Archive for the ‘Republican’ Category

Republican chaos escalates – The Missoulian

Its hard to believe that, given majority control of both chambers of Congress, the presidency and the Supreme Court and all the statewide offices in Montana except two the Republican Party still cant enact its agenda. But the reality is theyre in total chaos characterized by savage in-fighting, crazy decisions, and being so distracted they appear incapable of even maintaining the state and nation, let alone making us great again.

President Trump is rattling the world with his threats of unleashing fire and fury on North Korea a move that would result in the deaths of millions of people throughout the region and radioactive poisoning of the air and water for the rest of the planet.

Apparently our science-challenged president cant comprehend that we all share and breathe the same atmosphere and there is no border wall that will keep radiation released by destroying North Koreas nuclear facilities from American shores and skies. Perhaps, cossetted in one of his towers, he never heard of the radiation that has already traveled to West Coast from Japans Fukushima nuclear reactor meltdown. And that was just one reactor. If our unhinged president actually launches his threatened attack on North Korea, it will release so much radiation from destroyed nuclear reactors, bombs and stockpiles, it will dwarf the damage done by Fukushima.

Of course his locked and loaded military threats serve to provide a dramatic diversion from the ongoing Russia investigations of Trump, his family, friends and political appointees. But diversions are merely sideshows to the very real and serious business of running a nation with more than 325 million people, meeting their most pressing needs, and assuring a brighter future for them, their children and grandchildren.

But the Republicans will have their backs against the wall when Congress returns from its August recess, since it will face a daunting series of challenges including raising the debt ceiling and hammering out a budget in about two weeks before the nation risks default. If that wasnt bad enough, the U.S. Postal Service announced late last week it would not be able to come up with $6.9 billion less than four days worth of military spending by October to pay for future retiree health and pension benefits as required by law and may have to disrupt day-to-day mail delivery. But apparently while Trump is busy whacking Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell about the head and shoulders and suggesting he retire, issues like delivering the mail take a back seat to the ever more heated rhetoric pouring out of the White House these days.

Closer to home, Montana has its own unhinged Republican in Secretary of State Corey Stapleton, who continues to insist theres massive voter fraud here. Meanwhile, hes also claiming theres some threatening connection between states that have legalized recreational marijuana and mail-in ballots, saying in February: If you look at the three states that have done it, you can see that populism and direct democracy at its best, all three states, Oregon, Washington, and Colorado, they do all mail-in ballots and theyre all-marijuana-all-the-time states too. Is that what you want? Because thats what youre going to get. Really? And here we thought we were just mailing in our votes.

If this is the best Republicans can do, theyre going to have a very tough time come mid-term elections next year. Reckless threats, fantasy voter fraud and a complete lack of achievement isnt governance its incompetence, plain and simple, and to their peril a majority of Americans now recognize it for exactly that.

George Ochenski's column appears each Monday on the Missoulian's Opinion page. He can be reached by email at oped@missoulian.com.

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Republican chaos escalates - The Missoulian

GEORGE WILL: ‘Republican Gothic’ in Alabama primary – Tuscaloosa News

George Will | Syndicated Columnist

Southern Gothic is a literary genre and, occasionally, a political style that, like the genre, blends strangeness and irony. Consider the current primary campaign to pick the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate seat in Alabama vacated by Jeff Sessions. It illuminates, however, not a regional peculiarity but a national perversity, that of the Republican Party.

In 1985, Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III was nominated for a federal judgeship. Democrats blocked him because they considered him racially "insensitive." In 1996, he got even by getting elected to the Senate. Twenty years later, he was the first senator to endorse Donald Trump, who carried Alabama by 27.7 points. Sessions, the most beloved Alabaman who is not a football coach, became attorney general for Trump, who soon began denouncing Sessions as "beleaguered," which Sessions was because Trump was ridiculing him as "weak" because he followed Justice Department policy in recusing himself from the investigation of Russian involvement in Trump's election.

On Tuesday, Alabama's bewildered and conflicted Republicans will begin picking a Senate nominee. (If no one achieves 50 percent, there will be a Sept. 26 runoff between the top two.) Of the nine candidates, only three matter Luther Strange, Roy Moore and Rep. Mo Brooks.

