who will not face re-election in 2022, was also a governor of Massachusetts and would ordinarily be a member of the GOP establishment.

But the party is firmly in the grip of Trump and his supporters according to a CNN poll this week, 70% of Republicans believe the lie that Biden did not win enough legitimate votes to be president.

At the Utah convention, a motion to censure Romney failed narrowly, by 798 votes to 711. The author of the resolution, Davis county delegate Don Guymon, said Romneys votes to remove Trump from office hurt the constitution and hurt the party.

This was a process driven by Democrats who hated Trump, Guymon told the Associated Press. Romneys vote in the first impeachment emboldened Democrats who continued to harass Trump.

Some in the crowd applauded Romney and after the state party chair, Derek Brown, asked delegates to show respect, the senator ended with a plea to come together in strength and unity.

Emily de Azavedo Brown, a delegate from Salt Lake county, told the AP: If the point of all this is to let Mitt Romney know were displeased with him, trust me, he knows. Lets not turn this into a Trump or no Trump thing. Are we a party of principle or a party of a person?

On Sunday the Maine senator Susan Collins, like Romney a senior figure in the centre of the party, told CNNs State of the Union she was appalled by events in Utah.

Mitt Romney is an outstanding senator who serves his state and our country well, she said. We Republicans need to remember that we are united by fundamental principles we are not a party that is led by just one person.

Collins refused to say who she voted for in the presidential election. Romney has said he did not vote for Trump but not who he voted for instead. He has said that in 2016 he voted for his wife, Ann, rather than Hillary Clinton.

Cindy McCain, the widow of the Arizona senator and 2008 presidential nominee John McCain, also spoke to CNN. She said refusal to accept the result of the 2020 election as in her state, where Republicans are carrying out a controversial audit of votes in the most populous county was just aloof and crazy.

Other speakers at the Utah convention faced dissent, among them governor Spencer Cox. He told a largely maskless crowd he knew some hated him for his Covid-19 mitigation measures but touted other moves such as banning vaccine passports in state government.

Private businesses in Utah can still demand proof of vaccination.

In one of many attacks on Bidens attempts to pass new spending bills on top of the $1.9tn coronavirus relief bill passed in March, Utahs other senator, Mike Lee, said Democrats followed one idea: unquestionable trust in government.

Chris Stewart, a congressman, told the crowd Biden was pursuing an agenda of radical socialism. He also said the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, kind of sucks.

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Mitt Romney booed and called traitor at Utah Republican convention - The Guardian

It’s 2021, but Louisiana Republicans are still fighting over whether slavery is evil – NOLA.com

The chair of the Orleans Parish Republican Executive Committee on Monday condemned statements about the good aspects of slavery by Martha Huckabay, president of the Womens Republican Club of New Orleans and a vocal, far-right conspiracy theorist.

Parish Republican chair Adrian Bruneau denounced Huckabay, who over the weekend defended state Rep. Ray Garofalo, R-Meraux,after the lawmaker suggested thereweregoodaspects to slavery.

These are atrocious, Bruneau told Gambit regarding Huckabay's statements, adding, This is not what we stand for. We dont agree with her stance in fact, we vehemently disagree with her stance.

Huckabay told Gambit on Tuesday evening, "My comment is a series of statements taken out of context. Nobody believes there is anything good about slavery."

But on May 2 she lashed out at state Rep. Stephanie Hilferty, R-New Orleans, after Hilferty correctly pointed out there are no good parts of slavery during consideration of Garofalos legislation to ban teaching critical race theory, which examines systemic racism.

In a rambling Facebook post, Huckabay, whose views often reflect the QAnon movement, claimed Hilferty and other conservative legislators were becoming indoctrinated by Communist beliefs. She also insisted slavery resulted in hard working ethics and love and respect between some enslaved people and slave owners.

In the United Statesand other parts of North America,millions ofAfricanswereraped, tortured andforced into labor. The United States was one of the last Western nations to end the practice during theCivil War. Since thattime,Jim Crow policies and other forms of institutionalized race-based discrimination have persisted in Louisiana and the rest of thecountry.

