Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

Republicans’ Problem in Attacking Biden: They Helped Pass His … – The New York Times

President Biden isnt the only one doing a full summer embrace of federal spending on infrastructure and semiconductor manufacturing so are some of the Republicans aiming to remove him from office next year.

The White House has labeled the presidents new economic campaign Bidenomics, a portmanteau that until now has been a pejorative used by Republicans and conservative news outlets primarily to underscore inflation.

But in a speech on Wednesday in Chicago about the economy, Mr. Biden latched on, with a renewed focus on the two most significant bipartisan legislative accomplishments of his term, the infrastructure bill and the CHIPS and Science Act. He hopes these measures will help brand him as the cross-aisle deal maker he sold to voters in 2020, appeal to political moderates who formed a core of his winning electoral coalition and impress upon tuned-out voters what he has done in office.

One significant benefit for Mr. Biden: Republicans helped pass those bills.

While G.O.P. presidential candidates and the Republican National Committee continue to paint Mr. Bidens economic stewardship as a rolling disaster, Republican senators who helped shape the legislation say they anticipated that those accomplishments would accrue to Mr. Bidens political advantage as well as to their own.

Senator Todd Young, an Indiana Republican who helped write the enormous bill aimed at revitalizing the domestic semiconductor industry, said the work on a law that he called off-the-charts popular had started with Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York, during President Donald J. Trumps administration.

The Biden administration deserves credit for advancing the proposal and, irrespective of the timing of its origin, helping it become law, Mr. Young said.

Senator Bill Cassidy, Republican of Louisiana, more grudgingly acknowledged the presidents role in securing a trillion-dollar infrastructure bill that had eluded the past two administrations.

When senators from different parties come together to work on solutions to our nations problems and then the president jumps in front of the parade, it does not mean hes the grand marshal, Mr. Cassidy said.

Mr. Bidens infrastructure bill won votes from 19 Republican senators and 13 Republican House members. Sixteen Senate Republicans and 24 Republicans in the House voted for the semiconductor legislation.

It will be difficult for Republicans to land criticism when they themselves are taking credit for the same achievements. The White House on Wednesday highlighted praise for the Biden administrations broadband spending from Representatives Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington and Gus Bilirakis of Florida, Republicans who both voted against the infrastructure legislation that funded it, along with Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas.

But perhaps no Republican acclaim for the infrastructure legislation brought Mr. Biden more joy than a tweet from Senator Tommy Tuberville of Alabama that said it was great to see Alabama receive crucial funds.

To no ones surprise, its bringing along some converts, Mr. Biden said on Wednesday of his bipartisan legislation. Theres a guy named Tuberville from Alabama, a senator from Alabama, who announced that he strongly opposed the legislation. Now hes hailing its passage. Mr. Biden then dryly drew the sign of the cross on his chest.

Steven Stafford, a spokesman for Mr. Tuberville, said that Mr. Biden and his allies had twisted the senators words. Now that the bill is law of the land, the people of Alabama deserve their fair share, he said.

And even as Mr. Biden on Monday played up the $42 billion of broadband spending in the infrastructure law, another Republican senator who did vote for it, Susan Collins of Maine, was trumpeting the $272 million from it that is going to her state.

Of course, the White Houses celebration of Republican plaudits for legislation Mr. Biden signed will matter little unless the president can persuade voters that these achievements are improving their material well-being.

Mr. Bidens defenders have long maintained that the economic policies he is highlighting in the Bidenomics rebrand are very popular with voters. The problem, these allies say, is that few people connect them with Mr. Biden.

And Wednesdays speech came at a moment when Mr. Bidens approval ratings on the economy are in dangerous territory.

An Associated Press/NORC poll released Wednesday found that just 34 percent of adults approved of Mr. Bidens handling of the economy. Among Democrats, only 60 percent and a mere 47 percent of those 45 years old or younger approved of his economic stewardship.

The millstone is inflation, which has tempered sharply from its peak last year but remains above the norm. Whether inflation is at 9 percent or 4 percent, prices remain high, which may be why the president speaks less about the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief plan, which passed early in his tenure and has been blamed even by the Federal Reserve for part of the surge of inflation. It is also why Republicans continue to mock what they call the inaptly named Inflation Reduction Act, which passed in 2022 on strictly Democratic votes.

