Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

It will come home to roost at the polls: Republicans prepare for voter backlash following overturn of Roe – MSNBC

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Republicans prepare for voter backlash following overturn of Roe07:31

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DOJ and national security experts raise concern over delaying Trump Mar-a-Lago probe07:12

373 members of law enforcement found on Oath Keepers membership rolls03:42

Pro jobs, pro family, pro fish and pro choice: Mary Peltola (D-AK) on her historic victory and campaign plans for November06:48

Officials in Jackson, Mississippi face setbacks as city enters second week without clean water04:32

Trumpism only works for Trump: Molly Jong-Fast on Dr. Ozs social media attacks05:25

This is an explicit endorsement: Trump posts support for QAnon and other conspiracy theories on Truth social platform04:33

Theres a lot more to it: FBI list shows 48 empty folders marked classified at Mar-a-Lago03:31

Rep. Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) discusses seized Mar-a-Lago documents and threats to national security04:55

Library director resigns after months of intimidation tactics and threats from conservative activists04:07

Democratic Rep. Charlie Christ looks to take back Florida governors mansion from Ron DeSantis09:01

'There's a deep double standard here': Backlash over Bidens student debt forgiveness plan06:30

DNI will lead assessment of potential risk to national security from Mar-a-Lago documents05:21

Tennessee teens take abortion rights education into their own hands06:40

'They are sentencing this young girl to having a baby' FL State Sen. on teen abortion case04:51

'A clear pattern of behavior' Fmr. FBI agent on law enforcement threats after Mar-a-Lago05:54

Rep. Lofgren (D-CA) on whats next for Jan 6 committee: 'This is an active investigation and a lot more information is coming in to us.'08:07

FBI and DHS issue joint bulletin on threats facing federal law enforcement04:53

Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-TX) on the FBI investigation of Trump: 'Donald Trump has never paid a price.'08:04

Joyce Vance: Trump testing out a 'shifting array of potential defenses' following FBI investigation05:09

MSNBC Political Contributor Danielle Moodie and Former Republican Congressman Joe Walsh join Yasmin Vossoughian to discuss Republican women showing up in record numbers to vote in the aftermath of the abortion ruling and how the political backlash could impact the midterm elections. [Abortion has] been a political weapon for years and Republicans did it to get elected and promised once we got here all would be good. Well, were here now and its going to hurt Republicans politically, Walsh says.Sept. 10, 2022

Now Playing

Republicans prepare for voter backlash following overturn of Roe07:31

UP NEXT

DOJ and national security experts raise concern over delaying Trump Mar-a-Lago probe07:12

373 members of law enforcement found on Oath Keepers membership rolls03:42

Pro jobs, pro family, pro fish and pro choice: Mary Peltola (D-AK) on her historic victory and campaign plans for November06:48

Officials in Jackson, Mississippi face setbacks as city enters second week without clean water04:32

Trumpism only works for Trump: Molly Jong-Fast on Dr. Ozs social media attacks05:25

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It will come home to roost at the polls: Republicans prepare for voter backlash following overturn of Roe - MSNBC

History will judge Republicans who stay silent about the big lie – The Guardian

I have a serious question for people who have power in America, and who continue to deny the outcome of the 2020 election and enable Trumps big lie: what are you saying to yourself in private? How are you justifying yourself in your own mind?

I dont mean to be snide or snarky. Im genuinely curious.

If you hold public office and deny the outcome of the 2020 election, are you telling yourself that despite the overwhelming evidence that Biden won and the lack of evidence of fraud, you still genuinely doubt the outcome?

But you must know that 60 federal courts have found no basis in Trumps claim, nor have any so-called state audits and even Trumps own attorney general found the claim baseless.

Or are you telling yourself that it will soon be over that Trump will fade, that the big lie will disappear, that your party and America will soon move on?

But you must know youre wrong. The big lie is growing. It has metastasized into a cancer thats dividing the nation and devouring our democracy.

Or are you telling yourself that you have no real choice but to support the lie if you want to keep or obtain political power?

Even if true, is power so intoxicating to you so important as an end in itself that youll do anything for it?

Where will you draw the line? If Trump is reelected and imposes martial law? If he or another Republican president forbids public criticism of his administration? If he calls for violence against those who oppose him?

And what do you tell yourself about the measures your party is taking based on the big lie: suppression of votes, takeovers of election machinery, assertions that state legislatures can overturn voter preferences in the certification process, rejection of the January 6 committees findings?

