Saturday, May 31, 2025

Rep. Ilhan Omar Seeks Solidarity w/ Other Angry Minorities

‘Clearly, I am a nightmare…’

Ilhan Omar Says Trump Has ‘Trafficked in Hate' His Whole Life
Ilhan Omar/Photo by Fibonacci Blue (CC)

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn. has on many occasions used her identity as a shield—notoriously blaming her own inflammatory hate rhetoric on the fact that she has a different set of cultural norms and experiences.

But as her mainstream appeal wanes, likely to face a primary challenger in her race next year, the freshman congressman is grasping for support wherever she can find it, and becoming even more radicalized along the way.

Omar—who was last year elected as one of the first Muslim women in Congress, alongside Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich.—has been accused of repeatedly using anti-Semitic stereotypes and downplaying the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in her public comments.

Former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke praised Omar’s positions, referring to her as “the most important Member of the US Congress” on Twitter for her stance against Jewish Zionism.

But where most of Duke’s forays into politics wound up as unmitigated failures, Omar envisions her own historical role to be much larger.

In a recent HuffPost interview, she referred to herself as the president’s “biggest nemesis,” intent on stirring up a coalition of angry Trump-haters to help insulate her from criticism, while also underscoring her qualifications as a multi-category minority.

“Clearly, I am a nightmare [for Trump]—because he can’t stop really thinking about ways that he can continue to use my identity to marginalize our communities,” Omar said.

Ironically, putting aside her assertions that the president had sought to capitalize on her identity for political reasons, Omar, herself, has been known to invoke it quite frequently.

Immediately after her controversial 9/11 remarks were revealed by a fellow Muslim who condemned them, Omar went on “The Late Night with Stephen Colbert” to deflect.

“If you think about, you know, historically, where our nation is at right now, there are many members of our community that, their identities are a lightning rod—they’ve become—they’re being used as a political football,” she said on the show.

“We are talking about immigrants, we are talking about refugees, women of color—people of color—minorities … Muslims specifically,” Omar continued. “And I just happen to embody all of those identities—and so it’s easy for this to be kind of self-explanatory.”

More recently, Omar staged a rally on Capitol Hill with members of radical black-supremacist groups including the Black Panthers and Black Lives Matter.

While attacking Trump specifically, her rhetoric at the rally took a surprisingly sharp turn, seeming to embrace a sort of counter-position to the president’s self-declared U.S. nationalism that instead sought to overthrow and exclude any non-‘marginalized’ American citizens.

“We are collectively saying your vile attacks, your demented views are not welcome here,” Omar, a Somali refugee, said, according to CNN.

“This is not going to be the country of the xenophobics. This is not going to be the country of the white people,” Omar said. “This is not going to be the country of the few. This is going to be the country of the many.”

It is a familiar tactic for Omar, who previously attempted to re-frame the criticism of her anti-Semitism as being itself indicative if Islamophobia.

For every criticism she receives, Omar redoubles her efforts, entrenched in the certainty that her worldview is the correct one, despite the ever-narrowing margin of support.

And for all her attacks on Trump, she seems determined to posture herself as the opposite polar extreme of what she perceives him to be—accepting that, in a sense, it makes her more similar than different; locked in her own symbiotic, yen-and-yang relationship with the president.

“As someone who certainly has survived far worse people than him, I’m going to be alright,” Omar told HuffPo. “… I always find conflicts to be the best sources for organizing.”

Although her views may be far outside the mainstream, Omar said in the article that she was able to cop with the sense of isolation by imagining a legion of like-minded followers standing beside her.

“People ask me, ‘Ilhan, do you feel afraid? Do you feel marginalized?’ And I don’t,” she told HuffPo. “Because I know hundreds of my sisters are constantly walking with me in every single space I’m in.”

GOP Sens. Demand to Know Who FBI Deep-State Leakers Are

‘Peter Strzok and Lisa Page referring to something as political? I mean, that’s like the pot calling the kettle black…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) As Democrats eat chicken on the House floor, some of the most powerful Republicans in the Senate are inching closer to holding partisan bureaucrats publicly accountable for spreading false innuendo about President Donald Trump colluding with Russia.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R.-Wisc., and Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, on Monday wrote a letter to Michael K. Atkinson, inspector general of the intelligence community, highlighting two shocking exchanges that they hoped were being investigated between former FBI counterintelligence chief Peter Strzok and his paramour, FBI attorney Lisa Page.

“There are going to be so many people looking into these things now,” Johnson told Fox News in a follow-up interview. “We have inspector generals, we have Attorney General Barr, we have at least two Senate committees that are going to be looking at this.”

Specifically, the two committee chairs—Johnson oversees Homeland Security and Foreign Affairs, while Grassley currently heads the Senate Finance Committee—sought clarity on messages between the lovebirds Strzok and Page that suggested some of the FBI’s “sister” investigative agencies may have been leaking false information to the media.

In one of the messages from December 2016, Strzok told Page, “Think our sisters have begun leaking like mad. Scorned and worried and political, they’re kicking in to overdrive.”

In another message, from April 2017, Strzok wrote, “I’m beginning to think the agency got info a lot earlier than we thought and hasn’t shared it completely with us. Might explain all these weird/seemingly incorrect leads all these media folks have. Would also highlight agency as source of some of the leaks.”

