Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

Are Republicans Finally Starting To Get It? – Video


Are Republicans Finally Starting To Get It?
Alex Jones takes calls and discusses how even the moderate right is starting to realize that things need to change. http://www.infowars.com/congress-stands-up-to-fcc-power-grab-with-bill/...

By: TheAlexJonesChannel

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Are Republicans Finally Starting To Get It? - Video

7 Republicans Boycott Hindu Invocation Because ‘They Worship Cows’ – Video


7 Republicans Boycott Hindu Invocation Because #39;They Worship Cows #39;
Seven Idaho Republicans boycott a Hindu invocation because they worship cows http://www.addictinginfo.org/2015/03/03/everyones-laughing-at-these-7-gopers-who-boycotted-a-hindu-invocation-...

By: David Pakman Show

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7 Republicans Boycott Hindu Invocation Because 'They Worship Cows' - Video

Republicans delay vote on attorney general nominee Loretta Lynch

Senate Republicans on Thursday delayed a committee vote on attorney general nominee Loretta Lynch for two weeks, provoking outrage from Democrats who said her nomination has been pending longer than any modern attorney general nominee.

Lynch was nominated by President Obama on Nov. 8, six weeks after Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. announced he was stepping down.

Many had urged Obama to move more quickly so that his nominee could be approved before the new Senate took over in January, but the administration instead waited until after the midterm congressional elections on Nov. 4, when Republicans won control of the Senate.

She was renominated Jan. 7.

Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the new chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, moved quickly to hold hearings on Lynch at the end of January, but announced Thursday that there would be a delay on the vote to seek responses from Lynch to senators questions. The delay is only for a week, but the Senate will be in recess next week, leading to a two-week hiatus.

Such delays have been common practice by the committee in the past, but, according to Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), the top Democrat on the committee, not usually for attorney general nominations.

While applauding Republicans for moving forward Thursday to approve Ashton Carter as Defense secretary, Leahy said, It is a disappointment that this morning, Republicans on the Judiciary Committee chose to hold over for two weeks another critical Cabinet nomination.

Carter was originally nominated Dec. 5, a month after Lynch, and was approved by the Senate by an overwhelming vote Thursday, which Leahy said made it clear that the Republicans could have done the same for Lynch.

Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), who supports Lynch, said Wednesday that he did not understand why Democrats were creating a fuss about a common procedural delay.

While there is little controversy about Lynch's record, Republicans have used her confirmation hearings to complain about Holder and also President Obamas policies on immigration. Her eventual confirmation, after a committee vote now scheduled for Feb. 26, seems assured.

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Republicans delay vote on attorney general nominee Loretta Lynch

DHS budget impasse fuels tension between House, Senate Republicans

Published February 11, 2015

House and Senate Republicans are having their first big family feud since taking control of Congress, as they hit a rock-hard budget impasse that threatens to trigger a partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security.

After a solid 16 months without a government shutdown of any kind, Congress is careening toward an end-of-the-month funding deadline for DHS without a new budget.

The House already passed a bill that includes provisions overturning President Obama's controversial immigration executive actions. But despite repeated attempts last week, the Senate was unable to pass that bill -- as Democrats blocked it, over and over again. Democrats want the immigration provisions stripped.

Yet House Republican leaders are refusing to take another crack at the bill. A senior House GOP leadership aide told Fox News there is no backup plan -- they are insisting the House-passed bill is the only proposal.

This is a dare not only to Democrats but to their Senate Republican colleagues, who are equally adamant that the House should make the next move.

"I can tell you I think it's clearly stuck in the Senate," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told reporters after a closed-door lunch of Senate Republicans. "And the next step is obviously up to the House."

For his part, House Speaker John Boehner on Wednesday said the House has done its job and it's time for the Senate to act. He put the onus on Democrats, saying they need to "get off their ass."

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid's office shot back, with a spokesman saying: "We know Speaker Boehner is frustrated but cursing is not going to resolve the squabbling among Republicans that led to this impasse."

The flare-up Wednesday underscored the worsening stalemate on Capitol Hill with funding for the Homeland Security Department set to expire Feb. 27. Republicans aren't sure what comes next and one senior source told Fox News, "There is no plan, which is scary."

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DHS budget impasse fuels tension between House, Senate Republicans

Wisconsin Republicans cut right-to-work hearing short, advance bill

Republicans on the Wisconsin Senate's labor committee ended a public hearing on contentious right-to-work legislation early and sent the bill on to the full Senate Tuesday, enraging dozens of people who had been waiting all day to speak and sparking a demonstration in front of the Senate chamber.

The daylong hearing began at 10 a.m. Sen. Stephen Nass, a Whitewater Republican and the committee's chairman, had planned for it to last until 7 p.m. But around 6:20 p.m. he announced he was ending the hearing due to what he called a "credible threat" that union members planned to disrupt the proceeding.

"We're not going to take a chance," Nass told the crowd.

Dozens of people who had waited hours to speak leapt to their feet, shouting profanities. Nass called a vote on the bill over the din but it was impossible to hear the roll over chants of "Shame!" Nass' office said later the vote was 3-1. Sen. Chris Larson, a Milwaukee Democrat, did not vote, instead accusing Nass of "wimping out."

Police escorted the three Republicans on the committee out of the room after the vote.

SEIU officials had planned to protest the hard stop at 7 p.m. but the effort was going to be peaceful, SEIU Healthcare Wisconsin Vice President Bruce Colburn told reporters later.

"This is just an example of them taking away workers' voice," he said. "What they did here was an act of political cowardice."

Throngs of union supporters migrated to the corridors outside the Senate chamber, chanting "Get up, get down, Madison's a union town" and "Hey-hey, ho-ho, right-to-work has got to go." They were still standing outside the chamber as the clock approached 7:30 p.m. The Senate was not in session.

The hearing breakdown marked the culmination of a tense day at the Capitol. About 2,000 construction workers, electricians, carpenters and other union members rallied against the bill on the building's steps and in the rotunda around midday.

The gathering paled in size and intensity to protests four years ago when Gov. Scott Walker pushed through his measure that effectively ended collective bargaining for most public workers. Those rallies lasted for weeks and grew as large as 100,000 people.

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Wisconsin Republicans cut right-to-work hearing short, advance bill