You have sworn an oath to uphold the constitution. How do you defend yourself in your own mind?

Im asking you, Kevin McCarthy. And you, Lindsey Graham, and Marco Rubio, and Rick Scott and Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz and Ron Johnson. And others.

And Im asking those of you with significant power in the Republican party who have remained silent in the face of all this such as you, Mitch McConnell, and you, Mitt Romney: how do you justify your silence?

And I ask those of you now running for office who are denying the 2020 election results and pushing other aspects of Republican authoritarianism such as you, JD Vance, and Blake Masters, Mehmet Oz, Herschel Walker, Doug Mastriano, and Kari Lake: what are you telling yourself in private? How are you excusing yourself? Why are you even running?

And I ask the billionaires and CEOs who are bankrolling these people: how do you rationalize spending millions, even tens of millions, helping them get or remain elected?

Im asking you, Peter Thiel, and you, Stephen Schwarzman, and Ken Griffin and Steve Wynn and Mike Lindell and Patrick Byrne and others: is this really the way you want to spend your fortune? Is this your legacy to the nation?

And I ask all the people making money off this rot the TV hosts and producers and media moguls who are raking it in while poisoning the minds of America with bald-faced lies what are you telling yourself in private?

Im asking you, Rupert Murdoch, and you, Tucker Carlson, and you, Sean Hannity, and you, Laura Ingraham: how are you defending yourself to yourself?

I dont expect you to answer me. This is a question for you to answer to yourself, alone and in private.

But before you do, may I have a confidential word?

Whether youre a politician supporting the big lie, a billionaire backer of it, or a broadcaster whos pushing it, it is not too late for you to get off the road you are on.

Yet if you continue to promote or enable this lie, you are undermining our democracy. The crisis you have helped create is worsening. You bear part of the responsibility for what comes next.

When the history of this trying time is written, future generations of Americans will judge your actions and your silences harshly.

They will recall your cowardice and your self-justifications. They will remember your lust for power and your moral blindness. They will recollect your unwitting ignorance or your witting failure to come to democracys defense in this perilous time.

Generations to come will sit in judgment about what you have wrought. And if the democratic experiment called America continues to unravel because of what you did or failed to do, you will live in infamy.

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History will judge Republicans who stay silent about the big lie - The Guardian

Connecticut Republicans trying to win attorney general’s office for first time in more than 60 years in 3-way battle – Hartford Courant

HARTFORD Connecticut Republicans have not won the state attorney generals office in more than 60 years as they have been defeated by big-name Democrats like Joe Lieberman and Richard Blumenthal.

But they think this year could be different with attorney Jessica Kordas of Norwalk battling against incumbent Democrat William Tong as Republicans believe they have political momentum at a time of weak poll ratings for President Joe Biden.

Democrats dispute that notion; they have a wide voter registration advantage over Republicans and have swept every statewide and Congressional office since 2006. In addition, Tong has won multiple high-profile settlements over the past four years, including more than $40 billion from multiple drug manufacturers and distributors in a national settlement in connection with deaths from opioids.

Jessica Kordas, Republican candidate for Connecticut attorney general, stands with her children as she is nominated at the State Republican Convention on May 6. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill) (Jessica Hill/AP)

A first-time candidate at the age of 39, Kordas said deep concerns about mask requirements imposed on her two children, aged 8 and 10, and their classmates in the public schools sparked her interest in politics during the coronavirus pandemic.

I really got involved this January with fighting against mask mandates, Kordas told The Courant in an interview. Ive been fighting to protect and defend the constitution my entire career. ... In this particular instance, it was hearing my kids cheer when we found out we could choose whether or not to wear masks. We all know that families are unique. Parents should be in a position to make choices. They know their kids and their family situation better than anyone else, and certainly better than administrators at a school and definitely better than the governor making mandates under executive orders.

Kordas is also concerned about the multiple extensions of Gov. Ned Lamonts extraordinary powers, which have since ended. She criticized Tong as a rubber stamp for the governors abuse of power. Part of the reason why the extensions were made six times in 2020 and 2021 by the Democratic-controlled legislature was so that Connecticut could continue a state of emergency in order to qualify for more than $50 million in federal funding that included food stamps for the poor and temporary housing for the homeless.