It makes sense for him to emphasize the bipartisan bills that passed that should have economic impact as opposed to the totally partisan bills that drove inflation, said former Senator Roy Blunt of Missouri, who voted for both the infrastructure and semiconductor bills before his retirement early this year.

Representative Thomas Massie, Republican of Kentucky, made clear that his party intended to lump all of the achievements being promoted by Mr. Biden into the inflationary maw, including the infrastructure and semiconductor legislation.

Both of those bills caused inflation, which is Bidens biggest albatross in the upcoming election, he said, so I dont think they did him any favors, referring to Republicans who helped pass the measures.

In his speech on Wednesday, Mr. Biden said that the pandemic relief plan had driven unemployment down from above 6 percent to below 4 percent. He suggested that his economic leadership would achieve an even broader goal he placed at the center of his 2020 campaign: restoring the soul of America.

Its going to help lessen the division in this country by bringing us back together, Mr. Biden said. It makes it awful hard to demagogue something when its working.

The Republicans aiming to unseat Mr. Biden werent buying the economic kumbaya. The Trump campaign on Wednesday said Bidenomics has created the worst economic decline since the Great Depression. Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, in a Fox News appearance, said Mr. Bidens policies mean everybody pays more for basic staples of life.

Republicans are loath to concede that the passage of two major bills makes Mr. Biden a bipartisan statesman. Those bills are not only not emblematic, its the exception, said Josh Holmes, a longtime political adviser to Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, who voted for the infrastructure bill.

In truth, more bills than those passed with bipartisan support in the last Congress. Mr. Biden enters the 2024 election cycle as the beneficiary of an extraordinary bout of productivity that included a modest gun control law, a legal codification of same-sex marriage, and a revamping of procedures for counting Electoral College votes after Mr. Trump tried to hijack that obscure process.

Senators from both parties put aside their tendency to push for only the legislation they want or pocket the issue for the next election.

We cant get in a place in the country where you dont vote for something you believe needs to pass because you think it might help the other side, Mr. Blunt said.

Democrats point to the circumstances that Mr. Biden inherited in 2021 the attack on the Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters determined to overturn the election results.

There was a sizable group of Senate Republicans who looked the death of democracy in the eye on Jan. 6 and decided to try to show people that democracy could still work, said Senator Chris Murphy, Democrat of Connecticut.

But Mr. Murphy also credited the legislative skills of Mr. Biden, honed over 36 years in the Senate.

A lot of my progressive friends were angry he wasnt punching Republicans in the mouth so much, Mr. Murphy said, but he kept the door open for Republicans to work with us on infrastructure, guns and industrial policy.

Cecilia Kang contributed reporting.

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Republicans' Problem in Attacking Biden: They Helped Pass His ... - The New York Times

Opinion | Republicans’ Anti-Woke, Anti-Vote Crusade Has Crashed … – The New York Times

Before the dust had cleared on the 2020 election, Republicans in statehouses across the country had already regrouped and coalesced around a core crusade revived and revitalized that was anti-woke and anti-vote.

Having lost control of the presidency and Congress, they funneled their quest for control into voting booths, bathrooms, locker rooms, classrooms and doctors offices.

If they couldnt control the highest rungs of power, they would look to exert control over Americans lives at the lower rungs. They would come to insert themselves into the most intimate of activities between voters and ballots, between families and doctors, between teachers and students.

The battle would move from an aerial assault to trench warfare.

In that fight, Arkansas passed the first-in-the-nation law outlawing gender-affirming care for transgender children.

In 2021, Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who is no friend to the queer community, vetoed the bill, saying that it created new standards of legislative interference with physicians and parents as they deal with some of the most complex and sensitive matters concerning our youths. He said that the bill positioned the state as the definitive oracle of medical care, overriding parents, patients and health care experts, which he called a vast government overreach.

Hutchinson now a long-shot Republican presidential candidate seemingly understood that the effort was unconstitutional, and came between doctors, families and patients in the same way that Republicans once disingenuously claimed that Obamacare death panels would.

Nevertheless, the Arkansas legislature overrode the governors veto. The new law was quickly challenged, and last week a federal judge permanently enjoined it, writing that it is, in fact, unconstitutional.

