Sunday, May 25, 2025

Is House Speaker Paul Ryan to Blame for GOP Midterm Losses?

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‘Paul Ryan should be focusing on holding the Majority rather than giving his opinions …’

House Immigration Bill Has 'Path to Citizenship' for Illegal Aliens
Donald Trump & Paul Ryan (screen shot: ABC News/Youtube)

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) As analysts work to make sense of the mixed outcome from Tuesday’s midterm election, some may wonder whether Speaker of the House Paul Ryan’s ineffectiveness in mobilizing the House GOP was responsible for losing the lower chamber to Democrats.

In reality, a complex tapestry of intangible factors—and a few historical constants—played a part.

But the Wisconsin congressman, whose divergence from Trumpism made him a political casualty, certainly had a role in it.

Despite public statements Trump made at rallies that the midterms were a referendum on him, media outlets including the Los Angeles Times and Politico reported that the president privately held the Congress responsible for what he considered to be their elections, and pinned much responsibility on the retiring Ryan for his failure to lead.

Trump publicly said as much last week after Ryan second-guessed the legality of the president’s proposal to repeal birthright citizenship by executive order:

While the two Republican leaders have largely avoided the public disputes that others—even members of Trump’s own cabinet—have engaged in, the exchange offered a window into the out-of-sync dynamic that disappointingly resulted in Congressional gridlock during what should have been the GOP’s shining moment.

Not only did the House struggle to find traction on countless legislative issues, such as balancing the budget and pushing through entitlement reform—two of Ryan’s and Trump’s shared objectives—but the election effort itself seemed fraught with disarray and lackluster candidates going up against a well-funded and well-coordinated Democratic machine.

The morning after the midterm election, Trump posted that candidates who followed his lead for the most part fared well.

A Reluctant Leader

Whether one can cast blame the departing Ryan, one of more than 40 GOP congressmen who decided not to pursue re-election when faced with the daunting road ahead, may be something of a “chicken vs. egg” question that depends on the perspective.

In the six years after being selected as Mitt Romney’s 2012 vice presidential running mate, Ryan, now 48, was branded everything from P90X beefcake to political wunderkind to Ayn-Rand-reading face of neoconservatism to policy wonk determined to fix the tax system to a last-gasp GOP savior following a party mutiny over his predecessor, former Speaker John Boehner.

Nancy Pelosi and Paul Ryan/IMAGE: CNN via Youtube

Ryan spent 10 terms in Congress, chairing two powerful committees before getting drafted into the speakership. But unbeknownst to him, by time he assumed the gavel in October 2015, the fate of his own political trajectory and legislative ambitions had already been sealed by Trump’s June 2015 ride down a golden escalator to announce his candidacy.

Ryan’s reluctance to step into the role of Congress’s main cat-herder was punctuated by his difference in vision and style from Trump. The former’s career inside the D.C. Beltway had acclimated him to a different kind of deal-brokering—one geared toward sausage-factory compromises, albeit a little too eager to acquiesce to the opposition—than the pragmatic business mogul who embraced conflict and controversy with an eye toward winning big-time.

Like Boehner, Ryan struggled as speaker to bridge the gap among factions and to placate the various stakeholders. As seasoned liberal adversaries like Nancy Pelosi maneuvered to regain power by undermining any legislative action, on Ryan’s right the increasingly vocal House Freedom Caucus quickly lost confidence in him over his lukewarm support of Trump.

Meanwhile, in the world outside D.C., Ryan was less than assured of safeguarding his own working-class district from an embarrassing political defeat at the hands of either a primary challenger or a well-funded progressive like Randy “The Iron Stache” Bryce, who promised to ‘repeal and replace‘ the incumbent.

Publicly, Ryan (who at 16 lost his father to a heart attack) expressed his desire to spend time with his family as his three children approached their teenage years. The shooting of House Majority Whip Steve Scalise last year by a deranged, left-wing radical not only waylaid the legislative agenda for several crucial months, but also, no doubt, added to the psychological toll pressing on Ryan—third in ascension order for the presidency—to step away.

In announcing his retirement in April, Ryan said, “[I]t’s easy to [let politics] take over everything in your life, and you can’t just let that happen because there are other things in life that can be fleeting as well—namely your time as a husband and a dad, which is the other great honor of my life.”

But as Ryan’s mind drifted back to the Badger State, the result was a power vacuum among House GOP leadership that left Trump pulling double duty.

Where other chief executives in his position historically have maintained a low midterm profile in order to avoid making it about their policies and personalities, Trump took ownership, barnstorming across the country in recent weeks.

From a historical perspective, it was a success—his projected loss of 36 seats (with some races on Wednesday still being counted or contested) fell in line with expectations—unlike Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, who each ceded control of Congress in their first midterms with losses of 52 and 63 seats, respectively.

