Archive for the ‘Democrats’ Category

The Democrats fighting the legal battles against Trump – CNN

He left, after a period of "talking people off the walls and off the ledges," preparing to do battle with another New Yorker, Donald Trump -- again.

In the weeks since, Schneiderman -- who led the Trump University fraud lawsuit -- and the nation's other Democratic attorneys general have leapt to the forefront of the anti-Trump resistance, taking on his executive order banning immigration from seven majority Muslim countries.

It's the first round in what's certain to be a years-long series of battles with the Trump administration over enforcement of labor, environmental and consumer protection rights, as well as health care and immigration laws.

"There's a sense of urgency and a real sense that we are now the guardians of the rule of law in the United States," Schneiderman said in an interview.

"That's the kind of thing that's tough to accept," he said. "But we appear to be confronted by an administration where you question if you take the rule of law seriously."

The attorneys general described to CNN a decision-making process on who would take on Trump based on which offices have budgets large enough to afford to do battle with the Justice Department, and based on which issues resonate most clearly locally.

Schneiderman, in a separate interview, told CNN's Erin Burnett on Wednesday's "OutFront" his legal antagonism toward Trump isn't personal.

"No, not at all. Again, I represent the people of the state of New York and I represent a lot of people who are hurt by this ban," he said. "I represent people who had to make a choice between keeping their jobs and getting back to their families who were separated by this ban ... I have no choice but to go and pursue this."

In the less than two weeks since Trump signed his travel ban, what had been semi-regular conference calls with Democratic attorneys general and, at times, their staffs, have become almost daily.

"We're going to be on the front lines of some of the most important battles for economic and social justice," said Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring.

In the wake of the election, Schneiderman offered guidance to states and counties that want to become "sanctuaries" that do not deport undocumented immigrants who abide by the law.

Noting a spike in hate crimes, he also issued updated guidance immediately after the election to law enforcement agencies on hate crimes.

In Virginia, Herring recently asked state lawmakers for more authority to prosecute hate crimes -- and to broaden the state's definition of hate crimes to more closely match federal law -- because, he said, he fears a less active Civil Rights Division at the Justice Department.

"Given what I heard during the campaign, I'm not optimistic," he said. "It's probably not going to be a very high priority."

"That's an example," Herring said, "of where I have adjusted some of the work that we're doing and trying to make sure that we can keep a president in check if we need to."

Many Democrats' eyes are on Schneiderman -- a dean of sorts among the group, in his second term in one of the nation's largest states -- and California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who is now just weeks onto the job and is expected to take on a bigger role in the coming months.

Schneiderman's office has bureaus devoted to labor, civil rights and to appeals and opinions. It also has the advantage of being situated in a state where the headquarters -- or major operations -- of a number of major companies.

Should federal agencies -- including the Labor Department and the Environmental Protection Agency, as well as the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which liberals fret the Trump administration will gut -- fail to enforce regulations, Schneiderman said his office is prepared to sue to force those rules' enforcement.

"Our office has been not shy about taking on federal agencies about not doing their job," Schneiderman said.

Right after Trump's election, Schneiderman also immediately warned Trump against withdrawing support of President Barack Obama's Clean Power Plan. And he urged New York lawmakers to guarantee free contraception -- a backstop against GOP-led efforts to repeal Obama's Affordable Care Act.

The strategizing and coordination among the 22 Democratic attorneys general began at a conference in Fort Lauderdale hosted by the Democratic Attorneys General Association.

"It was a moment where we all looked around and realized, this is real," said Hawaii Attorney General Doug Chin. "President Trump being elected is a very real fact, and we need to start thinking about what we're going to do about that. He needs to be aware that as a group, we're going to be incredibly vigilant and assertive."

They already had a model: Republicans during President Barack Obama's tenure.

Greg Abbott of Texas -- now the state's governor who served as its attorney general during most of Obama's administration -- led many of the GOP's legal battles against Obama's immigration orders. And Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt, Trump's pick for administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, had regularly sued to block its regulations.

"In some ways, they created -- or maybe I should say they perfected -- a model of going to court and really standing against the presidential administration," said Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan.

Democrats had done it before, too. During President George W. Bush's second term, Massachusetts led a group of 12 states and several cities that sued to force the EPA to regulate greenhouse gases.

The galvanizing moment, the Democratic attorneys general said, was when Trump signed an executive order banning travel to the United States from seven majority Muslim nations.

"As the hours went on, we literally had chaos at the Philadelphia airport," said Josh Shapiro, the newly-elected attorney general of Pennsylvania.

Several states rushed into court to try to block the implementation of Trump's travel ban -- but it was Washington state's attorney general Bob Ferguson who was most successful in a lawsuit joined by Minnesota.

After a judge halted the implementation of Trump's travel ban, the offices of Schneiderman, Shapiro and Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey led the drafting of an amicus brief in which 16 additional states backed Washington's case.