While previous congressional probes into the FBI scandal—followed by an inspector general’s investigation and report—revealed substantial misconduct and suggested rabidly partisan bias may have informed the investigation, Johnson said the two messages hinted at an even broader conspiracy.

“This raises all kinds of questions, all kinds of concerns,” Johnson said, “and we’re just writing the inspector general of the intelligence community to see if … has he undertaken an investigation into leaks from those agencies?”

A previous Freedom of Information lawsuit from Judicial Watch sought to discover the records between former CIA Director John Brennan and former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper with CNN during the election and the rollout of the salacious and unverified Steele Dossier, which claimed Trump had colluded with or been compromised by Russia.

The two high-ranking intelligence officials during the Obama administration both later were hired by CNN as special correspondents.

It has been documented and reported that immediately following the election, key Clinton aides John Podesta and Robbie Mook took an active role in crafting the Russia collusion narrative, both to explain Clinton’s election loss and to divert public attention away from any possible investigations into her alleged campaign corruption.

“In early December [2016], if you take a look at the news stories, that’s really the first news stories talking about a Russian potential working with the Trump campaign or involvement with the Trump organization,” Johnson said.

This made the timing of Strzok’s remark about the “sisters” all the more curious, he added.

FBI's Trump Haters Under Probe for Leaks to Media
Peter Strzok & Lisa Page/PHOTOS: Justice Dept. & Ohio State U.

“It’s really puzzling—in those first text messages, what would those sister agencies be worried about? And to refer to these agencies as political—Peter Strzok and Lisa Page referring to something as political? I mean, that’s like the pot calling the kettle black,” Johnson said. “But what are they kicking into overdrive?”

The second e-mail, with its references to fake stories being planted in the media, was no less disconcerting, Johnson said.

“Now we know that there was no substance at all to those stories—but you have agencies, potentially of the United States government—leaking stories that fully indicate that [Russian collusion] might be the case and really creating this incredible narrative,” Johnson said.

“That has taken about eighteen months to get to the bottom of—the fact that there was no story there, there was no collusion,” he said. “And yet, agencies of the federal government were leaking stories.”

At the time of the April message about the media leaks, there already was open discussion about whether Trump was under investigation related to any of the allegations of Russian collusion.

A month later, the president fired disgraced FBI Director James Comey for his refusal to give a straight answer over whether Trump was being investigated.

Comey later acknowledged leaking potentially classified memos about his privileged conversations with Trump to the media in order, to help spur a special counsel’s investigation, he said.

Johnson said he didn’t necessarily expect for criminal charges to emerge from the forthcoming inquiries but that providing a full set of facts about the debunked Russia narrative was no less important.

“The public has a right to know, and people do need to realize it’s congressional investigations — their whole purpose is to make this information public,” he said.

Even though the inspector general’s previous report on the FBI did not lead to serious consequences for the bad actors involved, making sure the story is part of the public record, especially now that the Russia claims have been disproved, had taken on a new urgency.

“I’m always concerned if it’s another criminal investigation, if no crimes are revealed, we may never hear about it,” Johnson said, “but this is just potentially wrongdoing on the parts of these agencies.”

WALKER: Dems’ Gerrymandering Efforts Could Hijack Constitution

‘If Republicans fail to fight back nationally … we will find ourselves in a perpetual minority for a generation…’

Dem. Attorney Marc Elias Used Activist Court Rulings to Redraw GOP Districts 1
North Carolina’s Congressional districts/IMAGE: USA Today via Youtube

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) After two recent victories for Democrats in their “sue-till-blue” effort to undo GOP advantages in red states, former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is calling on Republicans to “wake up.”

Walker recently assumed a key role with the National Republican Redistricting Trust, intended to be a counterpart to former Attorney General Eric Holder‘s National Democratic Redistricting Committee.

On Monday, Fox News published an op–ed from Walker urging his fellow conservatives to be aware of how the Left’s blatant power-grab was playing out right under their noses.

Holder and former President Barack Obama “have spent years and millions of dollars selling the false narrative that Democrats draw ‘fair maps’ while any and all Republican-drawn maps are ‘partisan gerrymanders,'” Walker said.

“While rhetorically cute, their primary goal has nothing to do with fighting gerrymandering as they repeatedly claim, but to put redistricting in the hands of unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats and lifetime-appointed judges,” he said.

The Holder gerrymandering group—first formulated during the 2016 Democratic National Convention by key liberal players, including then-House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and then-Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe—had a significant impact in the 2018 races that helped give the House of Representatives its current Democratic majority.

It initially had released a list targeting about a dozen red states during the 2020 races, but it appears to be expanding its goals in real time.

Activist-liberal judicial panels recently ruled against the district maps in Michigan and Ohio—two crucial swing states that helped carry the elections of both Obama and President Donald Trump.

The Holder-run NDRC also appears to be wielding an ever-increasing level of political influence after Obama’s former campaign arm, Organizing for Action, was brought into its fold.

Obama and Holder Team to Take Out Walker in 2018, Flip Ryan's Seat
Eric Holder & Barack Obama/PHOTO: WhiteHouse.gov

That move assures the NDRC not only financial resources and other campaign-related infrastructure, but a massive distribution list of social-justice-warriors ready to mobilize at its beck-and-call.

The group has divided into multiple layers, including a nonprofit fund that does not need to disclose its donor lists and a super-PAC that has the ability to spend unlimited funds to promote the candidates of its choice—sometimes without their consent.