In his statement following the loss, Ryan brought out his customarily analytical approach by noting that on average, going back to 1862, the president’s party has lost 32 House seats and two Senate seats in midterm elections (Trump’s Senate is expected to gain three).

“Tonight history has repeated itself,” Ryan said. “A party in power always faces tough odds in its first midterm election.”

But he also acknowledged the new political realities with an appeal to his successors “find common ground” despite the rancor.

“We don’t need an election to know that we are a divided nation, and now we have a divided Washington,” Ryan said. “As a country and a government we must find a way to come together.”

CNN’s Acosta Has Press Pass Suspended for Briefing Room Scuffle

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‘CNN should be ashamed of itself having you working for them. You are a rude, terrible person…’

CNN's Jim Acosta Attacks Trump, Blaming Him for Deadly Events in Charlottesville
Jim Acosta/Photo by Gage Skidmore (CC)

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Between interviewing prospective attorneys general and pondering how to find a new way forward until the 2020 election with a now divided government—and an opposition party that made impeaching him its central platform—President Donald Trump probably had enough to worry about on Wednesday.

But that didn’t stop CNN Chief White House Correspondent Jim Acosta from doggedly trying to steal Trump’s time by questioning the president over the semantics of a caravan approaching the border and whether he was concerned about further indictments in special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russian collusion investigation.

Following a tense exchange between Trump and Acosta in which the reporter allegedly accosted a female White House staffer, Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said on Twitter late Wednesday night that Acosta’s press pass had been suspended.

Trump already had little patience as soon as Acosta prefaced his question about a statement he made during the close of the election campaign.

“Here we go,” Trump said.

After a gamely exchange that lasted about a minute and a half, in which the two talked over one another and Trump managed to slip in a jab at CNN’s ratings, the president finally told Acosta, “That’s enough.”

However, Acosta refused to yield the mic as a female White House staffer approached to take it.

As Trump stepped away from the podium, Acosta finally handed over the mic.

Trump then lit into him, saying, “I tell you, CNN should be ashamed of itself having you working for them. You are a rude, terrible person.”

As Acosta attempted to interject, Trump added, “The way you treat [Press Secretary] Sarah Huckabee [Sanders] is horrible.”

In June, CBS published a story that was widely spread suggesting that Sanders, who has been publicly mocked at the annual White House Correspondents Association dinner and forced from a restaurant by intolerant social justice warriors, was considering a departure.

However, Sanders put the rumors to rest, saying on Twitter that she loved her job.

Acosta has often assumed the role of chief antagonist during press briefings, so much so that during Trump campaign rallies, people in the audience would actively look for him in order to heckle with jeers of “CNN sucks.”

The network, in return, which Trump often refers to as “fake news,” has expressed alarm at what it calls Trump’s “hate movement” against the media and have claimed Trump is endangering the press with his rhetoric.

Several times in the past, White House officials have canceled interviews or threatened consequences over Acosta’s rude and unruly behavior.

Obama’s Election Day Gaffe Highlights Left’s Complicated Relationship with Women

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‘Lord knows we need more women in charge…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Former President Barack Obama took great strides during his time in office to see that the government, not science, had the upper hand in determining people’s gender.

But at a rally in the D.C. suburbs of Northern Virginia, he confoundingly took it a step farther, encouraging voters to replace a Republican woman, Rep. Barbara Comstock, with Democratic Jennifer Wexton because, “Lord knows we need more women in charge,” he said.

Obama pressed forward with a talking point that his party first trotted out during the Brett Kavanaugh hearings that the #MeToo movement would dominate the midterms. Promoting it as a reboot of 1992, liberals have declared—ironically, despite the election of serial abuser Bill Clinton to the nation’s highest office that year—2018 marked the return of the “Year of the Woman.”

But as it did the first time around, the changing context has made the Left’s bid for the female vote a bit awkward on occasion.

On one hand, Democratic politicians like New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, former Attorney General Eric Holder and former Vice President Joe Biden have shown a lack of self-awareness by refusing to reconcile their rhetoric with their own misogynist histories.

On the other hand, as Obama proved Tuesday, the Left has no issue with disparaging the wrong “type” of female—i.e. the conservative kind.

Alumni, Faculty at Susan Collins's Alma Mater Demand Revoke of Her Degree
Sen. Susan Collins and Justice Brett Kavanaugh/IMAGE: NBC News via Youtube

While supporting the politically charged and unsubstantiated claims of Kavanaugh accusers—some of whom have since been discredited and admitted to lying—leftist activists didn’t bat an eye in sending death and rape threats to the offices of Maine Sen. Susan Collins after she cast the deciding vote for Kavanaugh.