My freedom is not for sale, Kordas said. I dont intend to sell my childrens freedom, either, simply for the benefit of federal funds coming into our state. Thats not the intention of executive power. It felt so wrong that the attorney general in that particular case did nothing. He certainly didnt protect small businesses from having to be closed and sheltered for so long. He didnt protect children that werent being properly educated, that were having trouble learning different phonics. If you cant see someones mouth, its really hard to understand the difference between the M and N sound from behind a mask. It left parents in a position where we didnt have a choice. We had to stand up and do something.

Told of his opponents concerns about mask mandates, Tong responded, I believe in science. I believe in masks. I believe in vaccines. I believe in trusting public health professionals. Period.

Tong stressed that, under state law, he is required to represent the governor and all state agencies, such as the departments of transportation and social services. When the governor is sued in his official capacity, Tong and his office must legally defend the governor regardless of whether the office holder is Republican or Democrat.

Ive heard some suggestion that I should have opposed the governor or that I had an obligation to oppose the governor, Tong said. Anybody who suggests that has no idea what the job of attorney general is.

Tong said he would not get into a back-and-forth with Kordas on every point, adding, Im going to run by doing my job.

In a state where Democrats have won every election for Congress and statewide office since 2006, party members believe there is little chance that Tong could lose. Democrats have more than 800,000 registered voters, compared to Republicans with about 455,000 in Connecticut. The largest group is unaffiliated voters at more than 900,000.

Aside from Democrats, Tong has won the endorsement of the union-backed Working Families Party, giving him an important extra ballot line in November. He also held the partys line in 2018, helping ensure his victory with the grassroots assistance of volunteers through door-knocking and phone-banking.

Outside of the state, Tong is supported by the Democratic Attorneys General Association.

Hes fearlessly protected his states consumers on everything from utility bills to potential online crimes and scams, said Sean Rankin, the associations president. Hes brought millions back to Connecticuts residents in settlements, and hes going to continue putting Connecticut families first when hes reelected.

State attorney general William Tong stands with Christine Gagnon and her daughter Daria during the announcement of the signing of aproclamationdeclaring Aug. 31 as Overdose Awareness Day in Connecticut. The Gagnons lost their son and brother, Michael J. Gagnon, 22, to a drug overdose on July 17, 2017. (Douglas Hook / Hartford Courant) (Douglas Hook)

Sitting in a West Hartford restaurant near where he grew up, Tong talked in detail about the large number of settlements he has reached in major cases. In addition, after three decades of fights, negotiations and litigation, Tong settled the Sheff vs. ONeill school desegregation lawsuit and the Juan F. consent decree that oversaw the Department of Children and Families under multiple governors.

In terms of multistate work and settlements, this has been an extraordinary and consequential four years, Tong said in an interview. It has been transformative.

The most recent settlement requires e-cigarette manufacturer JUUL Labs to pay nearly $440 million in connection with marketing and selling to minors as officials attempt to cut down on youth tobacco use.

Tong also forced utilities to pay more than $100 million for problems with slow responses to power outages related to Tropical Storm Isaias. He has won money for consumers from Eversource, United Illuminating, Yankee Gas and Frontier.

From consumer finance and health care to student loans and robocalls, Tong and his team have won hundreds of millions in settlements for consumers and the state. He led a multistate lawsuit against price-fixing by large manufacturers known as Big Pharma and generic drug-makers.

Currently, he is battling against some of the biggest names in America in antitrust cases against Google and Facebook, along with investigating allegations of harm to children by TikTok and Instagram. He also sued ExxonMobil in September 2020, saying that the company knew for decades that burning gasoline leads to climate change.

Tong credits his success, in part, to an understanding of a wide variety of legal issues, gained as the co-chairman of the General Assemblys judiciary committee, and of how corporations operate, gained while working for two large law firms, including New York City-based Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP.

State Attorney General William Tong was interrupted at a restaurant table by a West Hartford native who complained about her home heating oil prices for this winter in a handwritten note she presented to him on a napkin. (Christopher Keating)

The biggest issue arguably has been opioids as Tong said he has been seeking even greater accountability against the addiction industry in the face of significant opposition from other states and played a pivotal role in securing a historic $32.5 billion in new funding to fight the opioid epidemic across the country, including approximately $400 million to Connecticut alone.

He added, Through my negotiations, I also secured the opportunity for victims and their families to personally address the most egregious profiters in this tragedy: the Sacklers.