Walker said the current effort was a win–win for the well-heeled Left.

“Win or lose they are happy to spend their money on lawyers just for the talking points their liberal judges and academics give them to use on cable news and social media,” he said.

“They are more interested in winning the battle of the courtroom in front of friendly judges than winning the battle of ideas before the voters.”

Walker—whose own election loss last year came following such a Democrat-led gerrymandering effort in Wisconsin, cautioned on what the implications would be if the Right did not counter the efforts.

“If Republicans fail to fight back nationally … we will find ourselves in a perpetual minority for a generation,” he said.

The Supreme Court in March heard arguments surrounding two cases—in Maryland and North Carolina—that Republicans hoped would lead to a broader ruling in their favor.

“The Supreme Court can and should swiftly bring clarity and restore reason to what has been profoundly flawed processes,” Walker said.

However, with some of the conservative judges wavering, there remained the possibility that the decision could swing the other way, or perhaps that a delayed ruling may arrive too late to undo the damage in time for next year’s election.

Moreover, such a verdict would apply only to federal districts and not to those of state legislators, who often are responsible for drawing the electoral maps.

Scott Walker Tells NFL Players to Focus on Not Beating Their Wives 1
Scott Walker/Photo by Gage Skidmore (CC)

“State legislatures, who are elected and accountable to the people they serve, have the long-standing right to draw their own districts, for their own state, as they see fit within the confines of the law,” Walker said.

But by using liberal-leaning state Supreme Courts to force redistricting of those legislators, the Democrats could continue kicking the can down the road even after a U.S. Supreme Court loss and, effectively, redraw their own gerrymandered (and, by then, constitutionally protected) maps in 2021.

“We must keep Democrats from hijacking the United States Constitution to achieve their partisan ends,” Walker said. “If we have fairly drawn maps approved by elected officials who are accountable to the voters, we will win.”

Dem Candidates Plan to Govern by Executive Order, While Criticizing Trump for It

‘Increasingly, you’ll see citizens sour on the whole enterprise…’

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Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris / IMAGE: Sen. Kamala Harris via Facebook

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) While congressional Democrats launch constant attacks on President Donald Trump claiming abuse of power, already some 2020 hopefuls are promising to replace him with … the exact same thing.

A story by Politico on Saturday highlighted the emphasis that several Democratic 2020 candidates were placing on ambitious agendas they would likely need to enact by executive order.

All the while, they shamelessly overlooked their opposition to similar actions made by the sitting president.

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., recently made headlines for promising that she would give Congress 100 days to “get their act together” before taking unilateral action to restrict Second Amendment freedoms if elected.

Former Rep. Robert Francis O’Rourke (“Beto”), unveiling a $5 trillion spending plan for climate change legislation, also promised to push it through without the help of legislators.

Meanwhile, both Harris and O’Rourke have vocally supported impeaching Trump for his firing of corrupt FBI Director James Comey, claiming it was obstruction of justice even though no underlying crime was committed.

In the duplicitous minds of Democratic strategists like Andrew Feldman, the flip–flop on overstepping constitutional checks and balances is entirely justified because Orange Man = Bad.

“That’s basically the only way to govern now—it’s kind of a way of life,” Feldman told Politico. “… You can actually get a lot done, and as we’ve seen with the Trump administration, you can do a lot of harm.”

Trump recently issued his second veto in response to Congress’s efforts to keep his executive authority in check.

His first veto overturned a bill to block him from declaring a national emergency and using Pentagon funds to build a border wall.

The second vetoed bill sought to curb the president’s authority under the War Powers Act in response to U.S. support of Saudi Arabian military operations in Yemen—an alleged terrorist safe-harbor and breeding ground.

Although the efforts failed to secure enough votes in Congress for a veto override, anti-Trumpists on both sides of the aisle—after acquiescing to years of Obama’s autopen fiats—have made much hay of their claims that Trump is overreaching.

House Votes to Repeal Onerous Dodd-Frank Law
Barack Obama/IMAGE: YouTube

Ironically, after decrying Trump’s authority, progressive leaders are now pivoting back to a more White House-centered vision of governance as they outline their own presidential ambitions.

Some on the Left dismissed those campaign-trail promises as simple talking points intended to fire up the liberal base.

But, inevitably, their contorted arguments about the scope of presidential authority always circle back to attacking the present office-holder, even when giving his ideological adversaries a free pass.

“I think it’s more to appeal to various segments of the electorate—to rev people up issue by issue,” said Les Francis, a deputy White House chief of staff in the Carter administration. “It’s against a backdrop of dysfunctionality and paralysis to be sure. But I think it’s more, ‘How do you get people revved up?’”

Among the other candidates included in Politico‘s list were Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.; and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee. Both, like O’Rourke, promised immediate executive action to roll back Trump’s environmental policies.

But in the same breath as Warren promised to restore a massive land-grab of park lands in Utah—initiated by former President Barack Obama in the waning days of his Oval Office tenure—she feigned outrage that Trump had dared reinstate the original park boundaries by that exact method.

“With one stroke of his pen, President Trump shrunk our protected lands by more than two million acres in 2017 — the single biggest rollback of protected lands in U.S. history,” Warren wrote in a blog post via Medium.