Likewise, pop-star Taylor Swift made the unusual move of endorsing Tennessee Democratic Senate candidate Phil Bredesen by claiming he would do a better job representing women’s issues than his opponent Marsha Blackburn—an actual woman. Blackburn countered that she represented the issues that mattered to the women of Tennessee.

Although the “Believe all women” slogan was popular for a brief moment during the Kavanaugh hearings, it quickly ran into its limits as Keith Ellison, deputy chair of the Democratic National Committee, worked overtime to brush his own abuse scandal under the rug.

Meanwhile, in California’s hotly contested 39th district, several tables were turned as Democrats found themselves rallying around a male millionaire lottery winner, Gil Cisneros, to replace retiring Republican congressman Ed Royce rather than Young Kim, a first-generation Korean-American woman.

Adding insult to injury, Cisneros found himself tamping down claims from another left-wing politician, Melissa Fazli, that after the state Democratic convention, Cisneros had demanded sex in exchange for a campaign contribution. It took a good talking to for Fazli to come around.

“This past week, seeing the pain of Dr. Ford and so many women and the dismissiveness of both Judge Kavanaugh and Washington Republicans, I felt it was important to reach out to meet with Melissa,” Cisneros said, according to Politifact. “… We sat down and heard each other, found a clear case of misunderstanding, and are both ready to move forward.”

Rep. Adam Schiff, who stands poised to head the House Judiciary Committee should Democrats retake the lower chamber, nonetheless joined Cisneros on the campaign trail Tuesday, with a promise to re-open the House investigation into collusion between Trump and Russia during the 2016 campaign, even as special prosecutor Robert Mueller is working to bring his investigation to a close.

Rush Limbaugh Praises Trump’s Tireless Defense of America at Missouri Rally

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‘We are defending an America that has strayed from our founding…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) In one of the key battleground fronts of the 2018 midterm elections, Missouri, President Donald Trump got an extra boost of support at a rally on the eve of Election Day from conservative heavy-hitter Rush Limbaugh in his hometown of Cape Girardeau.

The radio talk-show host rebuked the accusations that the right-wing had created a “divisive” culture by demanding strong immigration and law-enforcement.

“They say we’re divisive, but we are not divisive,” he said. “We are defending an America that has strayed from our founding.”

Limbaugh, who joked that Trump had imposed a 10-minute time limit on him, began by encouraging the “electric” audience to start a chant “Lock her up” against Hillary Clinton, who has refused to concede her 2016 election defeat and gracefully exit the spotlight.

“Hillary Clinton colluded with Russia. Hillary Clinton rigged that election,” he said.

Limbaugh said that career politicians like the Clintons and Obamas were jealous that Trump had stirred up the conservative base in ways that they had not.

“This isn’t supposed to happen. You people are supposed to love them, not Trump. So guess what? They want to get in on it.”

But he said few had bothered understanding what motivated Trump’s supporters and that there was “much to learn.”

“The bond that exists between you and everybody else that has been to a Trump rally is something that politicians envy, and the people in Washington have not taken the time to understand why you voted for Trump. They just think you are stupid for doing so,” he said.

Some, he said, resented Trump for giving voice to voters that they would rather ignore. “You weren’t being listened to. You weren’t being paid any attention to. Even now, the real anger at Trump is actually at you for having elected him.”

However, Limbaugh dismissed the oft-floated media talking point that fear and anger were what had driven massive conservative turnouts in recent elections. “You’re not angry. You love people! You want your country to be the greatest it can be and you finally got someone willing to help you do it,” he said.

Limbaugh said that Trump—who bucked convention by taking an active role in the midterm campaigns and embracing it as a mandate on his performance rather than distancing himself—had been “indefatigable” his goal of fixing the country. “Donald Trump wants America to be great again—and, it’s not a slogan, it is an objective.”

He observed that while other politicians may have personal gain at stake, Trump had no other motivations for entering the political arena.

“He is one of the most successful people in America and he doesn’t need this. He doesn’t need to put up with the abuse … He does because he sincerely believes that America is headed in the wrong track and it needs to be put back on the right track.”

Forget the Pundits: Data Foretells a Midterm Win for Trump Either Way

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‘My whole life, you know what I say? “Don’t worry about it, I’ll just figure it out.”’

Trump Claims 'Clear Victory' After Supreme Court Allows Travel Ban
Donald Trump/Photo by Gage Skidmore (CC)

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) If President Donald Trump loses a single seat in the House of Representatives during Tuesday’s midterm election, you can be certain some media outlets will be touting it as an unequivocal victory and mandate for “the resistance”—a blue wave, thumpin and shellacking all rolled into one.

But if history is the judge, based on the projected gains and losses at nonpartisan sites such as RealClear Politics, Trump already can declare a victory of sorts.

