Tumgik
#Representative Mario Diaz-Balart
minnesotafollower · 11 months
Text
Congressional Opposition to U.S. Helping Cuban Private Businesses  
As previously noted, the Biden Administration has been developing regulations to allow private Cuban entrepreneurs to open bank accounts in the United States to facilitate their operations and allow U.S. banks to clear dollar transactions originating in third countries that involve Cuban nationals. But those proposed regulations have not yet been publicly announced.[1] The apparent reason for…
View On WordPress
0 notes
faerie-hideaway · 10 months
Text
U.S. users email your representatives this, and make sure to include your zip code:
I am your constituent. I am strongly in favor of defunding Israel. I want my opinion logged on every single one of these pieces of legislation. It is an atrocity that the USA is sending our taxpayer dollars, weaponry, and other support to Israel in order to aid in the genocide of the Palestinian people. It does not reflect the will of your constituents, and I demand that you correct this by voting for/against the following bills, resolutions, and legislation.
To be frank, I will be basing my vote for you in upcoming elections on this issue. I will be watching closely to see how you vote on issues regarding funding to Israel. I will not vote for you in the next election if you vote to send any money, support, or weaponry to Israel. I will be voting for you if you vote to block money, support, and weaponry to Israel.
This is the current legislation I am for, and the current legislation I am against. I would like your office to record my opinion for each bill, and I would like you to take this into consideration when you vote.
I am FOR the following, and expect you to vote for this and co-sponsor, either now or when matching legislation reaches your office.
H.Res. 786: by Rep. Cori Bush
H.Res. 388 by Rep. Rashida Tlaib
H.R. 3103 by Rep. Betty McCollum
I am against Joe Biden’s proposal to spend billions of dollars on Israel via a package for Israel, Ukraine, Taiwan, and the US border. Biden is asking for $100 BILLION for this package and it is only 1 YEAR'S worth of funding. This is ABSOLUTELY unacceptable, and I am against you voting for ANY bill that spends even $1 on Israel. I do not care what else is in the bill. If it gives money to Israel, I am against it.
I am AGAINST the following, and expect you to vote against this and not co-sponsor, either now or when matching legislation reaches your office.
S. 3083 by Sen. Bill Hagerty [R-TN]
S.Res. 417 by Sen. Charles “Chuck” Schumer [D-NY]
H.Res. 797 by Rep. Cory Mills [R-FL7]
S. 3081 by Sen. Steve Daines [R-MT]
H.Res. 796 by Rep. Ernest “Tony” Gonzales [R-TX23]
S.Res. 413 by Sen. Marco Rubio
H.R. 552 by Rep. Lance Gooden
H.R. 5959 by Thomas Tiffany
S. 3081 by Sen. Steve Daines
H.Res. 789 by Rep. Jefferson Van Drew
H.Res. 771 by Rep. Michael McCaul
H.R. 5932 by Rep. David Schweikert
H.Res. 768 by Rep. Michael McCaul
H.Res. 770 by Rep. Zachary (Zach) Nunn
H.Res. 701 by Rep. Bradley “Brad” Schneider
H.Con.Res. 61 by Rep. Janice “Jan” Schakowsky
S. 2587 by Sen. Jon Tester
H.Res. 606 by Rep. Andrew Ogles
S. 2413 by Sen. Robert “Bob” Menendez
S. 2438 by Sen. Christopher Coons
H.R. 4709 by Rep. Josh Gottheimer
S.Con.Res. 14: by Sen. Tom Cotton
H.Con.Res. 57 by Rep. August Pfluger
H.R. 4665 by Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart
S. 2265 by Sen. Dan Sullivan
S. 2226 by Sen. John F. “Jack” Reed
H.Res. 581 by Rep. Gregory Steube
S. 2240 by Sen. Christopher Coons
H.R. 4564 by Rep. Claudia Tenney
H.R. 4365 by Rep. Ken Calvert
H.R. 4076 by Rep. Chris Pappas
H.R. 3932 by Rep. Michael Turner
H.R. 3907 by Rep. Lois Frankel
S. 1802 by Sen. Gary Peters
H.R. 3792 by Rep. Joe Wilson
S. 1777 by Sen. Jacky Rosen
H.R. 3393 by Rep. Carlos Gimenez
H.Res. 409 by Rep. Carlos Gimenez
S. 1637 by Sen. Marco Rubio
H.R. 3266 by Rep. Brad Sherman
S. 1504 by Sen. Tom Cotton
H.R. 3099 by Rep. Michael Lawler
S.Res. 188 by Sen. Robert “Bob” Menendez
H.Res. 346 by Rep. Randy Weber
H.R. 2973 by Rep. Cathy Anne McMorris Rodgers
S. 1334: by Sen. Jacky Rosen
S. 1300 by Sen. Benjamin Cardin
H.Res. 311 by Rep. Ann Wagner
H.R. 2670 by Rep. Mike Rogers
H.R. 2531 by Rep. Bradley “Brad” Schneider
S. 1143 by Sen. Jerry Moran
H.R. 1777 by Rep. Joe Wilson
H.R. 1218 by Rep. August Pfluger
H.R. 1102 by Rep. Chip Roy
S. 510 by Sen. Tom Cotton
S. 489 by Sen. Rick Scott
S. 430 by Sen. James Risch
S. 431 by Sen. James Risch
H.R. 987 by Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz
H.Res. 92 by Rep. Josh Gottheimer
H.Res. 76 by Rep. Max Miller
H.R. 687 by Rep. Gregory Steube
H.R. 211 by Rep. Gregory Steube
S. 224 by Sen. Tom Cotton
S. 189 by Sen. Marco Rubio
I am against any legislation that allows troops to deploy to the Middle East in support roles for Israel, as proposed by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.
I am against Netanyahu’s ground invasion of Gaza, which will inevitably lead to mass killings of Palestinian civilians and escalate violence. If there are any future bills supporting this, you need to vote against them and not co-sponsor.
The U.S. Constitution and the War Powers Act stipulate that only Congress can authorize the president to use military force in a foreign war, except in cases of self-defense. Previous administrations from both parties have ignored this, with unauthorized strikes in places like Syria and Libya. I want you to stand against ANY use of military force that supports Israel or hurts Palestine.
And of course, I am against the usual funding of $3.8 billion PER YEAR to Israel. This 10-year agreement began in 2016. I do not want a renewal in 2026, and in the next election, I will vote for representatives who WILL NOT VOTE TO FUND ISRAEL. I will be keeping track of how you vote now, and I will not vote for you if you decide to fund Israel in any way.
I am a single-issue voter for this. I want you to defund Israel. I do not want a single dollar spent on supporting Israel. I will be paying attention to how you vote in the upcoming weeks and months, and if you vote to fund or provide weapons, troops, or intelligence to Israel, I will NOT vote for you in the next election.
We are paying attention to the budget. We know when you're giving aid to a country committing genocide instead of helping your constituents in the USA. Both myself and tens of thousands of other constituents have spent years saying that we don’t want our hard-earned taxpayer dollars going to Israel. The lack of willingness to fund anything for American citizens, but the quickness with which you take action for Israel is telling. It is unacceptable.
As an elected official, you have the opportunity to listen to the public and stand against genocide. Israel is currently committing war crimes against Palestine. You can stop this by defunding Israel. THOUSANDS of Palestinian people have been killed, 1/3 of them children, in just a couple of days. One child every 15 minutes is being killed. YOU can prevent this by refusing to send additional weapons and funding to Israel.
We are currently spending BILLIONS of dollars EVERY YEAR on Israel. I do not want my money going towards the ethnic cleansing and genocide of Palestinians. Not a dollar more.