Politico was quick to note that in 2014 Trump was among the many Republicans who criticized Obama’s use of executive order on a number of issues—most prominently by refusing to enforce existing laws related to immigration and health care.

One obvious difference, though was that Trump was neither a public figure nor even a candidate for office at the time.

Another point to consider is that Trump has simply used executive authority largely to undo those things that Obama used it to do in the first place.

And in some cases, like the border wall negotiations, the current president has made every effort in good faith to negotiate with the obstructionist opposition.

Trump has since embraced—and even boasted about—the number of times he used executive orders to enact policy, although Politico noted it was only slightly higher than that of Obama or George W. Bush during their first two years in office.

Trump at U.N. Security Council
President Donald Trump chairs the U.N. Security Council/IMAGE: Fox News via Youtube

Meanwhile, in their partisan opposition to Trump, Democrats have identified another method through which executive action may be stymied: using the courts to issue an injunction.

While many of Obama’s actions challenged in the courtroom wound up proving to be unconstitutional, Trump’s have, by and large, been cleared and validated after the frivolous deployment of lawsuits as a stall tactic.

Even so, one source told Politico that, eventually, the tit-for-tat use of executive authority to reverse one’s predecessor may prove to have a limited shelf-life.

“People will get thoroughly sick of that,” Bo Cutter, a veteran of two Democratic White Houses, told Politico. “… Increasingly, you’ll see citizens sour on the whole enterprise.”

Union Thugs Use Intimidation Tactics at Ala. Food Plant—and in Congress

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‘Given Teamsters union bosses’ well-deserved reputation for using violence to shut down dissent, it is critical that the NLRB quickly prosecute…’

Supermarket Employee Files Complaint after Union Harassed and Threatend Him
IMAGE: CBS Boston

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Teamster thugs at an Alabama Sysco Foods plant got federal charges for attempting to snatch the petitions from anti-union activists.

According to the National Right to Work Foundation, Sysco employee Sulane Lowery filed a federal unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board against the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and Teamsters Local 612.

“Sulane Lowery is simply exercising his right to oppose Teamsters monopoly unionization, but rather than seeking to convince workers to voluntarily affiliate with their union, Teamsters bullies have resorted to physical intimidation and coercion,” said NRTW Foundation President Mark Mix.

Lowery had been organizing a counter-drive as the union sought to press the Sysco employees to support giving it exclusive worker representation at the food-distribution plant south of Birmingham.

Lowery’s complaint said that he was gathering the petitions from coworkers when several Teamsters agents “ripped from his hands the petitions he was collecting.”

The union henchmen then proceeded to steal employee information from the petitions, although they never returned them.

“Given Teamsters union bosses’ well-deserved reputation for using violence to shut down dissent, it is critical that the NLRB quickly prosecute the Teamsters for this blatantly illegal behavior,” Mix said.

The attack is believed to be caught on tape by security cameras and will be investigated.

Despite its efforts to protect workers’ rights to be free from union coercion and intimidation practices, NRTW said its own ability to operate free from intimidation had also come under threat recently by a different sort of thugs.

In March, the partisan Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives, led by Speaker Nancy Pelosi, railroaded through a highly contentious bill, HR 1, which it dubbed the “For the People” Act.

In reality, despite its rosy, Orwellian nomenclature, the bill, which cleared the House 228–197 was anything but “for the people.”

Among the bill’s lowlights:

  • Expand ‘access’ to voter registration—by effectively limiting safeguards in place to prevent voter fraud
  • Force presidents and vice presidents to release their tax returns
  • Rewrite campaign finance laws, forcing nonprofit advocacy groups to submit reams of paperwork and disclose donors

“The clear, unconstitutional aim of HR 1 is to curtail the free speech of ordinary citizens,” said Greg Mourad, NRTW’s committee vice president, in a newsletter.

Like the petition-stealing teamsters, NRTW said it fears the disclosure of its supporters, in an era in which leaks and doxing have become common practices deployed by the Left, would be tantamount to an intimidation tactic.

“Effectively, Right to Work officers would either have to help thuggish politicians and union bosses track down and harass our supporters for daring to criticize them, or risk fines and, potentially, imprisonment,” Mourad said.

Sen. Kamala Harris Confused that Rosenstein Had Role in Mueller Probe

‘Sir, the flip—flop in this case, I think, is that you’re not answering the question directly…’

Low-Info Sen. Kamala Harris Claims Shock that Rosenstein Had Role in Mueller Decision
Cory Booker and Kamala Harris / IMAGE: Senate Judiciary Committee

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Although “collusion” was supposed to be the main topic during Wednesday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing with Attorney General William Barr, it was “confusion” that seemed to overcome Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif.

Harris, a 2020 presidential hopeful, has previously expressed befuddlement over whether she approved of Jussie Smollett‘s hate-crime hoax and whether she would allow incarcerated felons to vote in elections.

At the hearing, she seemed shell-shocked once again upon learning that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who oversaw the Mueller investigation for nearly two years (prior to his resignation this week), was involved in the prosecutorial decisions after the report’s submission.

During Harris’s often peevish seven-minute interrogation of Barr, she grilled the recently appointed attorney general by demanding to know if he was aware of whether Rosenstein—the man he took over the Mueller investigation from—had consulted with a DOJ ethics panel before becoming involved.