Although the Democrats need to pick up only 23 seats, the average number of seats lost in a midterm election dating back to Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency is 26, according to UC Santa Barbara’s American Presidency Project. Thus, Trump could still be ahead of the curve even if the House GOP does lose the majority, provided he keeps it below that. On the eve of Election Day, RCP had the average gains projected by its polls at exactly 26.

Considering only the number of seats being contested and Trump’s average approval rating around 44 percent, UCSB’s historical data suggests the president would lose between 26 and 33 seats as the norm. Recent Democrat-led redistricting efforts might also factor into the calculation.

Interestingly, the UCSB data shows that Trump is the Republican with the highest number of House seats to be contested in the 84-year span (21 midterm elections total, excluding the current one). The president’s combative rhetorical style and populist appeals to “drain the swamp” may be attributable for some of the electoral map difficulty.

Trump’s unwillingness to abide by political norms has resulted in a number of high-profile departures leaving open seats with no incumbent advantage. This includes four retiring GOP senators and more than double the number of GOP congressmen leaving the House as their Democratic colleagues.

However, the Left’s cashflow has also played a huge part in the increased number of contested races. In an election that is on pace to break spending records for congressional elections by around $800 million, according to estimates by the Center for Responsive Politics, Democrats have held a clear advantage in fundraising.

State Dept., USAID Sued for Docs on Funding to Soros’s Foreign Campaigns
George Soros/Photo by boellstiftung (CC)

While some have interpreted this as a sign of voter enthusiasm and momentum for the progressive movement, others see it as an indicator of the tremendous amounts of dark money that special-interest groups and billionaire plutocrats such as George Soros, Michael Bloomberg and Tom Steyer have been willing into invest in flipping the electoral map.

By contrast, the relatively low number of contested seats in the Senate has opened the possibility of what might—under different circumstances and with a different media—be considered a routing in Trump’s favor. Only five of the 21 elections included in the UCSB midterm data showed a gain in the upper chamber, as Trump is poised to achieve. All of those chief executives, with the exception of Ronald Reagan in 1982, were enjoying sky-high enthusiasm and popular support when they built on their leads.

If the GOP were to pick up the seats of struggling Democrat incumbents Heidi Heitkamp (N.D.) and Claire McCaskill (Missouri)—and to clinch one of the other tightly contested battleground states that went for Trump two years ago (Indiana, Montana, West Virginia and Florida are the main candidates)—then a three-seat net gain would put Trump at a tie with John F. Kennedy in 1960 for the No. 2 spot in midterm Senate increases, behind only Franklin D. Roosevelt with nine seats in 1934.

As history shows, extraordinary circumstances can also impact the result. In addition to his nine-seat Senate pickup in the 1934 midterm, three years after the start of the Great Depression, Roosevelt gained nine House seats. Likewise, George W. Bush gained eight seats in the House and two in the Senate in 2002, the year after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Trump’s economic successes, and his focus on national defense and security issues, both play to his advantage. But even one of his potential liabilities—the likelihood of a partisan impeachment push—could wind up yielding favorable results.

BOOK: Bill Sought Monica After Hillary's Health Care Fail
Bill Clinton & Monica Lewinsky/IMAGE: YouTube

Former President Bill Clinton picked up seats in his second midterm, in 1998, amid the looming Starr investigation for perjury and obstruction of justice. However, his net gain of five also was far eclipsed by his loss of 52 seats during his prior 1994 midterm. That election had handed control of the House to Republicans.

The GOP maintained a strong enough majority to proceed with Clinton’s impeachment in December 1998, despite the prior month’s mild losses, but it did so at a heavy cost in its own public standing that ultimately proved unsuccessful in removing Clinton from office.

Trump currently faces a similar situation, with House Democrats threatening to use subpoena powers to stymie his legislative agenda and some saying that they would extend a harmful and unfounded investigation into Russia collusion, regardless of special counsel Robert Mueller’s findings.

Some Democrats also have hinted at launching an impeachment investigation into Justice Brett Kavanaugh, despite an extensive report by Senate Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, that found no credible evidence of sexual assault.

Trump has said that the defining issues of the election will be Kavanaugh and the caravan of thousands of migrants threatening to cross the border in coming weeks.

Democrats have pushed health care as the definitive election issue—but that has proven toxic in the past, with voters having punished Clinton in 1994 for an attempted health care overhaul and delivering a 63-seat loss to Barack Obama in 2010 following passage of the Affordable Care Act. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is hopeful of repealing Obamacare should the GOP retain control of Congress, though Trump and other Republicans have said changes to ACA protections for pre-existing conditions are off the table.

Trump, Congressional Republicans Celebrate Tax Victory 1
Donald Trump/IMAGE: YouTube

While Trump’s numbers will likely shine by historical standards, barring any surprises, there remains the possibility—as he proved in 2016—that Trump could also surpass pollsters’ expectations due to oversampling and other surveying tricks that falsely inflated the Democratic “momentum” prior to Election Day.