Huckabay argued Garofalo's words were appropriate and lamented that the Republican-dominated state legislature has been infiltrated with marxisum[sic] and said the topic of slavery is a one-sided leftist trap.

She wrote, Slavery goes all they [sic] way back to biblical times, and if youve read your Bible, you would know that many of the slaves loved their masters, and their masters loved them, and took very good care of them, and their families.

The post captured the attention of lawmakers and political organizations after the Twitter account,@HellOrBywater which frequently tracks Huckabays online activity sharedscreenshotsof it that went viral.

On May 4, Huckabay postedSlavey[sic]is an evil stain on humanity on her Facebook page after Bruneau posted a message condemning her comments.

Bruneau says the official committee stands with Hilferty, and sought to distance his party from Huckabay, saying the conspiracy theorist has zero clout with the GOP.

This lady Id never heard of her; I dont know her. I know there are two Republican womens groups in New Orleans, possibly three. Im not familiar with her group, Bruneau told Gambit.

However, Huckabayis clearly a fixture in Republican circles.Her personalFacebook page and the page for the WRCNO arelitteredwith grip and grin photo op shots with most of the states leading Republicans, including House Minority Whip SteveScaliseand Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry.

Martha Huckabay's Facebook rant

But while those sorts ofpicturesarefairly routine virtually anyone can get in line for a picture with Scalise at a public event, for instance lawmakers and party leaders have clearly made it a point to attend her events, which the name of the organizationnotwithstanding, are typically held in Metairie. TheMetairieCountry Club and DesiVegas Steakhouse which has had itsownproblems with racismin recent months have served as venues.

These events regularly draw Republican elected officials, candidates and party leaders as guest speakers.According to the groups Facebook page, since 2019 guest speakers at WRCNO lunches have includedlosinggubernatorial candidateEddieRispone, Lt. Gov.Billy Nungesser, Secretary of State Kyle Ardoin, state Sen. Kirk Talbot, and Jefferson Parish Judge Scott Schlegel and his wifeLaurie,aswell as representatives for other politicians, including U.S. Sen.Bill Cassidy who has since been denounced by Huckabayas a traitorafter he voted to convict former president Donald Trump during his second impeachment trial.

Nungesser on April 29 was also a guest on her conspiracy talk radio show Liberty or Lockdown." His office did not respond to requests for comment.

Additionally, Huckabay has long been an early adopter of many of the dangerous ideas that have become articles of faith for some of Bruneaus party.

She has encouraged flouting public health guidelinesthroughout theCOVID-19 pandemic, claimedthere has been widespread voter fraud favoring Democrats and that Donald Trump won the 2020 election.She also believes the government is exerting controlby distributingFDA approved coronavirus vaccines, which weregreen-litunder the Trump administration.

Manyof her positions are extreme, even for the modern Republican Party.

In recent weeks shehas alsosuggested White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg are the same person andclaimedGeorge Soros funds Gambit, which she believesemploys nefarious operativesattempting to destroy New Orleans.

Gambit is owned by Dathel and John Georges, who are of no relation to Soros.

This story has been updated to include a follow-up statement from Martha Huckabay.

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It's 2021, but Louisiana Republicans are still fighting over whether slavery is evil - NOLA.com

Letter to the editor: Don’t follow Republican advice on these ballot questions – TribLIVE

Many conservatives feel betrayed by their Republican state representatives for actively championing Act 77 in 2019, prior to covid-19, for legalized no-excuse mail-in ballots, which I believe is a Democratic initiative similar to defunding the police. Our May 18 primary will have four ballot questions. Again, our Republican Legislature wants us to vote yes on all four, yet I advise no to questions 3 and 4:

1. Vote yes to allowing a majority vote to extend or terminate emergency powers.

2. Vote yes to limiting the Pennsylvania governors emergency powers to 21 days.

3. Vote no to amending the Pennsylvania Constitution regarding race and ethnicity. This is redundant to the 14th Amendment for equal treatment and could be used, like Act 77, in ways not spelled out, such as employing and housing illegals. They should have added the word citizen. If our Pennsylvania judiciary can subvert the law once, they can do it again with this back-door sanctuary amendment.