“I think they cleared it when he took over the investigation,” Barr said, noting that Rosenstein was approved by the Senate 96–4 following a specific discussion that he would lead the Russia investigation when then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself.

Harris said Rosenstein had a conflict of interest since he was also a key witness over the firing of former FBI Director James Comey.

Trump axed the disgraced Comey in May 2017 at Rosenstein’s recommendation, amid questions over whether the FBI was conducting an investigation into the now debunked claims of Russian conspiracy.

“[Rosenstein] wouldn’t be participating if there was a conflict of interest,” Barr said.

“This seems to be a bit of a flip–flop,” Barr added, “because when the president’s supporters were challenging Rosenstein—”

Harris interrupted: “Sir, the flip–flop in this case, I think, is that you’re not answering the question directly.”

Harris, a former San Francisco prosecutor, also claimed—without citing evidence—that Barr had a conflict of interest, making it unclear who would have been a satisfactory decision-maker in her mind.

“I think the American public has seen quite well that you are biased in this situation and you have not been objective,” she said after Barr asked what the basis would be for him to consult an ethics panel over ongoing investigations.

Political Theater of the Absurd

While more reasonable members of the Senate Judiciary Committee—including Sens. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.; Ben Sasse, R-Neb.; and Joni Ernst, R-Iowa—sought to explore ways Congress and the Justice Department could collaborate on preventing future Russian interference in elections, many of the the committee’s leftist radicals engaged in political theater, launching a full fledged assault on Barr’s credibility.

Sen. Cory Booker, D-NJ, another presidential hopeful, bemoaned that partisanship had allegedly seeped into the investigation.

“We’re at a very sobering moment in American history,” Booker said. “… I fear that we’re descending into a new normal that is dangerous for our democracy on a number of levels.”

Unfortunately, his far-left Senate colleagues—including Harris, Mazie Hirono of Hawaii and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut—didn’t get the memo.

“A lot of respected nonpartisan experts and legal officials were surprised by your efforts to protect the president,” Hirono said, “but I wasn’t surprised. You did exactly what I thought you’d do. That’s why I voted against your confirmation—I expected you would try to protect the president, and indeed you did.”

Hirono—who attempted to make a name for herself with her bombastic, profanity-laced, misandrist attacks during the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh—demanded Barr’s resignation.

However, her tirade was cut off by committee chairman Lindsey Graham, R-SC, who criticized her for slandering Barr.

Like Harris, Blumenthal—a leading Senate voice in impeachment calls and attempts to sue the president for his tax returns—called on Barr recuse himself from other investigations into the president.

“You’ve been very adroit and agile in your responses to questions here,” Blumenthal said, “but I think history will judge you harshly, and maybe a bit unfairly, because you seem to have been the designated fall guy for this report.”

Recalibrating ‘Normalcy’

BARR: Mueller Expressed Never Disputed Accuracy of AG's Report Summary
William Barr / IMAGE: Senate Judiciary Committee

As the Democrats griped that the Justice Department had overlooked Trump’s alleged moral shortcomings when assessing the Mueller Report, Barr tried to represent the written rule of law and best practices that he used to form the basis of his decisions.

“I’m not in the business of determining when lies are told to the American people,” he said. “I’m in the business of determining whether a crime has been committed.”

The attorney general, though mostly unflappable, was at times was clearly perplexed by the partisan grandstanding and outlandish accusations.

“This whole thing is sort of mind-bendingly bizarre,” he said in response to a question from Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., about the Democrats’ charges that he sought to forestall the report and mislead about its conclusions while making legally mandated redactions.

“I made clear from the beginning that I was putting out the report—as much of the report as I could—and it was clear that it was gonna take three weeks or so, maybe four, to do that,” Barr said.

Many of the complaints the Democrats raised were rendered moot by the report’s sparingly redacted, full public release in April—although they continued to press their narrative of malfeasance.

It is likely that the Democrats are seeking to justify, in the public eye, their continuing push for further House-led investigations into the accusations against Trump, which would, no doubt, extend through next year’s election season.

But Barr criticized the move and put the ball in the partisan leftists’ court to recalibrate their own “normalcy”—by accepting the legal conclusions of the Mueller Report and moving on rather than engaging in crass political games.

“The report is now in the hands of the American people,” he said. “Everyone can decide for themselves—there’s an election in 18 months. That’s a very democratic process, but we’re out of it, and we have to stop using the criminal justice process as a political weapon.”

BARR: Mueller Never Disputed Accuracy of AG’s Conclusions

‘When we pressed him on it, he said his team was still formulating an explanation…’

BARR: Mueller Expressed Never Disputed Accuracy of AG's Report Summary
William Barr / IMAGE: Senate Judiciary Committee

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) In the first hours of Attorney General William Barr‘s testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, several Democratic members honed on a letter that Special Council Robert Mueller sent to the AG’s office on March 24, which they claimed contradicted Barr’s previous testimony.

The letter, revealed the day before the testimony in a piece by The Washington Post, seemed to suggest, according to the Democrats, that Mueller was dissatisfied with Barr’s conclusions summarizing the key findings of the special counsel’s report on claims that President Donald Trump potentially obstructed the investigation.

But Barr disputed this, saying in response to a question from Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., that he had spoken directly with Mueller and been told otherwise.

“My understanding was his concern was not the accuracy of the statement of the findings in my letter, but that he wanted more out there to provide additional context to explain his reasoning on why he didn’t reach a decision on obstruction,” Barr said.