Across states, were seeing promising signs that the judiciary may wind up serving as a check on the relentless Republican campaign to disempower and disenfranchise. G.O.P. attempts to impose a kind of semifascist federalism are being trumped by our own constitutional democracy.

This month, a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction for three trans youths against provisions in a Florida law denying gender-affirming care to children, with the judge saying in a scathing opinion that their families are likely to prevail on their claim that the prohibition is unconstitutional.

Nearly 20 states have rushed to enact similar laws, seeing political advantage in inflaming culture wars, steamrollering the health and well-being of these children and their constitutional rights.

Last year, after Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas directed his states Department of Family and Protective Services to investigate cases of Texas children being subjected to abusive gender-transitioning procedures, a state judge issued a temporary injunction blocking some of the inquiries. The judge wrote that without the order, the families would suffer probable, imminent and irreparable injury in the interim.

On another note, last week a federal judge temporarily blocked a law that allowed Florida to penalize businesses that allowed children to attend drag performances. The law was written so loosely that some Pride parades in the state were either altered or canceled to avoid running afoul of the law.

This month, a federal judge ruled against a similar anti-drag law in Tennessee, saying the measure reeks with constitutional maladies of vagueness.

The same party that argues for parental rights when haranguing and harassing educators about what is being taught and read in the classroom couldnt care less about the parental rights of those trying to provide the best care for their children or who want their children to have an awareness and understanding of the broad spectrum of humanity and its expressions of love.

The Republican politicians pushing these un-American laws arent constitutional absolutists; theyre constitutional opportunists.

The same is true when it comes to elections, where the Republican strategy has become clear: Rather than change their party to appeal more broadly to the electorate, many Republican politicians are whittling away at the electorate and our election architecture, trying to remove or hamstring those aspects of the process that could lead to them losing.

They want to change the very meaning of democracy, shrinking to a government chosen by the chosen, a more originalist version of our system in which only certain people participate.

But again, the judiciary in this case, the Supreme Court has stepped in to stop them. The Supreme Court just ruled that a lower court should review Louisianas congressional map, which should result in it being redrawn to include an additional majority-Black district, and it has rejected the outrageous independent state legislature theory that would have left partisan state legislatures as the final word on federal election administration. Republicans were rebuffed on both turns. The Constitution prevailed.

This should sting for a party that has maintained for decades that it was led by the Constitution.

The Tea Party of the 2000s and early 2010s hailed itself as a constitutional movement, with many adherents professing constitutional originalism as one of its core tenets.

In 2012, the Republican Party platform asserted, We are the party of the Constitution, the solemn compact which confirms our God-given individual rights and assures that all Americans stand equal before the law.

The 2016 platform essentially repeated the line, but added, We reaffirm the Constitutions fundamental principles: limited government, separation of powers, individual liberty and the rule of law. (The party didnt even produce a new platform in 2020.)

Those declarations were never wholly true, but now theyre a mockery. That Republican Party has been swallowed whole the way a cobra swallows a lesser snake. MAGA is ascendant.

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Opinion | Republicans' Anti-Woke, Anti-Vote Crusade Has Crashed ... - The New York Times

Jean Guerrero: For Republicans, ‘Bomb the Mexicans’ is the new … – Brunswick News

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Jean Guerrero: For Republicans, 'Bomb the Mexicans' is the new ... - Brunswick News

Why Republicans are going all-in on education – Axios

Illustration: Allie Carl/Axios

A perfect storm of Supreme Court decisions, pandemic recriminations and fiery culture wars has vaulted education to the top of the 2024 presidential agenda, animating Republicans who believe they have the upper hand.

Why it matters: This election will be the first to test whether four years of heated debate over COVID-19 school policies, critical race theory and gender identity will translate at the presidential level. The conservative Supreme Court could add fuel to the fire and juice turnout among young voters.

Driving the news: The Supreme Court's rejection of affirmative action at colleges today is a watershed moment for higher education one celebrated across the board by Republican candidates and condemned by President Biden, who declared that this is "not a normal court."

Zoom in: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has staked out the most aggressive education platform of any candidate, seeking to upend school systems nationwide with the same "anti-woke" blueprint he's constructed in Florida.