Whether by telephone or email, Tong receives a wide variety of complaints from consumers about price gouging or poor service.

During an interview with The Courant at a restaurant, Tong was approached by a West Hartford native who complained about the jaw-dropping price increases in her home heating oil for this winter in a handwritten note that she presented to him on a napkin. Tong promised to look into the issue.

This is what we do every day, Tong said. I have a dedicated team that focuses on utility customer advocacy, and we have a dedicated constituent services team.

Saying, "This stinks and I promise you I will fight it with every fiber of my being," Ken Krayeske speaks out against a proposed minor league baseball stadium in Hartford at a Hartford City Council meeting in 2014. (Courant file photo) (Mark Mirko / Hartford Courant)

The third candidate in the race is attorney Ken Krayeske,running as a member of the Green Party, which has not won a statewide race in Connecticut in decades.

The Green Party has 1,233 registered members a tiny fraction when compared to more than 800,000 Democrats, more than 455,000 Republicans, and more than 900,000 unaffiliated voters.

Since the Green Party captured more than 1% of the vote in the attorney generals race in 2018, the party has an automatic ballot line for the seat.

Krayeske is not a newcomer to politics. As a blogger and political activist, he gained attention in January 2007 when he was arrested during Gov. M. Jodi Rells inaugural parade. But some lawmakers said he never should have been arrested for breach of peace and interfering with police, and the charges were dismissed by a judge.

In 2010, he ran against U.S. Rep. John B. Larson, a Democratic powerhouse, and captured 1.2% of the vote. Krayeske also served as the campaign manager during the 2006 governors race for Green Party candidate Cliff Thornton, who won 0.85% of the vote.

Krayeske is known partly for asking UConn mens basketball coach Jim Calhoun in February 2009 if he would relinquish some of his $1.6 million salary as the states highest-paid employee as a gesture to help solve the states budget deficit. Calhouns response that he would return not a dime became national news in the sports world and is still available on YouTube 13 years later.

As Krayeske persisted in his questioning in a quickly escalating clash, Calhoun said, Youre not really that stupid, are you?

Yeah, I am, Krayeske responded.

My best advice to you: shut up, Calhoun said.

A year later, Krayeske graduated from the University of Connecticut law schoo and worked for a Meriden law firm. He opened his own firm in July 2013 and now specializes as a solo practitioner in federal civil rights litigation.

His website includes the quotation from a deceased attorney and Harvard Law School graduate who said that a lawyers either a social engineer or ... a parasite on society.

In addition to winning various settlements, Krayeske filed a class-action lawsuit that prompted the state correction department to test and treat all prisoners for hepatitis C. The state has tested about 20,000 prisoners spending $40 million to help cure some prisoners of the liver infection.

When we use the law to lift the health care of the lowest rung of the societal ladder, we take one step closer to Medicare for all, Krayeske said. I encourage the voters of the state to imagine what could be possible if someone like me won the seat.

Krayeske admitted that his race is a long shot, but he vowed to continue fighting to generate a conversation about civil rights and to force a debate with his two opponents that has not yet been scheduled.

We never know who the Tunisian fruit vendor is that is going to spark an Arab Spring, Krayeske said, referring to the uprisings and protests in multiple countries. But we must continue to prime the pump and take risks. I do not suppose for one second that my candidacy is going to spark a revolution. ... But Ive caught lightning in a bottle before.

Christopher Keating can be reached at ckeating@courant.com.

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Connecticut Republicans trying to win attorney general's office for first time in more than 60 years in 3-way battle - Hartford Courant

King Charles is a different kettle of fish: Britains republicans believe their time will come – The Guardian

For Matthew, the Queens death is double edged: Theres cause for celebration in the sense that it might kickstart the end of the monarchy but its frustrating because I darent say that to anyone but my wife!

He admits crafting several Facebook posts arguing that the death of Queen Elizabeth II ought to preempt the UKs transition to a republic but has shied away from pressing send. A lot of people seem very emotional at the moment and I dont want to be the target of a massive pile-on by trolls, said Matthew (not his real name).

Other republicans admit they feel bullied into supporting something they dont believe in. I feel unable to express an opinion without being branded disrespectful, so therefore Ive been funnelled into complying with the countrys grief, said Aisha, who also requested a pseudonym.

