QuickQuotes
“I used to think when I was a senator, there was always congestion on the highways. There’s no congestion anymore. None. We got on the highway; there’s no congestion. And so — the way they get me to stop talking, they’ll say: ‘We just shut down all the roads. Mr. President, you’re gonna lose all the votes if you don’t get in.’ But anyway…”
Even major media are criticizing President Joe Biden’s confusing references made while speaking to American military families at the White House on July 4. During further rambling, he referred to former president and campaign rival Donald Trump as “one of our colleagues.”
“The whole Chevron deference doctrine … not only allows Congress to punt to agencies to decide questions of law, stripping them away from the courts … it even allows those delegations to happen when Congress says nothing — when it’s silent. They wanted to create this fourth branch of government with a group of experts who would … rule over the American people on the theory that they have expertise that ordinary people didn’t have. And the Supreme Court wiped that away today, 6-3.”
Jeff Clark, director of litigation for the Center for Renewing America, appeared on Real America’s Voice discussing the June 28 SCOTUS ruling in Loper Bright Enterprises et al. v. Raimondo, Secretary of Commerce, et al., which drastically curtailed federal agencies’ power.
“President Trump looked at the Taliban leader and said this: ‘I want to leave Afghanistan, but it’s going to be a conditions-based withdrawal.... If you harm a hair on a single American, I’m going to kill you.’ [Trump] reached in his pocket, pulled out a satellite photo of the leader of the Taliban’s home, and handed it to him, got up, and walked out the room.”
Appearing on the Sage Steele podcast in July, Representative Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) recounted his “favorite” story of former President Donald Trump’s negotiations with the Taliban on his Afghanistan withdrawal plans.
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