The most recent group phone call between the AGs came Tuesday afternoon, when Schneiderman and his staff, as well as the Democratic Attorneys General Association, led a discussion of the travel ban challenge just hours before oral arguments before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

"It was only like 80 years ago that a president's executive order based upon national security authorized citizens of Japanese ancestry, regardless of their backgrounds," Chin said. "It became very important that this was going to be the battle I was going to fight."

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The Democrats fighting the legal battles against Trump - CNN

Texas Democrats Angered by Trump’s Remark on Destroying Senator’s Career – New York Times


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Texas Democrats Angered by Trump's Remark on Destroying Senator's Career - New York Times

House Democrats, in Baltimore, vow to fight Trump – Baltimore Sun

House Democrats opened their annual issues retreat in Baltimore on Wednesday by vowing to aggressively fight President Donald Trump, slamming his first weeks in the White House and suggesting there would be little room for compromise.

In a barrage of criticism, Democratic leaders meeting at an Inner Harbor hotel used "illusionist" and "authoritarian regime" to describe Trump. Based on his actions so far, they said, they did not envision many areas of agreement.

The strong rhetoric from Democrats who have little real power in the House appeared to reflect a leftward lunge by the party following Trump's temporary travel ban on seven predominantly Muslim countries. The lawmakers are under increased pressure from the party's liberal base to push back.

"We're not irrelevant at all. We represent the views of the majority of citizens," said Rep. Steny Hoyer of the Southern Maryland, the No. 2 Democrat in the House. "We don't have to have our head bowed. We don't have to retreat in any way."

The gathering of House members at the Hyatt Regency is the first of two Democratic meetings in Baltimore this week as the party searches for a strategy to deal with the new president. On Saturday, candidates running to chair the Democratic National Committee will appear at a forum at the Baltimore Convention Center to discuss their vision for the party's future.

Trump defended the temporary travel ban, now pending before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, as important for national security. He told a group of police chiefs including Baltimore Police Chief Kevin Davis that his immigration order was "done for the security of our nation."

He said it was written "beautifully" and was within his executive authority.

"A bad high school student would understand this," he said.

Despite the Democrats' tough talk Wednesday, the party remains divided over whether to orchestrate a unified opposition to Trump the approach the tea party-driven Republican Party took against President Barack Obama or look for some areas of common ground.

Some Democrats are concerned a more strident approach would further distance the party from the blue-collar swing voters who helped clear Trump's path to victory and allowed Republicans to keep their majorities in the House and Senate.

That concern is acute as Democrats look ahead to the 2018 midterm election, when 10 seats now held by Democrats are up in states Trump won.

House Democrats have frequently held their annual retreat in Baltimore, a heavily Democratic city in a state that gave Hillary Clinton one of her largest margins in the country. In addition to discussions about policy and strategy, lawmakers will hear from NBA Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and comedian Chelsea Handler.

Outside the increased security around the Hyatt Regency, there was little indication Wednesday of the lawmakers' presence. The caucus meetings are closed to the public.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, a Baltimore native, offered particularly sharp criticism of Trump during the retreat's opening press conference. The California lawmaker reiterated her call for the FBI to investigate any connections between Trump and Russia.

"As long as the president continues down this path, there is nothing Democrats can work with him on," Pelosi said.

Later this week, Sen. Ben Cardin and Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh are among a list of Democrats who will speak at the forum Saturday to help party insiders choose their next party chair. The race includes former U.S. Labor Secretary Tom Perez of Maryland, Rep. Keith Ellison of Minnesota and several others.

Hoyer said Wednesday that he will support Perez, of Takoma Park, for the job.

"The most important role of our next chair will be to rebuild our state and local parties so Democrats can compete up and down the ballot," Hoyer said. "I believe Tom is best equipped to deliver on that challenge."

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, who appointed Perez to his administration in 2007, endorsed 35-year-old South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg for the job on Wednesday.

"The Democratic Party of the past became very good at telling millennials to wait their turn. But the future cannot wait," O'Malley wrote in a social media posting.

"We must call forward the goodness in the hearts of young Americans if we are going to save our country and overcome the darkness of Trumpism."

john.fritze@baltsun.com

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House Democrats, in Baltimore, vow to fight Trump - Baltimore Sun

Democrats Gloat Over GOP’s Obamacare Predicament – Huffington Post

BALTIMORE House Democrats are feeling good about the fight over the Affordable Care Act.

As Republicans continue to debate exactly how to deliver on promises to replace the massive health care program, which as of January insured 18 million Americans, Democrats were more than happy to sit, point, and gloat about predicament the GOP finds itself in.

As time goes on, it gets better for us, Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.), ranking Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, said Wednesday during the annual House Democratic retreat. Because as time goes on, more people apply for insurance. From a net benefit, all of a sudden youre gonna tell the American people youre gonna take something away.

When you look at it from that perspective, as Ive been having some fun saying, it has succeeded bigly, he added, borrowing President Donald Trumps favorite word.