4. Vote no to allowing fire departments and EMS companies with paid personnel to apply for state loans. This could lead to more paid fire departments.

Unfortunately, our Republican representatives have their own agenda and are not representing the best interests of Trump conservatives and cant be trusted. They clearly lack the fortitude to fight like progressives. When in doubt, vote no.

John Ventre

Hempfield

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Letter to the editor: Don't follow Republican advice on these ballot questions - TribLIVE

With budget vote, Republicans will create a $3.4 billion gap that will have to be closed this summer – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MADISON - Wisconsin Republicans will createan initial $3.4billion gap in the statebudget Thursday when theyvote to reject tax increases and forgo additional federal aid.

They will spend the next several weeks balancing the state's two-year spending plan, which they say they will dowithout raising taxes.

The leaders of the Joint Finance Committee last week announced they would strip hundreds of provisions from Democratic Gov. Tony Evers' proposed spending plan. That move will come at a significant cost, according to budget documents.

Much of the financial hit comes from the Republicans' decision not to make more people eligible for the BadgerCare Plus insurance program. Evers' proposalwould net $1.6 billionover two years because the federal government would pay for more of the state's health-care costs if the state gave about 100,000 more people access to BadgerCare Plus.

In addition, Republicans plan to reject Evers' proposals to raise about $1 billionin taxes over two years.

When accounting for those changes and others, Thursday's vote will create a $3.4billion difference between Evers' budget and the starting point for the Republican spending plan, according to figures from the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau.

Because they are taking money out of the budget, Republicans will have to come up with a spending plan that puts less toward schools and other services than what Evers wants.

"The ripple effects of this vote are going to be felton everything we do," saidRep. Evan Goyke, a Democrat who sits on the Joint Finance Committee.

The Republicans have not detailed their plans, but the co-chairmen of the finance committee said they were dropping parts from the budget because Evers loaded it with provisions he knew they opposed.

The governor sent the Legislature an unworkable budget proposal full of pet projects, excessive spending, tax increases and divisive non-fiscal policy. Removing these items from our deliberations on the first day enables us to begin crafting a realistic, responsible state budget that addresses the priorities of the people of Wisconsin,Sen. Howard Marklein of Spring Green and Mark Born of Beaver Dam said in a statement.

Thursday's vote will kick off weeks of meetings on the budget. Legislators plan to pass their final version of the budget by the end of June. Evers can then reshape it using his line-item veto powers.

Evers' budget would raise taxeson capital gains and on the income of manufacturers. It would also boost state revenue by legalizing and taxing recreational marijuana an idea Republican leaders oppose.

Republicans are removing numerous other parts of Evers' budget, including ones that would:

ContactPatrick Marley at patrick.marley@jrn.com. Followhim on Twitter at @patrickdmarley.

Our subscribers make this reporting possible. Please consider supporting local journalism by subscribing to the Journal Sentinel at jsonline.com/deal.

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With budget vote, Republicans will create a $3.4 billion gap that will have to be closed this summer - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Joe Biden, the Republicans, and Kids Stuff – The New Yorker

Superheroes Are Everywhere, a childrens book celebrating ordinary people, by Vice-President Kamala Harris, has landed, like so many things in American politics today, in the middle of a very childish controversy. It began when residents of Long Beach, California, organized a toy-and-book drive for unaccompanied child immigrants being housed in a convention center there. Someone donated a copy of Harriss book, and a journalist touring the facility saw it on a cot and took a picture of it. Partisan mayhem ensued, with headlines in the New York Post and on Fox News and complaints from sundry Republicans about an imaginary scheme to put a copy in a welcome kit for every immigrant, as if it were the Little Red Book, or an enrollment brochure for the Democratic Party. Was Harris paid for these books? Is she profiting from Bidens border crisis? Ronna McDaniel, the chair of the Republican National Committee, asked on Twitter.

Such fantastical pettiness is not confined to the immigration debate. As the new Administration enters its next hundred days, children are poised to be at the forefront of President Joe Bidens agenda. The address that he delivered to a joint session of Congress last Wednesday night included the American Families Plan, a set of transformative programs, amounting to almost two trillion dollars, largely directed at children. With that move, Biden launched his next major legislative fight. In the months to come, the child wars are likely to grow more intense and, in some quarters, more detached from reality.