Democrats have hammered the attorney general as part of their deflective efforts to undermine and scapegoat over the Mueller Report’s unsatisfactory conclusions about President Donald Trump’s campaign activity.

Following the revelations of the Mueller letter, some on the Left called on Barr to resign, claiming he had lied to Congress when directly questioned about any concerns that Mueller’s office might have had with the summary.

Barr, however, said the specific question he was asked cited complaints from unnamed staffers whose concerns he was not directly aware of. Regarding what Mueller had represented to him in the letter as a concern, Barr analogized his summary of the report to a judge rendering a verdict.

“After a monthslong trial, if I wanted to go out and get out to the public what the verdict was … and the prosecutor comes up, taps me on the shoulder and says, ‘Well, the verdict doesn’t really fully capture all my work. How about that great cross examination I did, or how about that third day of trial where I did that—- this doesn’t capture everything’—my answer to that is I’m not trying to capture everything,” Barr said.

He said Mueller was offered the opportunity to review in advance his four-page summary but declined.

Durbin expressed his skepticism, saying the fact that Mueller put it in writing was a telling indicator that he objected to the way the conclusions were being represented.

“There’s a good rule in politics: A good attorney doesn’t write a letter and doesn’t throw one away,” he said.

Passing the Buck on Obstruction

During the testimony, Barr also directly addressed Mueller’s decision to pass the buck on determining whether Trump had obstructed justice.

Barr said both he and recently resigned Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein—who oversaw much of the investigation—were surprised that Mueller had deferred on the obstruction question, which was part of his charter to decide conclusively.

“I think that if he felt that he shouldn’t go down the path of making a traditional prosecutive decision then he shouldn’t have investigated—that was the time to pull up,” Barr said, responding to a question from Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

Barr said that when he initially asked Mueller why his office had failed to reach a conclusion he didn’t get a direct answer. “When we pressed him on it, he said his team was still formulating an explanation.”

Given the burden of making that highly politicized determination, Barr said he weighed the evidence individually on each of the 10 possible obstruction claims, using the “analytical framework” provided by Mueller.

Ultimately, Barr said he found that it would be difficult to prove obstruction without an actual crime having occurred since the report had found no evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia.

“The paradigmatic case is there’s an underlying crime and the persons implicated are concerned about the crime being discovered,” Barr told Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-SC, the committee chair.

Barr said that one of the more publicized accounts from the report—that Trump directed attorney Don McGahn to dismiss Mueller was not outside of the scope of the president’s authority and may have stemmed from valid concerns about Mueller’s conflicts of interest related to a key player in the investigation, former FBI Director James Comey.

However, Barr noted that dismissing Mueller would be different from trying to end the investigation and that the White House had, in fact, fully cooperated with the investigative efforts, with McGahn testifying for more than 30 hours.

Graham pointed to several prominent Democrats having called for the dismissal of Comey, and Barr said Mueller’s findings supported the fact that there was no attempted cover-up involved in the firing.

“Even the report at the end of the day … came to the conclusion that a reason that loomed large there … was his refusal to tell the public… that the president was not under investigation,” Barr said.

Although Comey had told Trump as much in their private conversations, it was later revealed that the FBI had been investigating Trump, albeit under false pretenses supplied by the Steele Dossier.

Improperly Predicated Investigation

Republicans on the committee focused on the dossier and the role of Hillary Clinton’s actions and the Obama Justice Department’s actions in their own campaign interference.

Barr told Grassley that he was currently looking into whether the investigation into Trump, led by biased FBI agents including Peter Strzok, was properly predicated and that he hoped to deliver his findings to Congress.

Both Grassley and Graham noted that the Democrats’ actions using the firm Fusion GPS seemed, ironically, to be the most obvious case for foreign interference in the 2016 election.

“The Mueller Report spent millions investigating and found no collusion between Trump campaign and Russia,” Grassley said, “but the Democrats paid for a document created by a foreign national with reported foreign government sources—not Trump, but the Democrats. That’s the definition of collusion.”

However, Durbin attempted to redirect the conversation, saying that the GOP’s “Lock Her Up” Defense had no bearing on the testimony that Barr was there to provide.

He mocked the Republican questioning, claiming that their focus was really about Hillary Clinton’s e-mails and other scandals—including the Bill Clinton-era Travelgate and Whitewater investigations.

“There’s a lot of material we should be going through today, according to their response to this, that is totally unresponsive to the reality of what the American people want to know,” Durbin said.

Judge Protects Charlottesville Confederate Statues

If ‘a jury were to decide that they are not monuments or memorials to veterans of the civil war, I would have to set such verdict aside as unreasonable…’

Robert E. Lee statue
Charlottesville’s former Lee Park/PHOTO: Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) The Confederate statues in Charlottesville, Va., that led to a fatal 2017 clash between extremist ideologues cannot be removed by city officials, a judge ruled Tuesday.

A circuit court judge said that the statues of Gens. Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson were protected war monuments, Breitbart reported, citing local media.

Not only did the merits of the case fail to support further deliberation on their removal, but in fact, the opposite would be true, said Judge Richard Moore.

The law dictates that the court would have to actively intervene to block any removal efforts by the city, he said.

“[I]f the matter went to trial on this issue and a jury were to decide that they are not monuments or memorials to veterans of the [C]ivil [W]ar, I would have to set such verdict aside as unreasonable,” Moore wrote in his ruling.

