Connect with us

Politics

‘The worst start of any president in US history’: Trump blasts Biden over border, economic, and gas crises

Published

on

donald trump

After speculations of similarities between the Biden and Carter administration made the rounds, former President Trump is sharing his thoughts on what he says is an “unfair” comparison.

“It would seem to me that is very unfair to Jimmy Carter,” Trump wrote in a statement published to his site. “Jimmy mishandled crisis after crisis, but Biden CREATED crisis after crisis.”

RELATED: Almost 500 incidents of violent crimes at the border since Biden took office: report

“First there was the Biden Border Crisis (that he refuses to call a Crisis), then the Biden Economic Crisis, and now the Biden Gas Crisis. Joe Biden has had the worst start of any president in United States history, and someday, they will compare future disasters to the Biden Administration,” Trump wrote.

“But no, Jimmy was better!” the former president said.

You can follow Jenny Goldsberry on Twitter @jennyjournalism

Continue Reading

Immigration

BREAKING: Senate votes down both articles of impeachment against Mayorkas in party-line vote

Published

on

Mayorkas

The Senate voted down two articles of impeachment Wednesday which alleged Department of Homeland Security Secretary  Alejandro Mayorkas engaged in the “willful and systemic refusal to comply with the law” regarding the southern border in his capacity as DHS secretary. The second claimed Mayorkas had breached public trust.

What resulted in a party-line vote, began with Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., proposing a point of order declaring the first article unconstitutional, to which the majority of senators agreed following several failed motions by Republicans. The article was deemed unconstitutional by a vote of 51-48, with Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, voting present.

Fox News reports:

Schumer’s point of order was proposed after his request for unanimous consent, which would have provided a set amount of time for debate among the senators, as well as votes on two GOP resolutions and a set amount of agreed upon points of order, was objected to by Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo.

Schmitt stated in his objection that the Senate should conduct a full trial into the impeachment articles against Mayorkas, rather than the debate and points of order suggested by Schumer’s unanimous consent request, which would be followed by a likely successful motion to dismiss the articles. 

Republican senators took issue with Schumer’s point of order, as agreeing to it would effectively kill the first of the two articles. Several GOP lawmakers proposed motions, which took precedence over the point of order, to adjourn or table the point, among other things. But all GOP motions failed. 

After another batch of motions to avoid voting on Schumer’s second point of order, which would deem the second article unconstitutional, the Senate agreed to it. The vote was along party lines 51-49, with Murkowski rejoining the Republicans. 

Continue Reading

Trending