15 notes · View notes
conniejoworld · 2 years
Text
This is the full list of all Republican House representatives who voted against the sick leave measure:
Robert Aderholt, Alabama 4th district
Rick Allen, Georgia 12th district
Mark Amodei, Nevada 2nd district
Kelly Armstrong, North Dakota
Jodey Arrington, Texas 19th district
Brian Babin, Texas 36th district
Jim Baird, Indiana 4th district
Troy Balderson, Ohio 12th district
Jim Banks, Indiana 3rd district
Andy Barr, Kentucky 6th district
Cliff Bentz, Oregon 2nd district
Jack Bergman, Michigan 1st district
Stephanie Bice (OK), Oklahoma 5th district
Andy Biggs, Arizona 5th district
Gus Bilirakis, Florida 12th district
Dan Bishop, North Carolina 9th district
Mike Bost, Illinois 12th district
Kevin Brady, Texas 8th district
Mo Brooks, Alabama 5th district
Vern Buchanan, Florida 16th district
Ken Buck, Colorado 4th district
Larry Bucshon, Indiana 8th district
Ted Budd, North Carolina 13th district
Tim Burchett, Tennessee 2nd district
Michael Burgess, Texas 26th district
Ken Calvert, California 42nd district
Kat Cammack, Florida 3rd district
Mike Carey, Ohio 15th district
Jerry Carl, Alabama 1st district
John Carter, Texas 31st district
Buddy Carter, Georgia 1st district
Madison Cawthorn, North Carolina 11th district
Steve Chabot, Ohio 1st district
Liz Cheney, Wyoming
Ben Cline, Virginia 6th district
Michael Cloud, Texas 27th district
Andrew Clyde, Georgia 9th district
Tom Cole, Oklahoma 4th district
James Comer, Kentucky 1st district
Connie Conway, California 22nd district
Rick Crawford, Arkansas 1st district
Dan Crenshaw, Texas 2nd district
John Curtis, Utah 3rd district
Warren Davidson, Ohio 8th district
Rodney Davis, Illinois 13th district
Scott DesJarlais, Tennessee 4th district
Mario Diaz-Balart, Florida 25th district
Byron Donalds, Florida 19th district
Jeff Duncan, South Carolina 3rd district
Neal Dunn, Florida 2nd district
Jake Ellzey, Texas 6th district
Tom Emmer, Minnesota 6th district
Ron Estes, Kansas 4th district
Pat Fallon, Texas 4th district
Randy Feenstra, Iowa 4th district
Drew Ferguson, Georgia 3rd district
Brad Finstad, Minnesota 1st district
Michelle Fischbach, Minnesota 7th district
Scott Fitzgerald, Wisconsin 5th district
Chuck Fleischmann, Tennessee 3rd district
Mike Flood, Nebraska 1st district
Mayra Flores, Texas 34th district
Virginia Foxx, North Carolina 5th district
Scott Franklin, Florida 15th district
Russ Fulcher, Idaho 1st district
Matt Gaetz, Florida 1st district
Mike Gallagher, Wisconsin 8th district
Andrew Garbarino, New York 2nd district
Mike Garcia, California 25th district
Bob Gibbs, Ohio 7th district
Carlos Gimenez, Florida 26th district
Louie Gohmert, Texas 1st district
Tony Gonzales, Texas 23rd district
Anthony Gonzalez, Ohio 16th district
Bob Good, Virginia 5th district
Lance Gooden, Texas 5th district
Paul Gosar, Arizona 4th district
Kay Granger, Texas 12th district
Garret Graves, Louisiana 6th district
Sam Graves, Missouri 6th district
Mark Green, Tennessee 7th district
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Georgia 14th district
Morgan Griffith, Virginia 9th district
Glenn Grothman, Wisconsin 6th district
Michael Guest, Mississippi 3rd district
Brett Guthrie, Kentucky 2nd district
Andy Harris, Maryland 1st district
Diana Harshbarger, Tennessee 1st district
Vicky Hartzler, Missouri 4th district
Kevin Hern, Oklahoma 1st district
Yvette Herrell, New Mexico 2nd district
Jaime Herrera Beutler, Washington 3rd district
Jody Hice, Georgia 10th district
Clay Higgins, Louisiana 3rd district
French Hill, Arkansas 2nd district
Ashley Hinson, Iowa 1st district
Trey Hollingsworth, Indiana 9th district
Richard Hudson, North Carolina 8th district
Bill Huizenga, Michigan 2nd district
Darrell Issa, California 50th district
Ronny Jackson, Texas 13th district
Chris Jacobs, New York 27th district
Mike Johnson, Louisiana 4th district
Bill Johnson, Ohio 6th district
Dusty Johnson, South Dakota
Jim Jordan, Ohio 4th district
David Joyce, Ohio 14th district
John Joyce, Pennsylvania 13th district
Fred Keller, Pennsylvania 12th district
Trent Kelly, Mississippi 1st district
Mike Kelly, Pennsylvania 16th district
Young Kim, California 39th district
David Kustoff, Tennessee 8th district
Darin LaHood, Illinois 18th district
Doug LaMalfa, California 1st district
Doug Lamborn, Colorado 5th district
Bob Latta, Ohio 5th district
Jake LaTurner, Kansas 2nd district
Debbie Lesko, Arizona 8th district
Julia Letlow, Louisiana 5th district
Billy Long, Missouri 7th district
Barry Loudermilk, Georgia 11th district
Frank Lucas, Oklahoma 3rd district
Blaine Luetkemeyer, Missouri 3rd district
Nancy Mace, South Carolina 1st district
Nicole Malliotakis, New York 11th district
Tracey Mann, Kansas 1st district
Thomas Massie, Kentucky 4th district
Brian Mast, Florida 18th district
Kevin McCarthy, California 23rd district
Michael McCaul, Texas 10th district
Lisa McClain, Michigan 10th district
Tom McClintock, California 4th district
Patrick McHenry, North Carolina 10th district
Peter Meijer, Michigan 3rd district
Dan Meuser, Pennsylvania 9th district
Mary Miller, Illinois 15th district
Carol Miller, West Virginia 3rd district
Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Iowa 2nd district
John Moolenaar, Michigan 4th district
Alex Mooney, West Virginia 2nd district
Barry Moore, Alabama 2nd district
Blake Moore, Utah 1st district
Markwayne Mullin, Oklahoma 2nd district
Greg Murphy, North Carolina 3rd district
Troy Nehls, Texas 22nd district
Dan Newhouse, Washington 4th district
Ralph Norman, South Carolina 5th district
Jay Obernolte, California 8th district
Burgess Owens, Utah 4th district
Steven Palazzo, Mississippi 4th district
Gary Palmer, Alabama 6th district
Greg Pence, Indiana 6th district
Scott Perry, Pennsylvania 10th district
August Pfluger, Texas 11th district
Bill Posey, Florida 8th district
Guy Reschenthaler, Pennsylvania 14th district
Tom Rice, South Carolina 7th district
Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Washington 5th district
Mike Rogers, Alabama 3rd district
Hal Rogers, Kentucky 5th district
John Rose, Tennessee 6th district
Matt Rosendale, Montana
David Rouzer, North Carolina 7th district
Chip Roy, Texas 21st district
John Rutherford, Florida 4th district
Maria Elvira Salazar, Florida 27th district
Steve Scalise, Louisiana 1st district
David Schweikert, Arizona 6th district
Austin Scott, Georgia 8th district
Joe Sempolinski, New York 23rd district
9 notes · View notes
gusty-wind · 11 months
Text
Lists of 22 Rinos
Here’s the full Hall of Shame and who they voted for Speaker instead. The states and congressional districts they represent are in parenthesis:
Don Bacon (NE-2nd)- Kevin McCarthy
Linda Chavez-Deremer (OR-5th)- McCarthy
Anthony D’Esposito-(NY-4th) Lee Zeldin
Vern Buchanan (FL-16th)- Byron Donalds
Andrew Garbarino (NY 2nd) -Zeldin
Jake Ellzey (TX-6th) – Mike Garcia
Jen Higgins (VA-2nd) – McCarthy
Drew Ferguson (GA-3rd)- Steve Scalise
Ken Buck (CO-4th)- Zeldin
Mario Diaz-Balart (FL-26th)- Scalise
Nick Lalota (NY-1st)- Zeldin
Kay Granger (TX-12th) – Scalise
Mike Lawler (NY-17th)- McCarthy
Marinette Miller-Meeks (IA-2nd) – Kay Granger
John James (MI-10th)- Candice Miller
Tony Gonzales (TX-23rd)- Scalise
Carols Gimenez (FL-28th)- McCarthy
Mike Kelly (PA-16th) – John Boehner!
John Rutherford (FL-5th) -Scalise
Mike Simpson (ID-2nd)- Scalise
Pete Stauber (MN-8th) – Bruce Westerman
Steve Womack (AR-3rd)- Scalise
Courtesy of Benny Johnson, here are the phone numbers for the 22 turncoats.