The higher the number of people sampled, the more difficult such anomalies become, and Trafalgar Group, which often sampled considerably more people, showed leads for the Republican candidate in tightly contested Senate races in Nevada, Florida and Arizona, whereas in other surveys they remained toss-ups or projected a narrow Democrat win.

A huge victory for Trump and Republicans, of course, could pose just as many challenges as a loss, making desperate Democrats, who already have amped up the heated political rhetoric, turn even more vicious than a coalition government. Nancy Pelosi, poised to resume her role as speaker of the House, has promised collateral damage in that event. At a rally on Monday, Pelosi urged her liberal base “to be ready take a punch and throw a punch,” Breitbart reported.

Echoing Hillary Clinton, Pelosi said that the heated rhetoric on the Left would only cool once they were in power. When responding to a question on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert about lowering the temperature of political discourse, she said, ““Well, I think when we win, you will see evidence of that.”

But while considering the prospective outcomes at a recent campaign event, Trump was characteristically confident in his ability to manage. “My whole life, you know what I say? ‘Don’t worry about it, I’ll just figure it out,’” he said.

Dems, Media Rage After Trump Uses Cop-Killing Illegal in Attack Ad

‘I will break out soon, and I will kill more…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) In the closing week of the midterm election campaign, President Donald Trump left liberals seething over a simple ad, which he shared on Twitter.

The ad, running only 53 seconds, featured unrepentant, cop-killing illegal immigrant Luis Bracamontes in his own words with no voice-over.

“I will break out soon, and I will kill more,” Bracamontes said.

The Bracamontes case was one of several high-profile murders Trump has highlighted involving illegal immigrants, who disproportionately commit dangerous crimes. Entire organizations are dedicated simply to documenting the reported cases of violent assaults and rapes among illegals, aided and abetted by the liberal policies of sanctuary cities that defy federal rule of law in providing safe harbor.

Following the August murder of Mollie Tibbetts, Sen. Elizabeth Warren deflected on the scourge of non-citizen crime by saying Americans needed to refocus on “real problems,” like releasing into the population those whom immigration authorities had succeeded in detaining at the border.

Nonetheless, in a campaign season fraught with finger-pointing over the escalation of tension, fear-mongering, heated rhetoric and violence from every angle, Trump’s ad ignited yet another firestorm in the liberal media.

CNN anchor Chris Cuomo—brother of current New York governor and likely presidential contender Andrew—devoted a segment 9.5 times the length of the actual ad to discussing it with Democratic National Committee chair Tom Perez.

The segment doubled as a campaign spot for Perez, who made sure to squeeze in talking points about the Left’s cause célèbre, the preservation of Obamacare entitlements, before circling back around to addressing the immigration issue.

Perez said it was typical of Trump’s divisiveness and distraction. “His dog whistle of all dog whistles is immigration. This has been Donald Trump’s playbook for so long—and you know what, when they go low, we go vote.”

The outrage followed a week in which Democrats attempted to paint Trump and his voter base as unhinged lunatics and relate them to two acts of terrorism pinned on right-wing extremists, all while many prominent party leaders on the Left egged on violence and promised further instances of incivility and collateral damage.

Two days earlier, in a discussion with Cuomo, fellow CNN anchor Don Lemon said, “We have to stop demonizing people and realize the biggest terror threat in this country is white men, most of them radicalized to the right, and we have to start doing something about them.”

Perez seemed to take it a step farther, even blaming Trump for the crimes committed by illegal immigrants, which he suggested were part and parcel with the previous week’s headlines.

“When you create a climate—as this president has created—that invites violent acts, you should never be surprised when you have violent acts.”

Perez bragged about having been involved with creating immigration reform under President Barack Obama, whose divisive rhetoric led to race riots and police killings in cities like Ferguson, Mo.; Baltimore, Md.; Baton Rouge, La.; and Dallas, Texas—along with perennial riots in places like Berkeley and Oakland, Calif.

Noting that Republicans had wrested control of all branches of government from the Obama-era Democrats in 2016, Perez said any immigration problems were the GOP’s fault. “They own any failure in these policies right now.”

However, it was 2014, on Obama’s watch, when Bracamontes killed two Sacramento, Calif. sheriff’s deputies in cold blood, shooting Deputy Danny Oliver in the head and driving over his body in an attempt to flee, and later killing Detective Michael Davis after a rampage that included carjacking and shooting an innocent bystander five times—three in the face.

Ironically, after trying to pin immigration problems on Trump, Perez tried to downplay the current immigration threat by pointing out that under Trump’s watch, in fiscal year 2016-17, illegal border crossings had dropped to their lowest level since the 1970s.