Bidens proposals include one that would make pre-kindergarten programs for three- and four-year-olds universally available. You know who else liked universal day care, Senator Marsha Blackburn tweeted, before the speech was over. She linked to a Times story from 1974 about state-run nurseries in what was then the Soviet Union. Of course, our Western European NATO allies tend to like universal pre-K, too, and, in any event, nobody would force parents here to take advantage of the option. The question is not whether people will be allowed to raise their children as they wish, rather than handing them over to the commissars, but whether the U.S. will invest in children in the same way that other wealthy countries have.

The pandemic has made this a brutally hard year for American children, in large part because their situation was already precarious. One in every six children lives below the federal poverty level, which is an income of $27,501 for a family of four. For Black children, the rate is thirty per cent; for Latinx children, twenty-four per cent, according to the Childrens Defense Fund. (For adults, the rate is just under eleven per cent.) Biden said that his proposal to extend and increase the pandemic-relief child-tax credit to thirty-six hundred dollars for each child younger than six, and three thousand dollars for each child aged six to seventeen, would help more than sixty-five million children and help cut child poverty in half. Big gains like that are possible in a single swoop precisely because the numbers are so bad to begin with.

Children in this country are, in many respects, the focal point in a nexus of poverty. A lack of affordable, high-quality day care keeps women out of the workforce, and many people in the child-care field are also low-wage earners. The Biden plan would insure a fifteen-dollar-per-hour minimum wage for employees of the pre-K programs it envisions. Those programs would be developed in partnership with the states, a detail that does not jibe with Blackburns fears or with House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthys warning, after the speech, that Biden wants to control your life. (McCarthy continued, Hes going to control how much meat you can eata reference to an invented claim that Biden will limit Americans to one hamburger a month.) Similarly, Senator Tim Scott, in the official Republican response to the address, complained that Biden wanted to put Washington even more in the middle of your lifefrom the cradle to college.

Biden will have to act quickly. The Democrats control Congress, but just barely, and the task of holding on to the House in the midterm elections became harder, last week, after the reapportionment of seats following the 2020 census. (New York and Pennsylvania each lost a seat; Texas gained two, and Florida one.) Turning the plan into legislation that can pass Congress will require a debate among Democrats about priorities; Biden also has a two-trillion-dollar infrastructure package to get through. Meanwhile, the implications of the conservative shift of the Supreme Court are becoming increasingly clear. Last month, the Court made it easier to sentence children to life without parole, meaning that they could die in prison. (Brett Kavanaugh wrote the 63 decision; Sonya Sotomayor wrote an angry dissent.) Like the discussion around young migrants, that decision alternately reflects a distorted fear of children and an indifference to them. The ruling may also be a harbinger of the Courts stance should elements of the American Families Plan appear before it, as was the case with Obamacare.

The Biden plan, in fact, includes tax credits to help reduce the cost of Obamacare premiums (although not an expansion of Medicare, which Senator Bernie Sanders had sought). There is also an investment of two hundred and twenty-five billion dollars, in the next decade, to build a program that provides twelve weeks of parental and family leave. Indeed, the plan addresses the problems facing children and families from so many directionsa hundred billion dollars to guarantee two years of community college; eighty billion dollars for Pell Grants; forty-five billion dollars to expand school-based anti-hunger programsthat it is hard for Republicans to protest that, while they would like to do something for children, that something isnt in this plan. So they are left with disingenuous attacks and warnings about socialism.

The easy target for Republicans (and some moderate Democrats) is the new taxes that will be needed to pay for the plan, which would fall most heavily on the wealthiest Americans. Its a lot. Its a lot, Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat whose vote is crucial, told CNN, speaking of the cost. Its a lot thats worth fighting for. The challenge for the Biden Administration will be keeping the true reality of childrens lives at the center of the fight. Superheroes arent everywhere in Washington.

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Joe Biden, the Republicans, and Kids Stuff - The New Yorker