HERE ARE THE OFFICE NUMBERS OF THE 22 REPUBLICANS WHO VOTED AGAINST JIM JORDAN ON SECOND BALLOT – KEEP THE PRESSURE ON: Bacon – (202) 225-4155, (402) 938-0300 Buchanan – (202) 225-5015, (813) 657-1013 Buck – (202) 225-4676, (720) 639-9165 Chavez – (202) 225-5711, (503)… — Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) October 18, 2023
1 note · View note
wafact · 2 years
Text
Texas congressman who broke with GOP is censured
Co-Chairmen U.S. Representative Tony Gonzales (R-TX) and Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL) lead a news conference with members of the House Hispanic Conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, February 1, 2023. Jonathan Ernst | Reuters Republican U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales of Texas was censured Saturday in a rare move by his state party over votes that included supporting new gun safety laws after the…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
crossdreamers · 4 years
Text
Here are the US representatives who voted against the US pro-LGBT+ Equality Act
Tumblr media
The US Equality Act is to outlaw discrimination against LGBTQ people in housing, credit, jury service, public accommodations, and federal funding.
The House of Representatives passed the legislation yesterday, but it is unlikely that the Senate will follow up, given the Republican Party's increasing hostility to queer people. They are currently weaponizing transphobia in an attempt at mobilizing their base.
In the Senate the bill will require at least 10 Republicans to vote with all Democrats to advance past the so-called filibuster.
Metro Weekly has listed the representatives that voted against the law in the House.
Photo of Rep. Marie Newman.
Alabama:
Robert Aderholt
Mo Brooks
Jerry Carl
Barry Moore
Gary Palmer
Mike Rogers
Alaska:
Don Young
Arizona:
Andy Biggs
Paul A. Gosar
Debbie Lesko
David Schweikert
Arkansas:
Rick Crawford
French Hill
Bruce Westerman
Steve Womack
California:
Ken Calvert
Darrell Issa
Mike Garcia
Young Kim
Doug LaMalfa
Kevin McCarthy
Tom McClintock
Devin Nunes
Jay Obernolte
Michelle Steel
David G. Valadao
Colorado:
Lauren Boebert
Ken Buck
Doug Lamborn
Florida:
Gus M. Bilirakis
Vern Buchanan
Kat Cammack
Mario Diaz-Balart
Byron Donalds
Neal Dunn
C. Scott Franklin
Matt Gaetz
Carlos A. Gimenez
Brian Mast
Bill Posey
John Rutherford
Maria Elvira Salazar
W. Gregory Steube
Michael Waltz
Daniel Webster
Georgia:
Rick Allen
Buddy Carter
Andrew S. Clyde
A. Drew Ferguson
Marjorie Taylor Greene
Jody Hice
Barry Loudermilk
Austin Scott
David Scott
Idaho:
Russ Fulcher
Mike Simpson
Illinois:
Mike Bost
Rodney Davis
Darin LaHood
Adam Kinzinger
Mary E. Miller
Indiana:
Jim Banks
James Baird
Larry Bucshon
Trey Hollingsworth
Greg Pence
Victoria Spartz
Jackie Walorski
Iowa:
Randy Feenstra
Ashley Hinson
Mariannette Miller-Meeks
Kansas:
Ron Estes
Jake LaTurner
Tracey Mann
Kentucky:
Andy Barr
James Comer
S. Brett Guthrie
Thomas Massie
Harold Rogers
Louisiana:
Clay Higgins
Garret Graves
Mike Johnson
Steve Scalise
Maryland:
Andy Harris
Michigan:
Jack Bergman
Bill Huizenga
Lisa C. McClain
Peter Meijer
John Moolenaar
Fred Upton
Tim Walberg
Minnesota:
Tom Emmer
Michelle Fischbach
Jim Hagedorn
Pete Stauber
Mississippi:
Michael Guest
Trent Kelly
Steven Palazzo
Missouri:
Sam Graves
Vicky Hartzler
Billy Long
Blaine Luetkemeyer
Jason Smith
Ann Wagner
Montana:
Matthew M. Rosendale
Nebraska:
Don Bacon
Jeff Fortenberry
Adrian Smith
Nevada:
Mark Amodei
New Jersey:
Chris Smith
Jefferson Van Drew
New Mexico:
Yvette Herrell
New York:
Andrew R. Garbarino
Chris Jacobs
Nicole Malliotakis
Elise Stefanik
Claudia Tenney
Lee Zeldin
North Carolina:
Dan Bishop
Ted Budd
Madison Cawthorn
Gregory Francis Murphy
Virginia Foxx
Richard Hudson
Patrick T. McHenry
David Rouzer
North Dakota:
Kelly Armstrong
Ohio:
Troy Balderson
Steve Chabot
Warren Davidson
Bob Gibbs
Anthony Gonzalez
Jim Jordan
Bill Johnson
David Joyce
Robert E. Latta
Steve Stivers
Michael Turner
Brad Wenstrup
Oklahoma:
Stephanie I. Bice
Tom Cole
Kevin Hern
Frank Lucas
Markwayne Mullin
Oregon:
Cliff Bentz
Pennsylvania:
John Joyce
Mike Kelly
Daniel Meuser
Scott Perry
Guy Reschenthaler
Lloyd Smucker
Glenn Thompson
South Carolina:
Jeff Duncan
Nancy Mace
Ralph Norman
Tom Rice
William Timmons
Joe Wilson
South Dakota:
Dusty Johnson
Tennessee:
Timm Burchett
Scott DesJarlais
Chuck Fleischmann
Mark Green
Diana Harshbarger
David Kustoff
John W. Rose
Texas:
Jodey Arrington
Brian Babin
Kevin Bady
Michael Burgess
John Carter
Michael Cloud
Dan Crenshaw
Pat Fallon
Louie Gohmert
Tony Gonzales
Lance Gooden
Kay Granger
Ronny Jackson
Michael T. McCaul
Troy E. Nehls
August Pfluger
Chip Roy
Pete Sessions
Van Taylor
Beth Van Duyne
Randy Weber
Roger Williams
Utah:
John R. Curtis
Blake D. Moore
Burgess Owens
Christ Stewart
Virginia:
Ben Cline
Bob Good
Morgan Griffith
Robert J. Wittman
Washington:
Jaime Herrera Beutler
Cathy McMorris Rodgers
Dan Newhous
West Virginia:
David McKinley
Carol Miller
Alex Mooney
Wisconsin:
Scott Fitzgerald
Mike Gallagher
Glenn Grothman
Bryan Steil
Thomas P. Tiffany
Wyoming:
Liz Cheney
All Democrats voted for the legislation, as did three Republicans.
575 notes · View notes
deadbilly · 4 years
Link
Six Senate and House Republicans are expected this week to engage with elected Democrats and amnesty advocates, from corporate donors to the open borders lobby, on “building bipartisanship on immigration reform.”
On Thursday, Senators Marco Rubio (R-FL), Thom Tillis (R-NC), Susan Collins (R-ME), and John Cornyn (R-TX) and Representatives Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL) and Will Hurd (R-TX) are to participate in a discussion with Senators Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Robert Menendez (D-NJ), and Chris Coons (D-DE) about striking a deal on amnesty for illegal aliens in some form.
The event is being hosted by the pro-amnesty, pro-mass immigration American Business Immigration Coalition which is made up of a series of business donors such as the United States Chamber of Commerce and the open borders lobby like the George Soros-funded United We Dream organization.
This is why a nationalist third party is so badly needed. The GOP is too cowardly, sick and venal to be saved at this point.
77 notes · View notes
msfangirlgonewild · 4 years
Text
Michael Moore posted on Facebook:
Immediately Remove The Republicans Who Voted In Favor of the Terrorists’ Demands
It’s not just Trump who has to go. The Constitution is clear. Any member of Congress who participates in an “insurrection or rebellion” is in violation of the oath they took to defend and uphold the Constitution — and thus they may no longer serve in Congress. Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, written initially to exclude Confederate Civil War traitors, says that "No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress … who … having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress … to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same[.]"
There are 147 Republican members of the Senate and the House who late last Wednesday night (and into the early hours of Thursday morning) — just hours after a domestic terrorist attack on the Capitol which they and Trump helped to incite — voted to overturn (throw out) the legal and already-certified votes of millions of Americans in the states of Pennsylvania and Arizona. It was an act of sedition and a flagrant violation of their oath of office. Legal experts and other members of Congress have called it an act of treason. THIS MUST BE DEALT WITH. They must be, as the Constitution requires, removed from Congress.
Here are their names. And to be clear: The cop-killing terrorist mob who attacked, trashed, took over and shut down our United States Congress for seven hours — the first time in history this has ever happened — their terrorist demands and their stated intention was to prevent the counting of the votes of millions of Americans and illegally give the election to Trump. So what did these 147 Republican lawmakers do just hours after these domestic terrorists stormed the Capitol in the hopes of killing, harming or kidnapping some of their fellow representatives, including their Republican Vice-President!? They voted to give in to the terrorists’ demands! And do EXACTLY what the cop-killing mob had demanded they do: Throw out the votes of the American people! Imagine if on the night of 9/11, 147 Republican members of Congress voted to give in to the demands of Al Qaeda. We never would have stood for that and we would have had them all arrested. But of course there’s a difference: Bin Laden wanted to take down buildings in the financial and military capitols of America and kill 3,000 people in the process. These 147 Republicans just wanted to take down American Democracy.