Following Cuomo’s show, Lemon also weighed in on his program, calling the ad a “blatantly racist appeal … that shows you just how willing [Trump] is to use lies and scare tactics to terrify his base.”

Other anti-Trumpists also attacked it, with departing Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake calling it a “new low in campaigning” and Clinton-era Treasury Secretary Robert Reich saying “This may be the most desperate and vile ad since Willie Horton.”

Many in the media echo chamber picked up on the Horton comparison, referencing the attack ad used by then-Vice President George H.W. Bush in 1988 to portray opponent Michael Dukakis as being soft on crime.

Four years later, in Bush’s losing campaign to Bill Clinton, future First Lady Hillary Clinton, referred to violent black criminals as “super predators,” drawing criticism from some during her own presidential run.

Indiana Sen. Donnelly in Hot Water over Debate Racial Remark

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‘Our state director is Indian American, but he does an amazing job…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) President Donald Trump has faced plenty of attacks in the left-wing media for what they characterize as inflammatory, xenophobic remarks.

Now, as Sen. Joe Donnelly faces the prospect of losing his seat in the battleground state of Indiana, the incumbent Democrat seems to be asking himself, “What would Donald do?”

Like other red-state Democrats, Donnelly is paying for his polarizing vote against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh and frantically trying to backpedal on his more liberal positions.

His Republican challenger, businessman Mike Braun, has surged ahead after running behind for the past several months, according to RealClearPolitics.

But while many of Indiana’s conservative voters may applaud Donnelly’s working with Trump to address issues like illegal immigration, his cavalier attitudes toward race may raise some eyebrows.

At a debate Tuesday night, in response to a question about the diversity of his staff, Donnelly seemed to imply that his minority workers were excelling in spite of their racial identity.

“Our state director is Indian American, but he does an amazing job,” he said. “Our director of all constituent services, she’s African American. But she does an even more incredible job than you could ever imagine.”

In context, Donnelly seemed to be making the broader point that their race was irrelevant.

But others, like U.S. News & World Report writer David Catanese, certainly took note of the awkward phrasing.

Donnelly isn’t the only Democrat this week to face heat over a potentially racist, insensitive remark.

Hillary Clinton, who some have speculated may be gearing up for a 2020 presidential run, made an apparent racial joke during an interview with tech website Recode.

In response to interviewer Kara Swisher mixing up the violent rhetoric of Sen. Cory Booker and former Attorney General Eric Holder, Clinton quipped, “I know they all look alike.”

“No they don’t,” Swisher replied.

Stelter’s Portrayal of Trump Rally as ‘Hate Movement’ Is Fake News

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‘When you’re in that pen, you really do feel like a zoo animal…’

CNN’s Brian Stelter checks his phone before going on camera at a Trump rally in Charlotte, N.C. on Oct. 26./PHOTO: Ben Sellers/Liberty Headlines

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) For someone whose title is “chief media correspondent,” CNN’s Brian Stelter raises a lot of questions about how much he really understands the media.

On Friday, as his colleague, frequent White House antagonist Jim Acosta, headed to California to receive a press award, Stelter took the reins covering a rally in Charlotte by President Donald Trump.

I was there, as well.

On Sunday, Stelter posted what might best be described as a firsthand anthropological study of what he said was his first Trump rally.

“I was two years too late,” he said. “I should have gone to a rally in 2016. I’m a media reporter, after all, and Trump is putting on a show at these campaign events, complete with a booming soundtrack and a grand finale that regular rallygoers know by heart.”

The details he included in his rehashing of it—my first Trump rally as well—were familiar, but the experience was far from it.

“When you’re in that pen, you really do feel like a zoo animal,” Stelter said. “Rallygoers gawk at you, take pictures of you, and sometimes sneer while they walk by, saying things like, ‘You’re fake news’ and ‘enemy of the people.'”

In some ways, CNN was the star of its own side-show. Fewer people recognized Stelter than would have Acosta, although many scanned the “press pen” for signs of the network, which had its place-marker—right beside Fox News at the specially designated network table—turned over backward.

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CNN’s Brian Stelter goes largely unnoticed during a live shot./PHOTO: Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines

What perhaps Stelter and other members of the press found jarring was that it was an inversion of the usual situation, for journalists accustomed to pointing the lens at other people to have the tables turned. But as possibly the second most “famous” guy in the room (arguably of higher profile than Sen. Thom Tillis and other North Carolina politicians, as well as a NASCAR driver or two) Stelter of all people should not have found the fishbowl to be anything out of the ordinary.

Stelter noted that during the rally, a handful of friendly campaign staffers ushered the media to and from the bathrooms upstairs, presumably to ensure they were granted access back into the secure press area, where cameras and tables were set up.