Strange was Alabama's attorney general until he was appointed by then-Gov. Robert Bentley to Sessions' seat. Bentley subsequently resigned in the wake of several scandals that Strange's office was investigating or so Strange's successor as attorney general suggests when Bentley appointed him. The state Ethics Commission, which had scheduled an Aug. 2 hearing into charges of campaign finance violations by Strange, recently postponed the hearing until Wednesday, the day after the first round of voting.

Twice Roy Moore has been removed as chief justice of the state Supreme Court. In 2003, removal was for defiance of the U.S. Supreme Court regarding religious displays in government buildings. Re-elected, he was suspended last year for defiance of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision regarding same-sex marriages.

Yet Brooks is the focus of ferocious attacks on behalf of Strange, who ignores Moore. The attacks are financed by a Washington-based PAC aligned with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. This Washington Republican establishment strenuously tried but fortunately failed to defeat now-Sens. Marco Rubio and Ben Sasse, of Florida and Nebraska respectively, in their 2010 and 2014 primaries. (The Rubio opponent the PAC favored is now a Democratic congressman.)

The current attacks stress some anti-Trump statements Brooks made while chairman of Ted Cruz's 2016 Alabama campaign. For example, Brooks criticized Trump's "serial adultery," about which Trump has boasted. The PAC identifies Brooks, a conservative stalwart of the House Freedom Caucus, as an ally of Nancy Pelosi and Elizabeth Warren. Another ad uses Brooks' support for Congress replacing the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force with an updated one, and his opposition to interventions in Libya and Syria, to suggest that Brooks supports the Islamic State.

Brooks contributed financially to Trump's general-election effort, and has named his campaign bus the "Drain the Swamp Express." He says he supports Trump's "agenda," including potentially its most consequential item ending Senate filibuster rules that enable 41 senators to stymie 59. Strange sides with McConnell against Trump in supporting current rules. Yet the PAC's theme is that Brooks' support of Trump is insufficiently ardent. Such ardor is becoming the party's sovereign litmus test.

In one recent poll, the three candidates are polling in the 20s, and Moore is leading. A runoff seems certain, and if Moore is in it and wins, a Democrat could claim the Dec. 12 general election.

"Anything that comes out of the South," said writer Flannery O'Connor, a sometime exemplar of Southern Gothic, "is going to be called grotesque by the Northern reader, unless it is grotesque, in which case it is going to be called realistic." But, realistically, Alabama's primary says more about Republicans than about this region. A Michigan poll shows rocker-cum-rapper Kid Rock a strong potential Republican Senate candidate against incumbent Debbie Stabenow. Rock says Democrats are "shattin' in their pantaloons" because if he runs it will be "game on mthrfkrs."

Is this Northern Gothic? No, it is Republican Gothic, the grotesque becoming normal in a national party whose dishonest and, one hopes, futile assault on Brooks is shredding the remnants of its dignity.

George Will's email address is georgewill@washpost.com.

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GEORGE WILL: 'Republican Gothic' in Alabama primary - Tuscaloosa News

This Is the Bleakest Moment for America in My Lifetime – Esquire.com

Anyone who was at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland saw this coming. Heidi Cruz was reportedly physically threatened inside the convention hall. The frisson of danger that ran through Quicken Loans Arena was palpable and very, very real. Anyone who was at the Inauguration saw this coming. The address summoned up the desolate, witch-thickened wasteland he'd been handed. He had a memorable phrase for it.

American Carnage.

It came, finallyAmerican Carnage, that ison the streets and sidewalks of Thomas Jefferson's college town. He couldn't call it by its name. He couldn't heal the country because he'd hidden himself in its wounds.

As horrifying as the video of the murderous automobile was, there was another image from Charlottesville that shook me even more deeply. At some point in the long and bloody afternoon, a phalanx of local militia wannabes took up posts around Emancipation Park. They were dressed like Croatian guerrillas and they carried formidable firearms. As far as I know, they didn't do anything worth noting, but they were standing there as heralds to a very bleak future.

We now know what the reaction will be if the institutions of government, and the people in them, get so sickened by this administration that they act to rid the country of it. Is there any doubt that a president* who, after the events of this weekend, can't even see fit to rid himself of the fascists around him, including the ludicrous Dr. Sebastian Gorka, Ph.D., wouldn't balk at encouraging paranoid violence as a means of self-preservation? Is there any doubt that a president* who could not even muster the gumption or the outrage to criticize Nazis for what they are wouldn't blink at bringing the temple down on his own head either out of pure childish pique, or because he doesn't know any other way?