ALL 147 OF THEM MUST BE REMOVED IMMEDIATELY PER SECTION 3 OF THE 14th AMENDMENT OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION:
(Here Are the 147 Republicans Who Voted to Overturn the Certified Election Results)
U.S. SENATE
Tommy Tuberville, Ala.
Rick Scott, Fla.
Roger Marshall, Kan.
John Kennedy, La.
Cindy Hyde-Smith, Miss.
Josh Hawley, Mo.
Ted Cruz, Texas
Cynthia Lummis, Wyo.
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Robert B. Aderholt, Ala.
Mo Brooks, Ala.
Jerry Carl, Ala.
Barry Moore, Ala.
Gary Palmer, Ala.
Mike Rogers, Ala.
Andy Biggs, Ariz.
Paul Gosar, Ariz.
Debbie Lesko, Ariz.
David Schweikert, Ariz.
Rick Crawford, Ark.
Ken Calvert, Calif.
Mike Garcia, Calif.
Darrell Issa, Calif.
Doug LaMalfa, Calif.
Kevin McCarthy, Calif.
Devin Nunes, Calif.
Jay Obernolte, Calif.
Lauren Boebert, Colo.
Doug Lamborn, Colo.
Kat Cammack, Fla.
Mario Diaz-Balart, Fla.
Byron Donalds, Fla.
Neal Dunn, Fla.
Scott Franklin, Fla.
Matt Gaetz, Fla.
Carlos Gimenez, Fla.
Brian Mast, Fla.
Bill Posey, Fla.
John Rutherford, Fla.
Greg Steube, Fla.
Daniel Webster, Fla.
Rick Allen, Ga.
Earl L. "Buddy" Carter, Ga.
Andrew Clyde, Ga.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Ga.
Jody Hice, Ga.
Barry Loudermilk, Ga.
Russ Fulcher, Idaho
Mike Bost, Ill.
Mary Miller, Ill.
Jim Baird, Ind.
Jim Banks, Ind.
Greg Pence, Ind.
Jackie Walorski, Ind.
Ron Estes, Kan.
Jacob LaTurner, Kan.
Tracey Mann, Kan.
Harold Rogers, Ky.
Garret Graves, La.
Clay Higgins, La.
Mike Johnson, La.
Steve Scalise, La.
Andy Harris, Md.
Jack Bergman, Mich.
Lisa McClain, Mich.
Tim Walberg, Mich.
Michelle Fischbach, Minn.
Jim Hagedorn, Minn.
Michael Guest, Miss.
Trent Kelly, Miss.
Steven Palazzo, Miss.
Sam Graves, Mo.
Vicky Hartzler, Mo.
Billy Long, Mo.
Blaine Luetkemeyer, Mo.
Jason Smith, Mo.
Matt Rosendale, Mont.
Dan Bishop, N.C.
Ted Budd, N.C.
Madison Cawthorn, N.C.
Virginia Foxx, N.C.
Richard Hudson, N.C.
Gregory F. Murphy, N.C.
David Rouzer, N.C.
Jeff Van Drew, N.J.
Yvette Herrell, N.M.
Chris Jacobs, N.Y.
Nicole Malliotakis, N.Y.
Elise M. Stefanik, N.Y.
Lee Zeldin, N.Y.
Adrian Smith, Neb.
Steve Chabot, Ohio
Warren Davidson, Ohio
Bob Gibbs, Ohio
Bill Johnson, Ohio
Jim Jordan, Ohio
Stephanie Bice, Okla.
Tom Cole, Okla.
Kevin Hern, Okla.
Frank Lucas, Okla.
Markwayne Mullin, Okla.
Cliff Bentz, Ore.
John Joyce, Pa.
Fred Keller, Pa.
Mike Kelly, Pa.
Daniel Meuser, Pa.
Scott Perry, Pa.
Guy Reschenthaler, Pa.
Lloyd Smucker, Pa.
Glenn Thompson, Pa.
Jeff Duncan, S.C.
Ralph Norman, S.C.
Tom Rice, S.C.
William Timmons, S.C.
Joe Wilson, S.C.
Tim Burchett, Tenn.
Scott DesJarlais, Tenn.
Chuck Fleischmann, Tenn.
Mark E. Green, Tenn.
Diana Harshbarger, Tenn.
David Kustoff, Tenn.
John Rose, Tenn.
Jodey Arrington, Texas
Brian Babin, Texas
Michael C. Burgess, Texas
John R. Carter, Texas
Michael Cloud, Texas
Pat Fallon, Texas
Louie Gohmert, Texas
Lance Gooden, Texas
Ronny Jackson, Texas
Troy Nehls, Texas
August Pfluger, Texas
Pete Sessions, Texas
Beth Van Duyne, Texas
Randy Weber, Texas
Roger Williams, Texas
Ron Wright, Texas
Burgess Owens, Utah
Chris Stewart, Utah
Ben Cline, Va.
Bob Good, Va.
Morgan Griffith, Va.
Robert J. Wittman, Va.
Carol Miller, W.Va.
Alexander X. Mooney, W.Va.
Scott Fitzgerald, Wis.
Tom Tiffany, Wis.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/01/07/us/elections/electoral-college-biden-objectors.html (photo collage courtesy of the NY Times)
Tumblr media
16 notes · View notes
removedreality · 4 years
Text
Immediately Remove The Republicans Who Voted In Favor of the Terrorists’ Demands
It’s not just Trump who has to go. The Constitution is clear. Any member of Congress who participates in an “insurrection or rebellion” is in violation of the oath they took to defend and uphold the Constitution — and thus they may no longer serve in Congress. Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, written initially to exclude Confederate Civil War traitors, says that "No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress … who … having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress … to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same[.]"
There are 147 Republican members of the Senate and the House who late last Wednesday night (and into the early hours of Thursday morning) — just hours after a domestic terrorist attack on the Capitol which they and Trump helped to incite — voted to overturn (throw out) the legal and already-certified votes of millions of Americans in the states of Pennsylvania and Arizona. It was an act of sedition and a flagrant violation of their oath of office. Legal experts and other members of Congress have called it an act of treason. THIS MUST BE DEALT WITH. They must be, as the Constitution requires, removed from Congress.
Here are their names. And to be clear: The cop-killing terrorist mob who attacked, trashed, took over and shut down our United States Congress for seven hours — the first time in history this has ever happened — their terrorist demands and their stated intention was to prevent the counting of the votes of millions of Americans and illegally give the election to Trump. So what did these 147 Republican lawmakers do just hours after these domestic terrorists stormed the Capitol in the hopes of killing, harming or kidnapping some of their fellow representatives, including their Republican Vice-President!? They voted to give in to the terrorists’ demands! And do EXACTLY what the cop-killing mob had demanded they do: Throw out the votes of the American people! Imagine if on the night of 9/11, 147 Republican members of Congress voted to give in to the demands of Al Qaeda. We never would have stood for that and we would have had them all arrested. But of course there’s a difference: Bin Laden wanted to take down buildings in the financial and military capitols of America and kill 3,000 people in the process. These 147 Republicans just wanted to take down American Democracy.
ALL 147 OF THEM MUST BE REMOVED IMMEDIATELY PER SECTION 3 OF THE 14th AMENDMENT OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION:
(Here Are the 147 Republicans Who Voted to Overturn the Certified Election Results)
U.S. SENATE
Tommy Tuberville, Ala.
Rick Scott, Fla.
Roger Marshall, Kan.
John Kennedy, La.
Cindy Hyde-Smith, Miss.
Josh Hawley, Mo.
Ted Cruz, Texas
Cynthia Lummis, Wyo.
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Robert B. Aderholt, Ala.
Mo Brooks, Ala.
Jerry Carl, Ala.
Barry Moore, Ala.
Gary Palmer, Ala.
Mike Rogers, Ala.
Andy Biggs, Ariz.
Paul Gosar, Ariz.
Debbie Lesko, Ariz.
David Schweikert, Ariz.
Rick Crawford, Ark.
Ken Calvert, Calif.
Mike Garcia, Calif.
Darrell Issa, Calif.
Doug LaMalfa, Calif.
Kevin McCarthy, Calif.
Devin Nunes, Calif.
Jay Obernolte, Calif.