While Moore’s decision marks a small victory for historic preservationists and free-speech advocates, it is—like the bloody conflict it commemorates—a Pyrrhic one that has produced heavy casualties along the way, resulting in a largely lose–lose scenario.

Led by Wes Bellamy—a radical black activist, disgraced ex-school teacher and vice mayor of Charlottesville—the far-left City Council passed a controversial resolution to remove the statues and rename the downtown parks honoring the two generals.

Protests organized by Jason Kessler—a former Obama supporter turned right-wing agitator—resulted in violence between neo-Nazi groups and Antifa counter-protesters, temporarily turning the idyllic former hometown of Thomas Jefferson into a horrific hellscape in August 2017.

During the daylong melee, local protester Heather Heyer, 32, was killed as Ohio resident James Fields, 21, plowed into a crowd of bystanders, also injuring 19 others.

Fields was found guilty of murder in December.

Two Virginia State Police—Lt. Jay Cullen and Trooper–pilot Berke Bates—also died after their helicopter crashed while they were monitoring the protests.

Uncertain Future

 1
Charlottesville’s Robert E. Lee statue / PHOTO: Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines

Moore’s verdict in support of the Confederate statues may actually have the result of putting them into even greater limbo.

For more than two years, an injunction has prevented their removal—although city officials attempted for a time to ameliorate their sudden, spontaneous affront to public sensibilities by covering them in black tarps.

Now, the weight of law seems unlikely to placate those who have long pushed for the removal effort.

In the state’s southern neighbor, North Carolina, unruly mobs have forcibly taken down statues under similar circumstances.

The felling of Confederate monuments in Durham and Chapel Hill—two college towns, like Charlottesville—resulted in minor admonitions and a few nominal jail sentences, but the social-justice-seeking scofflaws ultimately succeeded in their removal efforts.

While the Charlottesville statues are considerably heavier—with both of the Virginian leaders mounted on their horses—and unlikely to be easily toppled, vandalism is all but guaranteed.

The statues also face a major challenge from Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, who may have a stronger hand than local officials in forcing their removal.

MURDOCK: Historically Culpable Democrats Alone Should Foot Bill for 'Reparations' 1
Ralph Northam’s 1984 medical school yearbook

After a February scandal revealed Northam’s past penchant for dressing in blackface, with a picture from his medical school yearbook that depicted blatantly racist images, the Democrat, who ran as a moderate, clung to his political life by promising a hard left turn.

Black activists—again led by Bellamy—agreed to give him a pass only on condition that he acquiesced to a radical agenda, among which removal of the state’s Confederate monuments figured prominently.

President Donald Trump has defended the statues and condemned their removal efforts. He recently reaffirmed that his response to the Charlottesville violence was perfect, while also calling Lee a “great general.”

Trump’s initial reaction was to condemn racism of all types and blame the violence on radicals of both the Right and Left fringes.

However, partisan opponents have sought repeatedly to distort the president’s words and translate his defense of the historical figures into a racist dogwhistle.

Whatever fate lies in store for the statues, they are sure to figure into both the upcoming Virginia state legislative elections and next year’s presidential race.

Cuomo Denies Involvement in Attacks on NRA, Says Trump is Afraid of the Gun Group

‘I also have blonde hair, blue eyes and a little button nose. Can you see it, John, my little button nose?’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) After New York’s state Attorney General Letitia James launched a partisan investigation into the finances of the National Rifle Association, Gov. Andrew Cuomo attempted to distance himself from it on Tuesday.

However, Cuomo—who acknowledged having his own vendetta against the powerful gun-rights group—nonetheless jumped at the opportunity to lob cheap shots at both President Donald Trump and the NRA.

“[T]he President of the United States, for all his bluster, is afraid of the NRA. It is that simple,” Cuomo told CNN‘s “New Day” host John Berman, who replaced the governor’s brother, Chris, on the leftist network’s morning show when the latter received his own prime-time program last May.

“We know it is that simple,” Cuomo continued. “The NRA has been a strong political force for many, many years. They’re threatening. They have money. They mobilize people.”

James’s investigation into the NRA’s finances followed the surprise departure of NRA President Oliver North on Saturday. North, who assumed the role last year, accused longtime NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre of charging some $200,0000 in personal expenses to a vendor.

Trump—a firm NRA supporter who became the first president since Ronald Reagan to address the group’s annual convention in 2017, and returned last week to address it’s most recent one—issued a statement criticizing the New York investigation as being politically motivated.

“The NRA is under siege by Cuomo and the New York State Attorney General, who are illegally using the state’s legal apparatus to take down and destroy the very important organization and others,” Trump said, according to CNN. “It must get its act together quickly, stop the internal fighting and get back to greatness fast.”

Cuomo responded by denying that he had any role in the launching of the investigation, while also taking a backhanded slap at the Mueller Report, which recently debunked longstanding claims of collusion between Trump and Russia.

Democrats have claimed—although with little evidence—that despite what some call an unprecedented level of transparency in the report’s release, U.S. Attorney General William Barr felt pressured by the White House to exonerate Trump.

“[W]e don’t use the criminal justice apparatus to play politics.” swiped Cuomo. “It is separate, Mr. President. You have the Justice Department, which acts independently to enforce the laws, and you don’t politicize the justice system, Mr. President—news flash.”