Getty

Except for himself and (possibly) his family, there is nothing this president* cares enough about to keep from destroying it if he thinks he has to do so. And, if he thinks he has to do it, he will use whatever tools are at hand, because why wouldn't he? Nobody in the party he purportedly leads has shown any willingness to do anything more than moan about how Troubled they are at what he's doing. And a lot of what his administration is doing comes from the same place in our history out of which James Fields, Jr. and his automobile came barreling in the summer sunshine of a Saturday afternoon. The administration still employs Kris Kobach for the purpose of suppressing minority voters. The administration is still in court defending the rights of oppressed white college applicants. Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III is still the attorney general, and a lot of people are trying to get the inside voice to speak again. Somebody never stopped whistling Dixie.

I can't remember a bleaker time in this country's history. The most perilous moments of the Cold War were frightening but, by and large, we were all in it together. The Vietnam period was angry and divisive but there was a central focus to all the rage, an ill-conceived and immoral foreign adventure that even its most wrathful opponents knew had to end sometime. But the centrifugal forces seem stronger and more mysterious this time. They seem to be coming from too many different directions and they seem to have a number of obscure and distant sources. Our sense of being a self-governing nation is being pulled apart. Our concept of a political commonwealth is unmoored and floating. Nothing is solid. Everything is fluid, and everything ought not to be. Not like this. Not in the 21st century. We settled some things in the last century that should have been settled for good.

I can't remember a bleaker time in this country's history.

Back in 1789, Thomas Jefferson, who founded a university in Charlottesville, engaged with James Madison on the subject of the popular basis of political authority. Famously, Jefferson wrote that:

"As the earth belongs to the living, not to the dead, a living generation can bind itself only: In every society the will of the majority binds the whole: According to the laws of mortality, a majority of those ripe at any moment for the exercise of their will do not live beyond nineteen years: To that term then is limited the validity of every act of the Society: Nor within that limitation, can any declaration of the public will be valid which is not express."

Madison, in reply, tried in his usual way to talk Jefferson gently down from his high horse and back to the business of governing here on planet Earth.

However applicable in Theory the doctrine may be to a Constitution, in [sic] seems liable in practice to some very powerful objections. Would not a Government so often revised become too mutable to retain those prejudices in its favor which antiquity inspires, and which are perhaps a salutary aid to the most rational Government in the most enlightened age? Would not such a periodical revision engender pernicious factions that might not otherwise come into existence? Would not, in fine, a Government depending for its existence beyond a fixed date, on some positive and authentic intervention of the Society itself, be too subject to the casualty and consequences of an actual interregnum? If the earth be the gift of nature to the living their title can extend to the earth in its natural State only. The improvements made by the dead form a charge against the living who take the benefit of them. This charge can no otherwise be satisfyed than by executing the will of the dead accompanying the improvements.

Yeah, I know, just a couple of slaveowners talking there. But the point remains important. Like the law, democracy must be stable, but must not stand still. Some things must abide, beyond the power of equivocators, thugs, and misbegotten presidents, beyond the influence of inconstant political drama. Some changes must change and, once change occurs, it, too, must abide. It must become permanent, and not subject to periodic revisions engendered by pernicious factions. Like Nazis, I guess.

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Can Jeff Flake survive the role of chief Republican antagonist to Trump? – Washington Post

PRESCOTT, Ariz. Over two months, Sen. Jeff Flake has dodged bullets on a baseball field, buried his elderly father and watched one of his political mentors, Sen. John McCain, battle terminal brain cancer.

And that was all before he published a book that doubles down on his criticisms of President Trump, which in less than two weeks since its release has once again put him at odds with members of his own party.

The best-selling book may make Flake (Ariz.) the most high-profile Republican casualty of the Trump era. Or, he may prove that embracing ones core principles can still be appealing to voters.

He was already facing a primary challenge from a nationalist who campaigns with sharp-edged, Trump-style bombast when his party launched a revolt against his 160-page critique on the president. On Friday, a Democratic congresswoman who has a sizable campaign war chest also signaled that she is likely to run against Flake.

For now, he is laughing off his newfound challenges.

Its been quite a summer, it really has, he said after meeting with business executives here, explaining later, We knew from the beginning that wed have a tough primary, wed have a tough general election.