Lauren Boebert, Colo.
Doug Lamborn, Colo.
Kat Cammack, Fla.
Mario Diaz-Balart, Fla.
Byron Donalds, Fla.
Neal Dunn, Fla.
Scott Franklin, Fla.
Matt Gaetz, Fla.
Carlos Gimenez, Fla.
Brian Mast, Fla.
Bill Posey, Fla.
John Rutherford, Fla.
Greg Steube, Fla.
Daniel Webster, Fla.
Rick Allen, Ga.
Earl L. "Buddy" Carter, Ga.
Andrew Clyde, Ga.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Ga.
Jody Hice, Ga.
Barry Loudermilk, Ga.
Russ Fulcher, Idaho
Mike Bost, Ill.
Mary Miller, Ill.
Jim Baird, Ind.
Jim Banks, Ind.
Greg Pence, Ind.
Jackie Walorski, Ind.
Ron Estes, Kan.
Jacob LaTurner, Kan.
Tracey Mann, Kan.
Harold Rogers, Ky.
Garret Graves, La.
Clay Higgins, La.
Mike Johnson, La.
Steve Scalise, La.
Andy Harris, Md.
Jack Bergman, Mich.
Lisa McClain, Mich.
Tim Walberg, Mich.
Michelle Fischbach, Minn.
Jim Hagedorn, Minn.
Michael Guest, Miss.
Trent Kelly, Miss.
Steven Palazzo, Miss.
Sam Graves, Mo.
Vicky Hartzler, Mo.
Billy Long, Mo.
Blaine Luetkemeyer, Mo.
Jason Smith, Mo.
Matt Rosendale, Mont.
Dan Bishop, N.C.
Ted Budd, N.C.
Madison Cawthorn, N.C.
Virginia Foxx, N.C.
Richard Hudson, N.C.
Gregory F. Murphy, N.C.
David Rouzer, N.C.
Jeff Van Drew, N.J.
Yvette Herrell, N.M.
Chris Jacobs, N.Y.
Nicole Malliotakis, N.Y.
Elise M. Stefanik, N.Y.
Lee Zeldin, N.Y.
Adrian Smith, Neb.
Steve Chabot, Ohio
Warren Davidson, Ohio
Bob Gibbs, Ohio
Bill Johnson, Ohio
Jim Jordan, Ohio
Stephanie Bice, Okla.
Tom Cole, Okla.
Kevin Hern, Okla.
Frank Lucas, Okla.
Markwayne Mullin, Okla.
Cliff Bentz, Ore.
John Joyce, Pa.
Fred Keller, Pa.
Mike Kelly, Pa.
Daniel Meuser, Pa.
Scott Perry, Pa.
Guy Reschenthaler, Pa.
Lloyd Smucker, Pa.
Glenn Thompson, Pa.
Jeff Duncan, S.C.
Ralph Norman, S.C.
Tom Rice, S.C.
William Timmons, S.C.
Joe Wilson, S.C.
Tim Burchett, Tenn.
Scott DesJarlais, Tenn.
Chuck Fleischmann, Tenn.
Mark E. Green, Tenn.
Diana Harshbarger, Tenn.
David Kustoff, Tenn.
John Rose, Tenn.
Jodey Arrington, Texas
Brian Babin, Texas
Michael C. Burgess, Texas
John R. Carter, Texas
Michael Cloud, Texas
Pat Fallon, Texas
Louie Gohmert, Texas
Lance Gooden, Texas
Ronny Jackson, Texas
Troy Nehls, Texas
August Pfluger, Texas
Pete Sessions, Texas
Beth Van Duyne, Texas
Randy Weber, Texas
Roger Williams, Texas
Ron Wright, Texas
Burgess Owens, Utah
Chris Stewart, Utah
Ben Cline, Va.
Bob Good, Va.
Morgan Griffith, Va.
Robert J. Wittman, Va.
Carol Miller, W.Va.
Alexander X. Mooney, W.Va.
Scott Fitzgerald, Wis.
Tom Tiffany, Wis.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/01/07/us/elections/electoral-college-biden-objectors.html (photo collage courtesy of the NY Times)
5 notes · View notes
fuzzynecromancer · 4 years
Text
Here is a list of every member of the United States of America congress that broke their oath of office to side with an evil clown and overturn legal election results. If one of them is representing your district, and you’re okay making phone calls, you should certainly call them up and let them now how you feel. If they are even closer to you, maybe you could make your feelings known in person, protest outside their house, address them in person when they go out to eat, etc. You could even, theoretically, call the ones who don’t represent your district, just to keep their phone lines heavy with displeasure.
Just a thought. Good luck.
Rep. Robert Aderholt, AL Rep. Rick Allen, GA Rep. Jodey Arrington, TX Rep. Brian Babin, TX Rep. Jim Baird, IN Rep. Jim Banks, IN Rep. Cliff Bentz, OR Rep. Jack Bergman, MI Rep. Stephanie Bice, OK Rep. Andy Biggs, AZ Rep. Dan Bishop, NC Rep. Lauren Boebert, CO Rep. Mike Bost, IL Rep. Mo Brooks, AL Rep. Ted Budd, NC Rep. Tim Burchett, TN Rep. Michael Burgess, TX Rep. Ken Calvert, CA Rep. Kat Cammack, FL Rep. Jerry Carl, AL Rep. Earl Buddy Carter, GA Rep. John Carter, TX Rep. Madison Cawthorn, NC Rep. Steve Chabot, OH Rep. Ben Cline, VA Rep. Michael Cloud, TX Rep. Andrew Clyde, GA Rep. Tom Cole, OK Rep. Rick Crawford, AR Rep. Warren Davidson, OH Rep. Scott DesJarlais, TN Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, FL Rep. Byron Donalds, FL Rep. Jeff Duncan, SC Rep. Neal Dunn, FL Rep. Ron Estes, KS Rep. Pat Fallon, TX Rep. Michelle Fischbach, MN Rep. Scott Fitzgerald, WI Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, TN Rep. Virginia Foxx, NC Rep. Scott Franklin, FL Rep. Russ Fulcher, ID Rep. Matt Gaetz, FL Rep. Mike Garcia, CA Rep. Bob Gibbs, OH Rep. Carlos Gimenez, FL Rep. Louie Gohmert, TX Rep. Bob Good, VA Rep. Lance Gooden, TX Rep. Paul Gosar, AZ Rep. Garret Graves, LA Rep. Sam Graves, MO Rep. Mark Green, TN Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, GA Rep. Morgan Griffith, VA Rep. Michael Guest, MS Rep. Jim Hagedorn, MN Rep. Andy Harris, MD Rep. Diana Harshbarger, TN Rep. Vicky Hartzler, MO Rep. Kevin Hern, OK Rep. Yvette Herrell, NM Rep. Jody Hice, GA Rep. Clay Higgins, LA Rep. Richard Hudson, NC Rep. Darrell Issa, CA Rep. Ronny Jackson, TX Rep. Chris Jacobs, NY Rep. Bill Johnson, OH Rep. Mike Johnson, LA Rep. Jim Jordan, OH Rep. John Joyce, PA Rep. Fred Keller, PA Rep. Mike Kelly, PA Rep. Trent Kelly, MS Rep. David Kustoff, TN Rep. Doug LaMalfa, CA Rep. Doug Lamborn, CO Rep. Jacob LaTurner, KS Rep. Debbie Lesko, AZ Rep. Billy Long, MO Rep. Barry Loudermilk, GA Rep. Frank Lucas, OK Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer, MO Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, NY Rep. Tracey Mann, KS Rep. Brian Mast, FL Rep. Kevin McCarthy, CA Rep. Lisa McClain, MI Rep. Daniel Meuser, PA Rep. Carol Miller, WV Rep. Mary Miller, IL Rep. Alexander Mooney, WV Rep. Barry Moore, AL Rep. Markwayne Mullin, OK Rep. Gregory Murphy, NC Rep. Troy Nehls, TX Rep. Ralph Norman, SC Rep. Devin Nunes, CA Rep. Jay Obernolte, CA Rep. Burgess Owens, UT Rep. Steven Palazzo, MS Rep. Gary Palmer, AL Rep. Greg Pence, IN Rep. Scott Perry, PA Rep. August Pfluger, TX Rep. Bill Posey, FL Rep. Guy Reschenthaler, PA Rep. Tom Rice, SC Rep. Harold Rogers, KY Rep. Mike Rogers, AL Rep. John Rose, TN Rep. Matt Rosendale, MT Rep. David Rouzer, NC Rep. John Rutherford, FL Rep. Steve Scalise, LA Rep. David Schweikert, AZ Rep. Pete Sessions, TX Rep. Adrian Smith, NE Rep. Jason Smith, MO Rep. Lloyd Smucker, PA Rep. Elise Stefanik, NY Rep. Greg Steube, FL Rep. Chris Stewart, UT Rep. Glenn Thompson, PA Rep. Tom Tiffany, WI Rep. William Timmons, SC Rep. Jeff Van Drew, NJ Rep. Beth Van Duyne, TX Rep. Tim Walberg, MI Rep. Jackie Walorski, IN Rep. Randy Weber, TX Rep. Daniel Webster, FL Rep. Roger Williams, TX Rep. Joe Wilson, SC Rep. Robert Wittman, VA Rep. Ron Wright, TX Rep. Lee Zeldin, NY Sen. Ted Cruz, TX Sen. Josh Hawley, MO Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, MS Sen. John Kennedy, LA Sen. Cynthia Lummis, WY Sen. Roger Marshall, KS Sen. Rick Scott, FL Sen. Tommy Tuberville, AL
3 notes · View notes
galwaygremlin · 4 years
Text
Here are the names of the 126 Congressional Representatives who tried to get SCOTUS to overturn the 2020 presidential election:
Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Gary Palmer of Alabama’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Ralph Abraham of Louisiana’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Rick W. Allen of Georgia’s 12th Congressional District
Rep. James R. Baird of Indiana’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Jim Banks of Indiana’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Jack Bergman of Michigan’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Gus Bilirakis of Florida’s 12th Congressional District
Rep. Dan Bishop of North Carolina’s 9th Congressional District
Rep. Mike Bost of Illinois’s 12th Congressional District
Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas’s 8th Congressional District
Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Ken Buck of Colorado’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Ted Budd of North Carolina’s 13th Congressional District
Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Michael C. Burgess of Texas’s 26th Congressional District
Rep. Bradley Byrne of Alabama’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Ken Calvert of California’s 42nd Congressional District
Rep. Earl L. “Buddy” Carter of Georgia��s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Ben Cline of Virginia’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. Michael Cloud of Texas’s 27th Congressional District
Rep. Mike Conaway of Texas’s 11th Congressional District
Rep. Rick Crawford of Arkansas’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida’s 25th Congressional District