However, Cuomo admitted to being at “loggerheads” with the NRA, both over a specific insurance policy for concealed-carry permit holders that the governor targeted last year, and more generally due to his diverging political views.

“I’ve been at loggerheads with the NRA for more than a year,” he said. “I’ve been at loggerheads with the NRA for about 20 years, for very good reasons. I believe the NRA is counterproductive, not just to the people of this country, but also for legal gun owners. I don’t think they serve gun owners well. They haven’t been constructive. They have been a destructive force in this country for everyone involved.”

Cuomo also touched on a high-profile dispute with Trump about federal tax reforms that raised taxes for many wealthy New Yorkers by capping state and local deductions.

The governor denied that the rate increases fell on his shoulders. In response to the president’s claim that he failed to fight hard enough in the tax debate, Cuomo reiterated an earlier claim that Trump was a liar. “Yeah, well, I also have blonde hair, blue eyes and a little button nose,” he said. “Can you see it, John, my little button nose? Again, the President is divorced from facts.”

The president’s tax overhaul, rather, amounted to “pure politics,” Cuomo griped.

“Fifteen states had their taxes effectively raised by the [state and local tax] deduction …  All Democratic states. It’s all politics all the time with him. There is no policy.”

Democrats Blasted for Rejecting Visits to Border; Willful Blindness to Crisis

‘Democrats in Congress won’t help solve the problem because they do not even recognize that a crisis exists…’

Illegals cross underneath an area of fencing and barbed wire in the Yuma, Ariz., sector of the southern border. / IMAGE: Customs and Border Patrol, 12 News via Youtube

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Five GOP congressmen who witnessed the crisis at the US–Mexico Border called on their Democratic counterparts to quit living in denial.

Reps. Andy Biggs of Arizona, Matt Gaetz of Florida, Sean Duffy of Wisconsin, John Joyce of Pennsylvania and Duncan Hunter of California recently visited the Yuma borderline in Biggs’s home state.

On Friday, they published a recap of what they encountered via the Fox News website.

Their firsthand report of seeing scores of Guatemalan nationals apprehended, overcrowded detention centers and cartels keeping lookouts reaffirmed the charges long made by the White House and Department of Homeland Security.

Contrary to Democrats’ claims that they are supporting a humanitarian mission, the congressmen said the political inaction and loose enforcement of immigration laws was, in fact, contributing to immigrants’ anguish as parents were sold into servitude by organized crime syndicates.

The children, said the congressmen, were then held captive, to be “rented” out to border-crossing illegals in a bid—often successful—to exploit the loopholes in asylum laws that would lead to a quick release.

“The inhumanity is caused by judicial activists who have limited the executive branch from enforcing our immigration laws,” the congressmen said.

While the laws based on the Bill Clinton-era Flores settlement require that children (and their accompanying guardians) be held no longer than 20 days, the overcrowding and lack of family detention centers often means they are released far sooner, usually about three days.

“President Trump has declared an emergency on the border. He is right,” said the congressmen. “We catch, at most, one-third of people illegally crossing into the U.S., and one-tenth of the drugs.”

But even as the top priority is securing the border, the Republicans said their political adversaries continued to ignore the problem altogether.

“Unfortunately, Democrats in Congress won’t help solve the problem because they do not even recognize that a crisis exists,” said the congressmen.

That isn’t for lack of effort on the part of border-security advocates, who say many Democrats have rebuffed their open invitations to arrange a visit.

Shortly after the government ended its shutdown in January, a group of Border Patrol wives in Texas’s Rio Grande area saw their online call to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., go unanswered.

“”You don’t need to bring any security detail,” wrote would-be organizer Jill Demanski on Facebook. “Our husbands/boyfriends/fiances/wives/significant others are actually very good at their jobs, thank goodness! And since you see no threat here, I’m sure you can just make a quick flight down here alone.”

A day later, a rancher in Pelosi’s home state of California re-extended an invitation, which he said he had initially offered more than four years prior, for the left-wing party leader to visit.

Freshman
Rep. Chip Roy surveying the cartel paths in the Rio Grande Valley / PHOTO: @RepChipRoy via Twitter

Shortly thereafter, Texas GOP Rep. Chip Roy made an “unannounced” border trip to see some of the trouble areas in the Rio Grande Valley, which he live-tweeted in early February, inviting supporters to use the hashtag #PelosiDoesntCare and others.

More recently, in early April, Art del Cueto, vice president of the Border Patrol Council, issued an open invitation to Democrats to visit after three Texas-based Democrats—including presidential hopeful Julian Castro—attacked Trump’s policies and called for open borders.

“I haven’t seen any of them down here working with us, I haven’t seen any of them down here asking to speak to any of us,” del Cueto said.

It is no surprise, of course, that Democrats are eager to avoid the bad optics. If they were to witness the lawlessness being described, they would have to acknowledge the crisis.

On the other hand, by going to a safe and secure section, as CNN‘s Jim Acosta attempted to do in early January, they risk even greater political peril in potentially encountering their greatest nemesis: an effective border wall.

While Acosta’s trip was widely mocked for helping to prove Trump’s point, a follow-up visit from Acosta’s network colleague Chris Cuomo in early April to the same area—near McAllen, Texas—showed a far different story as Cuomo visited one of the over-run detention centers.