Confronted with the challenge, Flake added, You just do it.

That approach helps explain his new book, Conscience of a Conservative: A Rejection of Destructive Politics and a Return to Principle. Not even his closest political advisers knew that hed been working on the book for more than a year. After its Aug. 1 release, the book quickly jumped on to the New York Times bestseller list although a far funnier, less serious tome by a colleague, Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.), currently outranks him.

Page after page, Flake lobs strong broadsides against Trump, like how he wooed voters with easy answers to hard questions, sweetened by free stuff basically alate-night infomercial that wasfree of significant thought.

Flake became heartsick, he said, as Republicans embraced Trump. Now, theresmore nastiness and dysfunction in the elections wake, he writes.

But the challenges Flake faced in recent months helped temper some of that nastiness and dysfunction, at least temporarily.

In mid-June, Flake was on the baseball field in Alexandria, Va., when House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) was shot. After ducking out of the line of fire, Flake ran onto the field to help treat a wounded congressional aide and Scalise.Congress quickly resumed its duties after the shooting, and Flake has taken time to reflect on what happened.

When the volley of shots rang out, I remember turning to the dugout and seeing where I had to run and bullets hitting the gravel, he said. And I just remember for some reason the thought just seemed to last awhile but:Why?Us?Here? It just seemed so incongruent, and I still have a hard time understanding how somebody can look out at a bunch of middle-aged men playing baseball and see the enemy.

Flake acknowledged the irony of being the target of a political assassination attempt while he was putting the finishing touches on a book that conveys his worry about how the coarse nature of modern politics could spark violence.

Its just its just got to stop, he said.

Less than two weeks after the shooting and just after his book went to print Flakes 85-year-old father died, and the Arizonans absence further stalled the Senates consideration of a GOP health-care overhaul plan. Without Flake, it was impossible for Republicans to hold a procedural vote to advance the bill.

Flake quickly returned to Washington, but then another life event interrupted the health-care debate the unexpected cancer diagnosis of McCain, who eventually derailed the bill by blocking further consideration of it. In the final minutes before McCains dramatic late-night vote against the measure, Flake tried one last time on the Senate floor to persuade his senior colleague to support the bill.

It didnt work and then Flake released his book.

Now, the most partisan of Arizona Republicans believe that Flake despite supporting the Republican effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act and supporting Trumps judicial and Cabinet nominees is among those most responsible for blocking Trumps legislative agenda. They dont like that he supported a bipartisan immigration plan in 2013, flew to Cuba at President Barack Obamas request to help relaunch diplomatic relations in 2014 and supports global trade pacts such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

The Flake model is you have to be conservative every six years, saidConstantin Querard, a conservative Republican campaign consultant based in Phoenix who does not support Flake.

What is unusual from the break in his normal behavior is that this time, instead of campaigning as a conservative that conservatives would recognize, hes chosen to redefine it and tell all the conservatives that theyre wrong and not really conservatives and that hes not only a conservative but hes going to teach us what conservatism is, Querard said. And he just doesnt have any credibility among the grass roots to attempt that.

Thats why Kelli Ward believes she has a chance to defeat Flake. An osteopathic physician and former state lawmaker, Ward tried and failed to defeat McCain in a primary two years ago by making his age an issue. This time, she will use Flakes dislike of Trump against him in a state that supported the president last year by 3.5 points.

Ward is unapologetically strident in her approach, embracing the tone and temperament that Flake repeatedly abhors in his book and describes as a shatter politics. She recently sent a fundraisingletter to supporters with envelopes emblazoned with the widely rebuked image of comedian Kathy Griffin posing with what appears to be Trumps severed head.

Inside the envelope, Ward wrote that she used the image because, its important to see what were up against.

In an interview, Ward said that Flakes national television interviews to promote the book are helping her. Every time hes on, Im gaining money and manpower.

While she won nearly 40 percent of the primary electorate in 2016, Ward says her support will grow this year because of Flakes decision to lash out at Trump. Much of her financial support comes from out of state, she said, because Republican voterswant somebody that is strong with a backbone, with a brain who will go do the job.

Did she mean to suggest that Flake has no backbone or brain?

You said it, Ward said. I dont think that Jeff Flake has represented his values dont align with those of his constituents.