Rep. Jeff Duncan of South Carolina’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Neal P. Dunn of Florida’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. Ron Estes of Kansas’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Drew Ferguson of Georgia’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Chuck Fleischmann of Tennessee's 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Bill Flores of Texas’s 17th Congressional District
Rep. Jeff Fortenberry of Nebraska’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Virginia Foxx of North Carolina’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Russ Fulcher of Idaho’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Greg Gianforte of Montana’s at-large congressional district
Rep. Bob Gibbs of Ohio’s 7th Congressional District
Rep. Louie Gohmert of Texas’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Lance Gooden of Texas’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Sam Graves of Missouri’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. Mark Green of Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District
Rep. Michael Guest of Mississippi’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Andy Harris of Maryland’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Vicky Hartzler of Missouri’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Kevin Hern of Oklahoma’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Clay Higgins of Louisiana’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Trey Hollingsworth of Indiana’s 9th Congressional District
Rep. Richard Hudson of North Carolina’s 8th Congressional District
Rep. Bill Huizenga of Michigan’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Bill Johnson of Ohio’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. John Joyce of Pennsylvania’s 13th Congressional District
Rep. Fred Keller of Pennsylvania’s 12th Congressional District
Rep. Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania’s 16th Congressional District
Rep. Trent Kelly of Mississippi’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Steve King of Iowa’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. David Kustoff of Tennessee’s 8th Congressional District
Rep. Darin LaHood of Illinois’s 18th Congressional District
Rep. Doug LaMalfa of California’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Doug Lamborn of Colorado’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Robert E. Latta of Ohio’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Debbie Lesko of Arizona’s 8th Congressional District
Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer of Missouri’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Kenny Marchant of Texas’s 24th Congressional District
Rep. Roger Marshall of Kansas’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Tom McClintock of California’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Dan Meuser of Pennsylvania’s 9th Congressional District
Rep. Carol D. Miller of West Virginia’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. John Moolenaar of Michigan’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Alex X. Mooney of West Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Gregory Murphy of North Carolina’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Dan Newhouse of Washington’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina’s 5th Congressional District
Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania’s 10th Congressional District
Rep. Guy Reschenthaler of Pennsylvania’s 14th Congressional District
Rep. Tom Rice of South Carolina’s 7th Congressional District
Rep. John Rose of Tennessee’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. David Rouzer of North Carolina’s 7th Congressional District
Rep. John Rutherford of Florida’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Austin Scott of Georgia’s 8th Congressional District
Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Adrian Smith of Nebraska’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Jason Smith of Missouri’s 8th Congressional District
Rep. Ross Spano of Florida’s 15th Congressional District
Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York’s 21st Congressional District
Rep. Glenn Thompson of Pennsylvania’s 15th Congressional District
Rep. Tom Tiffany of Wisconsin’s 7th Congressional District
Rep. William Timmons of South Carolina’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Ann Wagner of Missouri’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Tim Walberg of Michigan’s 7th Congressional District
Rep. Michael Waltz of Florida’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. Randy Weber of Texas’s 14th Congressional District
Rep. Daniel Webster of Florida’s 11th Congressional District
Rep. Brad Wenstrup of Ohio’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Bruce Westerman of Arkansas’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Roger Williams of Texas’s 25th Congressional District
Rep. Joe Wilson of South Carolina’s 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Rob Wittman of Virginia’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Ron Wright of Texas’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. Ted S. Yoho of Florida’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Lee Zeldin of New York’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California’s 23rd Congressional District
Rep. Robert Aderholt of Alabama’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Jodey Arrington of Texas’s 19th Congressional District
Rep. Brian Babin of Texas’s 36th Congressional District
Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia’s 9th Congressional District
Rep. Scott DesJarlais of Tennessee’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Morgan Griffith of Virginia’s 9th Congressional District
Rep. Jim Hagedorn of Minnesota’s 1st Congressional District
Rep. Jody Hice of Georgia’s 10th Congressional District
Rep. Billy Long of Missouri’s 7th Congressional District
Rep. Barry Loudermilk of Georgia’s 11th Congressional District
Rep. Steven Palazzo of Mississippi’s 4th Congressional District
Rep. Greg Pence of Indiana’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. Bill Posey of Florida’s 8th Congressional District
Rep. Mike Rogers of Alabama’s 3rd Congressional District
Rep. Pete Stauber of Minnesota’s 8th Congressional District
Rep. W. Gregory Steube of Florida’s 17th Congressional District
Rep. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey's 2nd Congressional District
Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina’s 6th Congressional District
Rep. Jackie Walorski of Indiana’s 2nd Congressional District
source: https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/skbaer/list-republican-house-members-overturn-election?utm_source=dynamic&utm_campaign=bffbbuzzfeed&ref=bffbbuzzfeed&&fbclid=IwAR0bx8z16YLQHDxbWzycz8jT2yfNi5MJDntLhqgJbPQbp4wfWY0HSXZCwAE
2 notes · View notes
ourquietman · 4 years
Text
Here’s a list of Republicans who voted to strip Greene of committee assignments:
Adam Kinzinger (IL)
Brian Fitzpatrick (PA)
Nicole Malliotakis (NY)
John Katko (NY)
Fred Upton (MI)
Carlos Gimenez (FL)
Chris Jacobs (NY)
Young Kim (CA)
Maria Salazar (FL)
Chris Smith (NJ)
Mario Diaz Balart (FL)
The group includes three representatives of Florida, who may not have appreciated the extremist congresswoman’s lies about the Parkland, Florida school shooting.
In all, 199 Republicans voted to keep the congresswoman who has espoused racist, anti-Muslim, and antisemitic views and threatened her co-workers on committees that make key policy on budgets and education.
From THE GUARDIAN.
1 note · View note
theliberaltony · 5 years
Link
via Politics – FiveThirtyEight
Last Wednesday, two U.S. representatives — Republican Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida and Democratic Rep. Ben McAdams of Utah — tested positive for the new coronavirus. And over the weekend, GOP Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky said he had tested positive. In total, nearly 30 House members are at some stage of self-quarantine and five senators are self-quarantining.
The outbreak of the coronavirus on Capitol Hill has underscored just how ill-equipped Congress is to govern when its members cannot be physically present. Already five Senate Republicans had to miss Sunday’s vote to pass an emergency economic stimulus package because they were quarantined. And if more members become unable to appear in the Senate or House chambers, we could eventually see a struggle to achieve an in-person quorum.