However, the experience in no way seemed unusual for those who frequent press events. And it hardly felt restrictive—if anything, the metal barriers were there for the media’s convenience, allowing journalists and cameramen to move about and do their jobs with relative freedom—although it was still a tight squeeze at times.

The biggest amenity, by far, was bypassing the entry line on the cold and rainy afternoon, but otherwise, the press were treated no differently than the commoners who surrounded them.

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CNN’s Brian Stelter interacts cordially with rally-goers at a Trump event in Charlotte, N.C. Oct. 26./PHOTO: Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines

I met a student reporter from Elon University who said she had been given media credentials and then subsequently got booted from the “pen.” We both agreed that there was little advantage in where I stood from where she was.

As far as I know, nobody kept Stelter, either, from going into the audience if the media “zoo” grew to claustrophobic.

For the most part, Stelter got right the fact that many of the people,  there for the spectacle above all, were more curious than hostile. They were genuinely interested in being a part of that moment in history—and maybe getting on TV to boot, whether it was the real news or the “fake news.” Just as with a professional wrestling event, the line between fact and fiction was sort of blurry, but that didn’t seem to matter.

By the following day, however, Stelter’s tone seemed to have changed. He unleashed on Twitter, saying, “I left the rally in Charlotte even more certain that Trump is leading a hate movement against the media.”

I, for one, stood in the same place, met and interacted with the same people, and saw the heart and soul of America represented in the crowd’s passion.

Although I had the benefit of identifying myself as local media instead of a major network, I felt far more simpatico with the gawking crowd than with the camera-laden platform of media tourists applying makeup before their stand-ups.

I am fairly confident to say that the way Brian Stelter left the rally (before the speech was over) was with the same biases and assumptions he entered it with—but for a brief, fleeting moment, maybe even he was moved by the cameraderie.

FBI Unconvincing in Defusing Democrat Mailer ‘Bomb’ Theories

‘This is nearly the same as a bundle of road flares wrapped together with an old-timey alarm clock ticking away….’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) At a press conference Friday afternoon, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and FBI Director Christopher Wray addressed the suspicious packages allegedly sent by right-wing extremist Cesar Sayoc to prominent Democrats.

In addition to providing details of Sayoc’s arrest, which the FBI said came about with the help of a fingerprint, one of the main objectives was attempting to bring closure to the speculation that it may have been a hoax or a false-flag stunt so close to the midterm election.

In the conference and a follow-up press release, Wray reiterated in no uncertain terms that the improvised explosive devices were real. “Though we’re still analyzing the devices in our Laboratory, these are not hoax devices,” he said.

Wray said the devices each contained about six inches of PVC pipe, a small clock, a battery, wiring and ‘energetic material,’ which, he explained, “is essentially potential explosives and material that gives off heat and energy through a reaction to heat, shock, or friction.”

But despite the FBI’s explanation, many doubts still lingered.

To begin with, as conservative radio pundit Rush Limbaugh had observed prior to the arrest, it didn’t add up that someone on the Right would seek to slow the tremendous momentum that Republicans nationwide were feeling.  At best, it was a distraction; at worst, negative optics that would undermine the GOP’s valid criticism of violent rhetoric on the Left—largely driven by many of the purported bombing “victims.”

Many in the media also observed that Wray’s statement was a direct contradiction, of sorts, to a tweet that President Donald Trump had issued at 7:30 Friday morning, putting the word “Bomb” in quotation marks.

With the FBI’s credibility already strained under the scandals surrounding top officials James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Peter Strzok, Lisa Page, Bruce Ohr and others, it didn’t seem a far stretch to wonder if any members of the “deep state” resistance still lingered in the agency’s upper echelon.

However, even among those less inclined toward the conspiratorial, several pieces of information simply didn’t seem to pass the smell test.

To begin with, some noted that the bombs themselves were so amateurishly designed that even if the ingredients were correct, they seemed highly unlikely to detonate.

A story from Twitchy compiled the tweets of former bomb-disposal officer Tom Sauer, who questioned their cartoonish appearance.

Many also puzzled over the fact that images of the packaging itself, provided both by CNN and by the FBI, showed that the suspicious-looking parcels not only failed to raise any red flags at USPS processing centers up and down the East Coast, but the stamps weren’t canceled.

Although the package sent to CNN appeared to show only $3 in postage, the lowest price for a 1-pound package from Aventura, Florida to New York City would be more than double that.

Moreover, others pointed out that the postal service would not have delivered packages to the addresses of former presidents Obama and Clinton due to Secret Service screening policies. Even left-wing “fact checking site” Snopes, in dutifully attempting to debunk the hoax claim, could not explain how they would have gotten there, only that they did.

Fla. Man Arrested in Case of Suspicious Package Mailings
Cesar Sayoc/PHOTO: Twitter

Details about Sayoc also were a bit over-the-top, including his van, which seemed glaringly obvious for someone engaged in a one-man conspiracy to murder top politicians and intelligence officials. “I thought he looked like a shooter,” Paul Bilodeau told the Sun Sentinel.