As someone who believes the monarchy is an outdated concept that compromises our democratic right and signifies colonialism, I am suddenly being turned into the bad guy for deciding not to celebrate that aspect of the Queens life.

People blur the line between her as a person who did a lot of amazing things and her as a queen, and thats where they get defensive, she said.

However, groups representing the views of Britains republicans say that now is not the time to be cowed into suppressing their beliefs.

Aware of supporters electing to self-censor and hearing reports of others admitting they are too petrified to air their views for fear of being cancelled, the main republican campaign group is actively pushing calls to abolish the monarchy.

Obviously people will be careful not to cause offence, but this is also a public office that needs to be debated, said Graham Smith, spokesperson for Republic, which is campaigning to replace the monarchy with an elected head of state. People still have every right to say whatever they think they shouldnt feel cowed. But there is a lot of concern, particularly on social media, about being censored or saying the wrong thing.

As coverage of the Queens death continues to dominate broadcast schedules, Smith anticipated ambivalence would become the overriding response for millions during the days ahead. There is an appetite for a lot of this, but there will be a point where people feel its going too far or going on for too long. Theres going be a lot of people switching over to Netflix and other streaming channels.

The saturation point for many, he envisaged, would be the middle of this week and although he anticipated overt republican and anti-monarchy sentiment to decline around the Queens funeral, he expected a resurgence soon after, when many predict the UK will enter a different era of debate over the future of its royal family.

Smith believes admiration for the Queen has largely repressed republicanism, with the issue likely to be imbued with renewed energy. The Queen was the monarchy for most people and has been all our lives. Charles will not inherit that level of deference and respect, and this really does change the whole dynamic, he said.

It was notable, the group said, that even during the hours immediately following the announcement of the Queens death on Thursday evening, it received a rise in support. Republic recorded more than 2,000 new followers during the 24 hours after the announcement. Were also getting an influx of people signing up to us, added Smith.

Although polls have consistently shown that the vast majority of Britons back the monarchy republicans have long accepted they had no chance of changing the system while the Queen was alive support for the monarchy has been falling.

Charles is a very different kettle of fish. If support was dropping anyway, its not going to go up, said Smith.

Polling ahead of the celebrations for the countrys first-ever platinum jubilee earlier this year suggested that 62% of Britons said they supported the monarchy. A decade earlier, however, the same polling company YouGov reported that figure was 11 points higher, at 73%. YouGov polling also revealed that almost a quarter 22% of people in the UK now support abolishing the monarchy, a pronounced increase from a decade earlier.

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King Charles is a different kettle of fish: Britains republicans believe their time will come - The Guardian

House Republicans add $28M to fall TV reservations – POLITICO

The NRCC also will air ads for the first time in three open seats: $2.7 million in a new district in North Carolinas Research Triangle, where Republican Bo Hines faces Democratic state Sen. Wiley Nickel; $2.6 million in a newly created district in the northern Denver suburbs, where Republican Barb Kirkmeyer is challenging state Rep. Yadira Caraveo; and $3.4 million in an open district in northeastern Ohio, where Democratic state Rep. Emilia Sykes faces Republican Madison Gesiotto Gilbert.

These buys give insight into what Republican strategists see as the clearest path to taking back the House. Additional spending is expected in the next two months.

We are continuing to expand the playing field deeper into Democrat-held territory and look forward to prosecuting the case against every one of these vulnerable Democrats, NRCC Chair Tom Emmer said in a statement.

The committee also upped its investment in Republican-held turf, too.

It will spend $2.2 million in its first ad buy to defend Rep. Michelle Steel (R-Calif.). And the NRCC increased its spending to protect Reps. David Valadao (R-Calif.), Mike Garcia (R-Calif.), Don Bacon (R-Neb.) and Steve Chabot (R-Ohio). All hold districts that Biden carried in 2020, leaving them increasingly vulnerable.

The NRCC also added to existing reservations in another eight districts currently held by Democrats, including Reps. Cindy Axne (D-Iowa), Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), Dan Kildee (D-Mich.) and Angie Craig (D-Minn.), as well as districts currently held by retiring Reps. Ann Kirkpatrick (D-Ariz.) and Conor Lamb (D-Pa.). It will also spend another $1.9 million to target Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine) and $1 million against Rep. Matt Cartwright (D-Pa.).

New NRCC spending:

Additional investments (with GOP-held seats in bold):

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House Republicans add $28M to fall TV reservations - POLITICO