Technically, the Constitution only requires the Senate and House to have a majority of members present to establish a quorum to pass legislation, but both chambers have rules that require senators and representatives to be physically present to cast votes. Leadership in both chambers also largely oppose allowing members to vote without being physically present, but this hasn’t stopped some legislators from renewing calls for remote voting.
In the Senate, Democratic Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin and Republican Sen. Rob Portman introduced a resolution to allow for remote voting for up to 30 days under extraordinary circumstances. After that, the measure could be extended if three-fifths of the Senate votes in favor.
But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell expressed opposition, telling reporters last week, “We will deal with the social distancing issue without fundamentally changing Senate rules.” The Senate has tweaked its procedures to increase the amount of time allotted for each vote so that fewer senators have to be on the floor at the same time, but at this point, it hasn’t made moves toward any larger overhauls.
In the House, Democratic Reps. Katie Porter and Eric Swalwell of California and Republican Rep. Van Taylor of Texas have asked House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy to adopt rules for remote voting, and more than 50 members have signed onto the request. There isn’t a specific piece of legislation attached to the letter, but Pelosi did ask House Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern to examine the issue, and on Monday the committee released a memo reviewing possible adjustments to voting procedures. It sounded a dubious note on the use of remote voting, but was more supportive of proxy voting — whereby an absent member has another member vote on her behalf — which has precedent in the House and Senate (the Senate allows proxy voting in committee).
The memo’s opposition to remote voting lines up with the views of the House leadership. Pelosi has said privately that she opposes remote voting, though the House is planning to alter its voting procedure in some way. McCarthy is also skeptical, particularly about how remote voting would work with parliamentary motions, which may require members to interject quickly to be heard.
To better understand the stakes of Congress voting remotely, I spoke with two legal experts — one in favor of such a step and the other opposed. Daniel Hemel, a professor at the University of Chicago School of Law and proponent of remote voting, stressed to me that there is nothing in the Constitution stopping Congress from allowing members to cast votes from afar.
Yes, the Constitution requires a quorum for the Senate and House to conduct business, but it doesn’t say anything about lawmakers having to be physically present. That requirement comes from chamber rules, which Hemel argues could be rewritten to allow for remote voting in crisis situations. While there might be security concerns, Hemel pointed out that corporate boards permit videoconferencing to count toward a quorum, so it’s unclear why Congress would be incapable of using a similar system to conduct its business.
If remote voting isn’t adopted, Hemel suggested COVID-19 could cause other problems too. “You can imagine a circumstance where one party actually gets a majority because the other party is more affected,” said Hemel, which could create concerns about the long-term legitimacy of votes taken in such circumstances.
Case in point: All five senators currently quarantined are Republican, which has reduced the GOP’s edge in the Senate from 53-47 to 48-47. This has already affected the party’s ability to advance an economic stimulus bill on Sunday, although even without the quarantine, Republicans would have needed some Democratic votes to move forward because of cloture rules, and both sides voted the party line. Still, we can see how abstentions due to health concerns could make it difficult for lawmakers to weigh in on vital issues down the line.
But Joshua Huder, a senior fellow at Georgetown University’s Government Affairs Institute, worries that remote voting could make it easier for leadership to ride roughshod over their party’s legislators. “We’re already at a place where party leaders have outsized control over the policymaking process,” said Huder. “When the rank-and-file aren’t around for the backroom deals and negotiations, you create a legislature that’s a rubber stamp for what the leaders want to pass.”
Huder didn’t rule out using alternate voting systems in a crisis, suggesting that members could remain in Washington and call in from their offices. But he did worry that remote voting would reduce face-to-face interactions, inevitably cutting down on members’ chances to make personal connections, which could exacerbate the divides that already exist in Washington. He also said it’s possible this could establish a precedent where remote voting was used in non-crisis situations because it becomes “a long-term or permanent solution through which Congress is going to pass legislation.”
Still, if the coronavirus crisis keeps getting worse in the U.S., there will be a lot of pressure on Congress — including from its own members — to make changes. “At a time when we’re asking Americans to make huge sacrifices to stop the spread of COVID-19, it is bad leadership for our politicians to then make none of those adjustments themselves,” said Hemel.
3 notes · View notes
nicepicsworld · 4 years
Text
Governors, White House Race to Reopen America
Tumblr media
An arms race of sorts has emerged between red states and blue states to reopen America, with Democrat and Republican governors developing rivaling plans to lead their states out of the darkness of the coronavirus crisis while the White House’s Coronavirus Task Force and President Donald Trump’s ultimate decision looms large over the country. Hundreds of millions of Americans are under some variation of stay-at-home orders in every state in the union, with all 50 states also having active disaster declarations—the first time such a crisis has ever swept the nation in her nearly 250-year history. The president has called the decision to reopen America for business the biggest he will ever make in his presidency, and his life, and is expected to roll out a new task force from the White House on Tuesday to detail his plans and lead the effort from Washington. The president has also said it is his decision—and his alone—to make, arguing Monday that he has the authority as the nation’s commander-in-chief to override any governors or local officials nationwide who may get in his way. That being said, while some Democrat governors have expressed unease with moving too quickly—in other words, they want to go on their own timetable, not Trump’s—there is an emerging competition between various governors nationwide to see who can get there first safely for the people of their state. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, is eyeing a plan rollout as early as this week to begin opening parts of his state back up for commerce. During an interview on Sean Hannity’s program on Fox News on Monday evening, Abbott reiterated the need to get Texas back to work as early as this week—and definitely ahead of the previous schedule of May 1. “We want to open. Texans love to work. Texans are dying to get back to work,” Abbott said during the Hannity interview. “We want them to get back to work, but we have to do so in a very safe way so that we don’t regenerate the spread of the coronavirus in the state of Texas. But we’re working on strategis as we speak with medical experts and business leaders to find the right strategy so we can unleash our economy.” He added that he believes Texas—and many other states—can reopen well before May 1. “I think most states can reopen even sooner than later. We don’t have to wait until May 1,” Abbott said. The White House, sources familiar with the matter told Breitbart News, has a list of approximately 20 states they intend to begin the reopening process in as soon as potentially later this week but definitely before the end of April. The virus, public health and federal officials admit, has not lived up to the dire predictions that doomsday models had originally forecast. The vaunted Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) model from the University of Washington has been notoriously wrong, predicting first anywhere from 100,000 to 240,000 dead Americans, then dropping that several times in subsequent weeks down to 93,000, then 81,000, then down to 61,000. The IHME model, which is what the White House used to extend the original “15 days to slow the spread” out from ending at the end of March all the way until now April 30, has also been even more incorrect when it comes to hospitalization numbers. In fact, a little-noticed revision to the model—one of many that the organization has made in the past several weeks—announced that the United States has already passed the proverbial “peak” of the curve of the virus days ago when it comes to hospitalizations and now the modelers admit the virus is in retreat. 1/ Yes, the geniuses at @IHME_UW have updated their model again. According to them, we are now PAST the peak of hospitalizations – which were cut yet again, to 57,000 beds from 94,000 in the previous forecast (and 262,000 in the April 1 forecast – April Fool’s!)