Not only did Sayoc’s behavior attract the attention of common-folk, but also professional photographers, filmmakers and even liberal activist Michael Moore, who conveniently released footage of Sayoc at a rally, which Moore said was an outtake from his new anti-Trump documentary.

Although several social media accounts that were purported to belong to Sayoc quickly went dark on Friday, inaccessible even via Archive.org, his Facebook page, when active, appeared to show very little except for pro-Trump messages and rally photos—and yet those close to him said his personality had only recently changed under the influence of steroids.

Some online sleuths—such as Shad Olson, who was able to capture screenshots of Sayoc’s accounts—said a deeper investigation revealed him to have been rabidly anti-Bush and that key details online about his political leanings changed shortly after his arrest.

Tragically, a real example of violence from an anti-Trump, anti-Semitic neo-Nazi in a Pittsburgh synagogue on Saturday made skepticism of the FBI’s bombing explanation seem both tasteless and irrelevant.

It is hard to question the slaughter of 11 innocent people in what should have been their sanctuary from the evils of the world—even while callous liberal media and politicians spun the massacre as confirmation of a right-wing undercurrent of violence propelled by Trump.

But the thread throughout all of the conspiracy speculation seems to be that, despite the many unanswered questions, the very implausibility of such a politically motivated stunt—the ridiculous and audacious quality of it—are precisely what might make it an effective smear campaign and/or cover-up.

Desperate Sen. McCaskill Tries to Halt Campaign Tailspin w/ Fox Interview

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‘My mouth gets me in trouble with some regularity. I am not afraid to tell people where I stand…’

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Sen. Claire McCaskill/IMAGE: Project Veritas

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) As polls showed GOP candidate Josh Hawley beginning to pull ahead in Missouri’s Senate race, incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill took to Fox News in an apparent effort at damage control.

McCaskill took direct aim at “crazy Democrats” who have promoted incivility, as well as obstructionist politicians like her Senate colleagues Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who resist the efforts of Congressional Republicans and President Donald Trump under any circumstances.

“Some of my colleagues are knee-jerk against the president,” she said. “I don’t get up every day figuring out how I can fight the president. I get up every day figuring out how I can fight for Missourians.”

McCaskill hoped to counter claims from a recent video produced by James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas that she attempted to conceal a radical liberal agenda from conservative voters. In it, she acknowledged having voted for Draconian gun control measures, while staff members in her campaign said she would support impeachment, oppose a border wall and had quietly accepted funds from Planned Parenthood.

But while she was forceful in some areas, she hedged in others, making it unclear whether the message might resonate with her constituents or backfire against her.

On the surge of illegal immigration, McCaskill said, “I do not want our borders overrun. And I support the president’s efforts to make sure they’re not.”

However, she stopped short of mentioning the funding of the wall, focusing instead on using technology to streamline the asylum process.

McCaskill also did not refute her positions on gun control, although she said she had never attempted to mislead.

“My mouth gets me in trouble with some regularity. I am not afraid to tell people where I stand—and Missourians know that,” she said. “The NRA’s come after me in every single election—this isn’t like some state secret.”

She implied that she was at odds with some of her fellow Democrats, such as Warren and Sanders.

“I would not call my colleagues crazy, but Elizabeth Warren sure went after me when I advocated tooling back some of the regulations for small banks,” she said. “… I certainly disagree with Bernie Sanders on a bunch of stuff.”

However, when questioned by Fox’s Bret Baier about how she had only supported Trump about 45 percent of the time while voting with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., 80 percent of the time, McCaskill said it was because there had not been enough votes on the Senate Floor since Trump took office.

And despite Missouri having gone for Trump by a margin of more than 20 percent, McCaskill stopped short of repudiating Hillary Clinton. “I thought she certainly had the breadth and depth of experience that qualified her, but I’d rather look forward and not backward.”

She also took to the spin zone to explain her costly vote against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, saying it was his position on campaign funding and not the uncorroborated sexual assault allegations against him that caused her to oppose.

“I’m watching this tsunami of dark money that is drowning our process,” she said.

McCaskill touched on the Project Veritas video also. In its immediate aftermath, she called on her opponent Hawley, who is currently the state attorney general, to investigate it as fraudulent under a law that regulates deceptive business practices.

Unable to get in front of the narrative, however, she told Baier it was not what was said in the video itself that was at issue so much as the devious way it was produced.

“The thing about those films that bothered me is not what was on them … it was that they had embedded themselves into our office for weeks on end and that guy had accessed our computers. He wasn’t in our computers to help me,” she said. “There was fraud, and I think that’s a ‘new normal’ that we’ve gotta do something about.”