Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

Jeb Bush and Where the Republicans are Going in 2016… – Video


Jeb Bush and Where the Republicans are Going in 2016...
Thom Hartmann talks with Eleanor Clift who covers politics for The Daily Beast and is a regular panelist on the McLaughlin Group Website: http://www.thedailybeast.c...

By: thomhartmann

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Jeb Bush and Where the Republicans are Going in 2016... - Video

Chris Matthews Destroys Netanyahu and Republicans for Trying to Hijack U.S. Foreign Policy – Video


Chris Matthews Destroys Netanyahu and Republicans for Trying to Hijack U.S. Foreign Policy
Chris Matthews rips Benjamin Netanyahu and the Republicans for trying to hijack US foreign policy from President Obama... This clip from the Majority Report,...

By: Sam Seder

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Chris Matthews Destroys Netanyahu and Republicans for Trying to Hijack U.S. Foreign Policy - Video

Kansas republicans unveil school funding proposal – Video


Kansas republicans unveil school funding proposal
KAKE News at Six - Thursday, March 5, 2015.

By: KAKE News

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Kansas republicans unveil school funding proposal - Video

Republicans delay vote on attorney general nominee

Published February 12, 2015

Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee have delayed the panel's vote on President Obama's attorney general nominee, at least until the end of the month.

Republicans asked new Chairman Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, to delay the vote Thursday morning, saying they have more questions for Loretta Lynch, who is now the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York. Grassley agreed, saying it was standard procedure when members request more time for inquiry. He said the vote will take place after the Presidents' Day recess.

Lynch, who would be replacing Eric Holder, appeared before the panel in late January and faced a barrage of questions from Republicans regarding the president's executive actions on immigration, gay marriage, voting rights laws, the IRS scandal and Holder's handling of the office in general. On Thursday, Republicans said they still have questions.

Sen. David Vitter, R-La., said he wanted to know more about a $1.9 billion settlement imposed by the Lynch's office three years ago that allowed Europe's largest bank, HSBC, to avoid prosecution in a massive drug money laundering scandal. The settlement has been questioned by lawmakers on Capitol Hill now that the bank has been implicated with new charges that it helped its wealthiest clients avoid paying taxes in their home countries.

"I would offer that as a specific reason to hold [the vote] over," Vitter said during the hearing.

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, offered some reticence on the delay, saying that while he would respect Grassley's decision to delay, he planned to vote in favor of Lynch based on her qualifications for the job.

But freshman Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., suggested the panel had not given Lynch's nomination a thorough enough examination in January, and wanted to ask "specific answers on how [she] is going to operate as the chief executive of the Department of Justice."

"I'm looking at this like an executive job interview," he said, claiming the "very brief" time he had to question her in January was not enough. "I'm simply trying to do my job and to do a thorough review to make sure we have somebody who not only has the legal mind but the wherewithal to manage a department" as critical as the DOJ.

The holdover drew criticism from Democratic committee members who saw it as an ideological stalling tactic.

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Republicans delay vote on attorney general nominee

In a bind, Senate Republicans offer vote on Homeland Security bill

A partial agency shutdown looming, Senate Republicans offered Tuesday to permit a vote on Homeland Security funding legislation stripped of immigration provisions backed by conservatives but strongly opposed by President Barack Obama and fellow Democrats.

"We could have that vote very quickly," Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said as his party struggled to escape a political predicament of their own making involving an agency with major anti-terrorism responsibilities.

McConnell said he did not know how the Republican-controlled House would respond if a stand-alone spending bill passed the Senate. Underscoring the realities of divided government, Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada initially said he wouldn't agree to the proposal unless it had the backing of House Speaker John Boehner, in a sign it would be likely to clear the House.

With House Republicans scheduled to meet privately Wednesday to discuss the issue, Boehner's office issued a statement that neither accepted nor rejected the proposal McConnell outlined to end weeks of gridlock.

"The speaker has been clear: The House has acted, and now Senate Democrats need to stop hiding. Will they continue to block funding for the Department of Homeland Security or not?" said Boehner spokesman Michael Steel.

Some House conservatives criticized the proposal, but one lawmaker allied with the leadership predicted it might win approval. Noting that a federal judge in Texas has issued an order blocking implementation of Obama's plan to shield millions of immigrants from deportation, Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma said the court had "effectively stopped the president's executive action," at least for now. "So I don't think we'd run the risk of shutting down Homeland Security," he added.

Even in the Senate, though, McConnell's plan had its GOP critics.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, a tea party favorite and potential 2016 presidential contender, called it a mistake. "Congress is obliged to use every constitutional check and balance we have to rein in President Obama's lawlessness," he said in a statement.

Senate Republican officials said McConnell's offer of a vote on a stand-alone funding bill also envisions a vote on a separate measure to repeal a directive from Obama last fall that shields about 4 million immigrants from deportation even though they live in the United States illegally. That measure would almost certainly fail in the Senate at the hands of Democrats.

At the same time, the proposal would eliminate an attempt by the House to repeal an earlier presidential order that allows tens of thousands of immigrants to remain in the country if they were brought here illegally as youngsters by their parents. Officials said Boehner's office had been informed of McConnell's plans before they were made public.

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In a bind, Senate Republicans offer vote on Homeland Security bill