Trump has vowed that Flake will lose his reelection fight next year, and some of his allies are falling in line behind Ward. On Friday, she hired consultantsEric Beach and Brent Lowder, who in 2016 ran the Great America PAC, which spent nearly $30 million to back Trump. And a super PAC launched to support her bid recently picked up a $300,000 donation fromRobert Mercer, the secretive billionaire who supported Trumps campaign.

But Ryan ODaniel, who managed McCains 2016 reelection campaign, said that Flake faces a political dynamic similar to the one that McCain faced two years ago. Despite Wards concerns, Flake is likely to earn the support of national conservative groups because of his solid conservative voting record, he said.

Hes always fought against earmarks and for smaller government, so its going to be very hard for anyone to out-conservative Jeff Flake in this primary, ODaniel said. Especially somebody who doesnt have the positive name ID, infrastructure or money.

Democrats, meanwhile, might have caught a break in their bid to unseat Flake. On Friday, Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, who represents a Phoenix-area district, said in a statement that she is seriously considering entering the race, and several Democrats now think she is all but certain to run.

Despite coming up short in statewide races since 2010, Democratic leaders think that Sinemas moderate voting record and $3million campaign war chest can help them capitalize on the growing anti-Trump and anti-Washington sentiment among voters.

As he travels the state this month, Flake is eager to remind voters about his book and that despite its content, he does occasionally agree with Trump.

I havent always agreed with this administration. Theres a book out there, he said during the meeting with business leaders. He explained that hesmore than pleased with how the Trump administration is handling regulatory issues and how the Environmental Protection Agency is now working to ease Obama-era federal oversight of western lands.

In an interview afterward, Flake noted that after being elected to the House in 2000, he opposed George W. Bushs No Child Left Behind education bill and his Medicare prescription-drug benefit plan. But I was with him on other things.

The situation with Trump is the same, he said. You shouldnt be a rubber stamp. I think thats what Arizona voters expect of me.

Or, as Flake writes in his book,We must be willing to risk our careers to save our principles.

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Can Jeff Flake survive the role of chief Republican antagonist to Trump? - Washington Post

WSU College Republican President attends ‘Unite The Right’ rally in Charlottesville – KREM.com

KREM 2's Amanda Roley talked with James Allsup about his involvement in the Charlottesville riot.

Staff , KREM 6:52 PM. PDT August 13, 2017

PHOTO: James Allsup (Photo: KREM)

PULLMAN, Wash. Washington State University College Republican President James Allsup has confirmed with KREM 2 that he was at the Unite The Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

KREM 2's Amanda Roleyspoke with Allsup on the phone. At the time of their conversation Sunday, Allsup was at an urgent care clinic in Charlottesville where he is being treated for minor exposure to pepper spray.

Just got off the phone with WSU College Republican Pres. James Allsup. Confirms he was at the "Unite the right" rally in #Charolettesville.

Allsup, who has more than 14,000 Twitter followers and 145,000 subscribers on YouTube, said he attended the rally in a media capacity. The WSU College Republican President said the rally organizer unexpectedly asked him to make a few remarks.

Allsup said he disagrees with the violence that took place in Charlottesville.

"I think it's terrible that anyone had to lose their life. I think that's awful," Allsup said.

He also said while he disagrees with symbols like the swastika seen at the rally, he believes those individuals should not be restricted from free speech.

"I would even say the same for the Black Panthers," Allsup said. "If you're going to peacefully organize an event and peacefully go to the event, I think you should have the right to speak."

Allsup said he considers himself a paleoconservative or a right wing libertarian. He also said he believes the term alt-right is a slur.

The twitter account, "Yes, You are Racist" has been using the hashtag, #ExposeTheAltRightto identify individuals who attended the rally. The account named Allsup as one of them.

"They have no proof that I'm a racist," Allsupsaid. "They are slandering me and that I'm racist without evidence because I talk about history and I talk about American politics."

Join us tonight at 5 for more from my interview with WSU College GOP Pres. James Allsup who attended the rally in #Charolettesville @KREM2

The "Spokane Citizens Against Racism" are holding a candlelight vigil on Sunday from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.

TONIGHT: "Spokane Citizens Against Racism" holding Candlelight vigil 6-7pm at Spokane Tribal Gathering Place. @KREM2

2017 KREM-TV

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WSU College Republican President attends 'Unite The Right' rally in Charlottesville - KREM.com