Republicans are finding it is much harder to craft an alternative to the health care law, commonly called Obamacare, than they initially figured. Their efforts to quickly repeal and replace the program have stalled, as Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) admitted on Tuesday.

Trump, who promised to repeal the law immediately upon taking office, seemed acknowledge the setback, suggesting the GOP may not put forward a plan of its own until next year.

It statutorily takes a while to get, Trump said during a Sunday interview with Fox News. Were going to be putting it in fairly soon. I think that, yes, I would like to say by the end of the year, at least the rudiments, but we should have something within the year and the following year.

House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) denied that his party was in discord. During a press conference this week, the speaker vowed his caucus would produce legislation this year aimed at replacing Obamacare.

The GOP hemming and hawing was music to the ears of leading Democrats who helped craft Obamacare. Those lawmakers projected confidence about the fate of the health care law during this weeks Democratic retreat in Baltimores Inner Harbor.

They realize there is no replacement, Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), ranking member on the Education and the Workforce Committee, told reporters, referring to Republicans. If they had done this quickly first day, do it while no ones looking they might have gotten away with it. Now, just too many people, including too many of their members, recognize the chaos that will be caused.

Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), ranking member on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said the Republicans are in total disarray.

They really dont have the votes for any kind of replacement, he added.

House Democratic leadership kicked off the retreat Wednesday by vowing to fight Trumps administration tooth and nail. In addition, they sought to push back against the notion they were irrelevant as a minority party with few institutional tools to oppose the GOPs whim.

House Democrats who helped draft Obamacare said during a panel discussion that the GOP underestimated the task that lay ahead.

I think we have tremendous leverage, Pallone said, noting Republicans would need Democratic votes to help pass a replacement plan that likely would not get every GOP member on board.

Theyre expecting somehow were going to join with them and say this is a terrible system and were going to help them replace it. We realize its a great system. What we want to do is improve it.

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Democrats Gloat Over GOP's Obamacare Predicament - Huffington Post

Illinois Democrats push back against Trump on abortion – Chicago Tribune

Pushing back against Republican President Donald Trump, one Democratic state lawmaker is sponsoring legislation aimed at protecting Illinois women's access to abortion services.

The plan from State Rep. Sara Feigenholtz, D-Chicago, would eliminate a so-called trigger provision in state law that automatically would make abortion illegal in Illinois if the abortion rights ruling Roe v. Wade is overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court. The proposal also would allow women with Medicaid and state employee health insurance to use their coverage for abortions.

Feigenholtz said her effort is a direct response to Trump, who has said he would appoint Supreme Court justices who would overturn Roe v. Wade.

Before the court decision, abortion in Illinois was illegal unless the mother's life was at stake. A law passed in 1975 two years after the case says that while abortion is now legal, the state would return to its former policy if the decision is ever reversed or modified.

"We really have to protect Illinois women and make an affirmative statement as a General Assembly that says Illinois is going to be a state where abortion is safe and legal no matter what happens with the Supreme Court and Donald Trump," Feigenholtz said.

The legislation is part of a broader agenda announced Wednesday by House and Senate Democrats that represents resistance to Trump in the legislature their party controls. Democrats detailed their fears that he'll push to weaken women's rights, and they protested the president's executive order banning immigrants and refugees from some Muslim-majority countries.

The abortion legislation cleared an Illinois House committee Wednesday despite concerns from some Republicans that the plan would remove a section of the 1975 law that says an unborn child is a human being from the time of conception and has a right to life.

"I think we have the responsibility to recognize that even an unborn child is a human being," said Rep. Sheri Jesiel, R-Winthrop Harbor. "We have that responsibility as a culture. We have that responsibility as a state. By striking that from the language, we do not do that."

The proposal has far to go before becoming law. It still needs a full House vote, Senate approval and a signature from Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner. Rauner avoided talk about social issues while campaigning but has since signed off on legislation that requires doctors who refuse to perform abortions for moral reasons to give patients information on where they can get the procedure elsewhere. That law is now before the courts.

Other efforts announced Wednesday call for paid sick time, paid family medical leave and access to free feminine hygiene products for students in grades 6-12. The group emphasized that more legislation could come up during session as it discusses other issues and the impact of the state budget impasse on women.

Sen. Melinda Bush, D-Grayslake, said she is hoping to build on momentum from last year, when she successfully rolled back the sales tax on feminine hygiene products. Her new focus centers on legislation that seeks to prevent tailors, dry cleaners, hair salons and barbers from charging men and women different prices for the same services.

"I want to make sure that women are not being discriminated against for services," Bush said.

Under the proposal, businesses would be required to display a price list for their 15 most popular services, along with a sign informing customers about the state's anti-discrimination policy. Sellers would also have to provide a complete written price list to customers upon request. Businesses that violate the policy could wind up with a $1,000 fine.

"Women have had the vote for 100 years, and there are still pieces of women's rights that we just have to be paying more attention to," Bush said.

hbemiller@chicagotribune.com

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Illinois Democrats push back against Trump on abortion - Chicago Tribune