… pic.twitter.com/sCioDU9gtG — Alex Berenson (@AlexBerenson) April 13, 2020 Part of the reason why U.S. officials at the federal, state, and local level relied on these now demonstrably flawed models to make their public policy decisions is because they had no real-world data on the threat of the quickly-spreading disease. Chinese Communist officials in Beijing lied to the world—including the World Health Organization (WHO), which dutifully reprinted the inaccurate information the communists provided about the disease’s spread—and then Europe was rocked quickly by it as the virus took a major toll on Italy then Spain then France and the United Kingdom. Meanwhile, the coronavirus scared the public as celebrities like Tom Hanks and several NBA stars were infected early, and lawmakers like Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) as well as Reps. Ben McAdams (D-UT) and Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL) were all infected. Each of those U.S. lawmakers has since recovered, but their infections combined with the infection of U.K. prime minister Boris Johnson—who was admitted to the ICU in a British hospital for treatment as his condition worsened, something he has since bounced back from as he continues his recovery outside the hospital—gripped American leaders with fear that even they were not invincible to the threat of the coronavirus. Despite all the high-profile cases, and what appeared to be a nasty perfect storm heading into April where U.S. hospitals would have been overrun and not enough ventilators would be available to treat the public as the virus spread, the models and projections have not come to pass. The models have been so badly inaccurate, in fact, that even Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams said during an appearance on Breitbart News Daily on SiriusXM 125 the Patriot Channel on Monday morning that the White House team is no longer using them—but instead making decisions on real world data. “It’s important to know that models are projections when you don’t have data,” Adams said. “Our original models were people’s best guesses, and/or they were informed by experiences in very different cultures and very different places. What the American people need to know now is we actually have data and we’re tracking that data and we’re not as reliant on these models as we are as say ‘this is what’s happening in California, this is what’s happening in New York, this is what’s happening in New Orleans.’ We’re following that data every single day and we’re giving that data to the community so they can make intelligent and informed decisions about when and where to reopen. It’s not going to be light-switch—just like it wasn’t a light-switch going off, it’s not going to be a light-switch going back on. Different communities will reopen sooner than other communities and they’ll have to do so based on their testing data—not a model, but actual data—and their capacity to be able to follow up on cases and isolate them. I feel confident that some places will start to reopen in May, June—other places won’t—it will be piece by piece, bit by bit, but it will be data-driven.” On that note, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo—a Democrat—said on Monday that his state has contained the virus, a huge win for the country as New York has represented the American epicenter of the disease. “We can control the spread. Feel good about that,” Cuomo said early on Monday, also adding, “because, by the way, we could have got to a point when we said we can’t control this damn thing.” “The worst is over,” Cuomo also said. After announcing those breakthroughs against the virus in New York, Cuomo then led a conference call with several Democrat governors from neighboring and nearby states like New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and others to discuss reopening the country. That effort came as the governors of Washington state, Oregon, and California each announced a pact between those western states to discuss reopening the country. This very interesting analysis came in just as the three Democratic governors of CA, OR, and WA announced a pact to reopen WITHOUT an explicit goal of no infections or deaths. (A long way from no @nfl season, as @CAgovernor said just days ago.) https://t.co/IBcM25I946 pic.twitter.com/5Nqw5yy29D — Alex Berenson (@AlexBerenson) April 13, 2020 Several other GOP governors in a number of states in addition to Texas are looking at reopening before May 1, too, Breitbart News has learned, though much remains in flux and depends on data that keeps rolling in this week. What these efforts by the White House and by these various governors—Republican and Democrat from all different parts of the country—could end up forcing, however, is essentially an arms race to reopen America. “Whoever figures it out first, good on them,” a former Trump White House official told Breitbart News. “They should be competing over who can safely open back up for business first and then instill confidence in their neighbors around the country, all while President Trump keeps edging the country back from the brink. if Texas leads the way or California does, it really doesn’t matter. We need to get the country back in business.” Read the full article
1 note · View note
minnesotafollower · 7 years
Text
Congressional Proposal for Extradition of U.S. Fugitives in Cuba 
On December 13 U.S. Representative Peter King (Rep., NY) and eight cosponsors filed a proposed House resolution calling for the extradition of U.S. citizens in Cuba who are fugitives from the U.S. That proposal will be summarized and analyzed below.
Contents of the Proposed Resolution[1]
The preamble of the proposed resolution, which was referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, recited…
View On WordPress
0 notes
loosekraken · 2 years
Text
Wyoming U.S. Senator > Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) .....says ‘there are not enough Democrats’ to help Liz Cheney win primary , Hummmm John.......I'm not real sure about that one....in light of what will go down right before mid-terms I find it hard to believe that there will be enough Republicans left in Congress in the numbers permitting them to do a darn thing , literally ..with the numbers left why would the Repubs even show up for work ?.......As Close to Mid-Terms as possible , allowing time for a response but no time for an repub party electoral rescue mission , Plaintiffs will file a Federal Complaint which shall remove B4 the Mid-Term Elctions a TOTAL of One Hundred & Fifty-Three Congresspersons from Congress Fourteen (14) Current Congressional SENATORS ........................... **** Ted Cruz (TX) **** **** Josh Hawley (MO) **** Cindy Hyde-Smith (MS) Cynthia Lummis (WY) **** John Kennedy (LA) **** ( "must really suck to be that dumb ! " ) Roger Marshall (KS) **** Rick Scott (FL) **** **** Tommy Tuberville (AL) **** Bill Hagerty (TN) **** Kelly Loeffler (GA) **** James Lankford (OK) Steve Daines (MT) Mike Braun (IND) **** Marsha Blackburn (TN) ****
And One Hundred & Thirty-Nine (139) Current Congressional Representatives from Office on a permanent basis with referrals to the DOJ for Criminal Prosecutions , Violation of Oath of Office at a min (federal felony 1 yr prison & removal from office & bar/ban from any & all federal employment , ever ............
Robert Aderholt (AL) Rick Allen (GA) Jodey Arrington (TX) Brian Babin (TX) Jim Baird (IN) Jim Banks (IN) Cliff Bentz (OR) Jack Bergman (MI) Stephanie Bice (OK) **** Andy Biggs (AZ) **** Dan Bishop (NC) **** Lauren Boebert (CO) **** Mike Bost (IL) **** Mo Brooks (AL) **** Ted Budd (NC) Tim Burchett (TN) Michael Burgess (TX) Ken Calvert (CA) Kat Cammack (FL) Jerry Carl (AL) Buddy Carter (GA) John Carter (TX) **** Madison Cawthorn (NC) **** Steve Chabot (OH) Ben Cline (VA) Michael Cloud (TX) Andrew Clyde (GA) Tom Cole (OK) Rick Crawford (AR) Warren Davidson (OH) Scott DesJarlais (TN) Mario Diaz-Balart (FL) Byron Donalds (FL) Jeff Duncan (SC) Neal Dunn (FL) Ron Estes (KS) Pat Fallon (TX) Michelle Fischbach (MN) Scott Fitzgerald (WI) Chuck Fleischmann (TN) Virginia Foxx (NC) Scott Franklin (FL) Russ Fulcher (ID) **** Matt Gaetz (FL) **** Mike Garcia (CA) Bob Gibbs (OH) Carlos Gimenez (FL) **** Louie Gohmert (TX) **** Bob Good (VA) Lance Gooden (TX) **** Paul Gosar (AZ) **** Garret Graves (LA) Sam Graves (MO) Mark Green (TN) **** Marjorie Greene (GA) **** Morgan Griffith (VA) Michael Guest (MS) Jim Hagedorn (MN) Andy Harris (MD) Diana Harshbarger (TN) Vicky Hartzler (MO) Kevin Hern (OK) Yvette Herrell (NM) Jody Hice (GA) **** Clay Higgins (LA) **** Richard Hudson (NC) Darrell Issa (CA) **** Ronny Jackson (TX) **** Chris Jacobs (NY) Mike Johnson (LA) Bill Johnson (OH) **** Jim Jordan (OH) **** John Joyce (PA) Fred Keller (PA) Trent Kelly (MS) Mike Kelly (PA) David Kustoff (TN) Doug LaMalfa (CA) Doug Lamborn (CO) Jacob LaTurner (KS) Debbie Lesko (AZ) Billy Long (MO) Barry Loudermilk (GA) Frank Lucas (OK) Blaine Luetkemeyer (MO) Nicole Malliotakis (NY) Tracey Mann (KS) Brian Mast (FL) **** Kevin McCarthy (CA) **** Lisa McClain (MI) Daniel Meuser (PA) Mary Miller (IL) Carol Miller (WV) Alex Mooney (WV) Barry Moore (AL) Markwayne Mullin (OK) Gregory Murphy (NC) Troy Nehls (TX) Ralph Norman (SC) **** Devin Nunes (CA) **** Jay Obernolte (CA) Burgess Owens (UT) Steven Palazzo (MS) Gary Palmer (AL) Greg Pence (IN) **** Scott Perry (PA) **** August Pfluger (TX) Bill Posey (FL) Guy Reschenthaler (PA) Tom Rice (SC) Mike Rogers (AL) Hal Rogers (KY) John Rose (TN) Matt Rosendale (MT) David Rouzer (NC) John Rutherford (FL) **** Steve Scalise (LA) **** David Schweikert (AZ) **** Pete Sessions (TX) **** Jason Smith (MO) Adrian Smith (NE) Lloyd Smucker (PA) Elise Stefanik (NY) Greg Steube (FL) Chris Stewart (UT) Glenn Thompson (PA) Tom Tiffany (WI) William Timmons (SC) Jefferson Van Drew (NJ) Beth Van Duyne (TX) Tim Walberg (MI) Jackie Walorski (IN) Randy Weber (TX) Daniel Webster (FL) Roger Williams (TX) Joe Wilson (SC) Rob Wittman (VA) Ron Wright (TX) Lee Zeldin (NY)
0 notes