What we're watching: This weekend, five presidential hopefuls including Trump and DeSantis are speaking at an event run by a controversial group known for promoting book bans and leading raucous school board protests.

How we got here: Conservatives' intense focus on K-12 education policy in particular has been building for years, beginning in response to prolonged school closures and mask mandates imposed over COVID.

The bottom line: Republicans have dominated the education messaging war, with little engagement from Democrats. But recent polling from the Pew Research Center suggests it hasn't translated to shifts in public perception, with neither party holding a significant edge on education policy.

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Why Republicans are going all-in on education - Axios

On tribal rights, Republicans need to declare their independence … – Bangor Daily News

The BDN Opinion section operates independently and does not set newsroom policies or contribute to reporting or editing articles elsewhere in the newspaper or onbangordailynews.com.

John Andrews of Paris represents District 79 in the Maine House of Representatives. He is a co-sponsor of LD 2004.

Now Brothers never let the Kings Wicked Councilors turn your Hearts Against Me and your Brethren of this Country.

These words were written byGen. George Washington on Christmas Eve in 1776. Washington took the time to write to the chiefs of the Passamaquoddy Tribe before he faced what looked like certain death in crossing the icy Delaware River and fighting the Hessians at the Battle of Trenton. Our nations first president was a friend of the tribes and respected them.

Gov. Janet Mills should follow suit.

Ive taken the time over my five years in Augusta to meet with chiefs and tribal representatives. Ive heard them and listened to them. Their battle for liberty and respect is something that I will never know. However, I can see the struggles of my Irish ancestors in their eyes. Everyone wants to be free.

I would be remiss as a lawmaker if I did not see the equivalency of cause in the Maine tribes fight for dignity. I swore an oath to the Constitution, the Constitution that Washington signed. I intend as a legislator to hold fast to the friendship that Washington showed our states tribes. Its good policy, and its the right thing to do.

Together as a state, we can reforge the bright chain of friendship that was crafted centuries ago between the People of the Dawn and those American rebels fighting for their own independence on the banks of the Delaware River. The tribes had our backs then, and its time we had theirs now.

LD 2004would allow Maine tribes to directly communicate with the federal government to access laws and programs that would benefit their communities. LD 2004 passedthe Maine House and Senate with unanimous consent votes for enactment. This should be seen as a message to the governor.

At its core, LD 2004 is a piece of legislation that would get state government out of the way. Maine tribes would be put on the same level of access with every other federally recognized tribe. Just like they are in every other state in the nation. Maine tribes and their communities would no longer have to beg permission to plan their lives from lawmakers, and a governor and her legal counselors.

This necessary piece of legislation was vetoedFriday by Gov. Janet Mills. I believe this action is on par with every intolerable act that King George III levied against the American colonists. The game is the same, but the players are different.

LD 2004 is an issue of basic liberty. Liberty for our tribes is long overdue. That is why I am proud to be a co-sponsor on this bipartisan bill that would help people live free and have the certainty to plan their future endeavors with regard to prosperity and economic development.

Because of the 1980 settlement act, the Wabanaki tribes health, educational and economic outcomes have lagged far behindthose of other population groups in Maine and other tribes throughout the country. President Ronald Reagan was a proud supporter of tribal self determination. In 1983, the Republican said: Since tribal governments have the primary responsibility for meeting the basic needs of Indian communities, they must be allowed the chance to succeed.

Those words ring true today. Maine Republicans need to live the values of one of their iconic presidents. We as Republicans were founded as an abolitionist party. We need to get back to our roots and core values of fighting for the freedom of all people.

I believe the governors veto of this bill is out of bounds and just plain vindictive against Maines tribes. Even some of the governors most ardent supporters did not want her to veto this bill.

Now, in the spirit of liberty, Maine Republicans must override her veto of this bill.This week of July 4 we have a real chance to fight tyranny or support it. I suggest that my fellow Republicans in the 131st Legislature walk in the footsteps of Washington and Reagan. We do not need to have our hearts turned against our states tribes by Mills and her counselors. We as Republicans should be fighting for the freedom and liberty of our Indigenous brothers and sisters.

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On tribal rights, Republicans need to declare their independence ... - Bangor Daily News