Alina Habba to Newsmax: Trump Has ‘Nothing to Hide’ Pertaining to Jan. 6

Alina Habba to Newsmax: Trump Has 'Nothing to Hide' Pertaining to Jan. 6 (Newsmax/"Eric Bolling The Balance")

By Jay Clemons | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 09:27 PM EDT

Alina Habba, the current senior adviser and previous attorney to former President Donald Trump, says Trump would have no problems complying with a subpoena from the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 unrest at the Capitol.

"I would recommend that [Trump] cooperate because he has nothing to hide. That's what I always say," Habba told Newsmax on Tuesday evening, while appearing on "Eric Bolling The Balance."

Habba continued: Trump "has no issue with being deposed, even though the left-leaning media seems to think he does. He has no issue being subpoenaed and answering questions about what happened that day" in January 2021.

"And he shouldn't," says Habba. "What [Trump] did [on Jan. 6] was very public," while noting then how the president encouraged the public in Washington, D.C., to "peacefully" and patriotically protest outside the Capitol.

At this point of Tuesday's interview, Habba turned the discussion momentum over to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., for reportedly denying multiple requests to have the National Guard present at the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Habba was similarly baffled by the recent revelation of Speaker Pelosi hiring a film crew — reportedly led by her daughter — to follow her around that day.

"What I really want to know is, 'Why didn't Nancy Pelosi do anything?'" Habba rhetorically posed. "The safety of the Capitol [building] is her responsibility" — not President Trump's.

"Why are we always having to play defense?" asked Habba, regarding the Trump team. "I want to know what [Democrats] did that day, and why they didn't do anything that was in their [legal] purview."

Regarding the documentary, Habba got a derisive kick out of Speaker Pelosi pretending to be tough for the cameras, admitting she wanted to punch then-President Trump in the face.

"OK, Nancy," Habba shot back in the present, with a tinge of sarcasm. The Trump adviser then mimicked Pelosi's bizarre hand rub/half-dance while presiding over President Joe Biden's State of the Union speech last February.

"I would love to question [Pelosi on the witness stand]. Can you imagine that fight?" asked Habba rhetorically.

Habba then rattled off some hypothetical questions, regarding why Speaker Pelosi didn't accommodate the National Guard request or why her daughter just happened to be recording Pelosi's thoughts on that day. Also, were the Democrats anticipating drama inside the Capitol?

"The whole thing was orchestrated," says Habba. "No, Nancy, it was not your 'moment.' You and the 'unselect' [Jan. 6] committee have been trying, and trying, and trying" to nail Trump for the better part of 21 months.

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Fetterman, in Debate With Oz, Tries to Play Down Health Challenge

Fetterman, in Debate With Oz, Tries to Play Down Health Challenge Fetterman, in Debate With Oz, Tries to Play Down Health Challenge (AP)

MARC LEVY and STEVE PEOPLES Tuesday, 25 October 2022 08:40 PM EDT

Pennsylvania Democrat John Fetterman acknowledged health challenges knocked him down but vowed to “keep coming back up” in the opening moments of his debate against Republican Mehmet Oz on Tuesday. The highly anticipated clash could prove pivotal in the state's high-stakes U.S. Senate contest.

Fetterman, 53-year-old lieutenant governor, has acknowledged that he “almost died" after suffering a stroke in May. On Tuesday night, he addressed what he called the “elephant in the room.”

“I had a stroke. He’s never let me forget that,” Fetterman said, speaking haltingly at times of his Republican opponent. “I might miss some words during this debate, mush two words together. … It knocked me down and then I'm going to keep coming back up.”

Fetterman insists he is prepared for the demands of the Senate as he continues to recover from the stroke. Independent experts consulted by The Associated Press before the debate said he appears to be recovering well. He used closed-captioning during the debate to help him process the words he hears.

Oz, a celebrity heart surgeon, ignored his opponent's health early in the debate, though he has hammered Fetterman on the issue repeatedly during the campaign. On Tuesday night, Oz attacked Fetterman's policies on crime, saying he is “trying to get as many murders out of jail as possible.”

"These radical positions extend beyond crime," Oz charged.

While debates have rarely swayed elections in the modern era, the intense national interest in the primetime affair — particularly in Fetterman’s performance — suggested this debate could prove decisive in an election central to the Democrats’ urgent fight to retain their Senate majority.

For Democrats, there is no better pickup opportunity in the U.S. than the race to replace retiring Republican Sen. Pat Toomey in a state Biden narrowly carried in 2020.

For much of the year, it looked as if Fetterman was the clear favorite, especially as Republicans waged a nasty nomination battle that left the GOP divided and bitter. But as Election Day nears, the race has tightened. And now, just two weeks before the final votes are cast, even the White House is privately concerned that Fetterman’s candidacy is at risk.

Voting is already well underway across the state. As of Tuesday, 639,000 votes had already been cast.

“The debate looms very large, bigger than usual for a Senate debate,” said Republican activist Charles Gerow, a veteran of two decades of Sunday TV political talk shows.

The Pennsylvania Senate hopefuls faced each other inside a Harrisburg television studio. No audience was allowed, and the the debate host, Nexstar Media, declined to allow an AP photographer access to the event.

The meeting was the first and only major statewide debate this year in Pennsylvania, since Democrat Josh Shapiro and Republican Doug Mastriano couldn’t reach an agreement on terms for a gubernatorial debate.

Fetterman is a star in progressive politics nationwide, having developed a loyal following thanks in part to his blunt working-class appeal, extraordinary height, tattoos and unapologetic progressive policies. On Tuesday, the 6-foot-9-inch Democrat swapped his trademark hoodie and shorts for a dark suit and tie.

But Fetterman's health has emerged as a central issue over the election's final weeks, even as candidates elsewhere clash over issues like abortion, crime and inflation.

Oz had pushed for more than a half-dozen debates, suggesting that Fetterman's unwillingness to agree to more than one is because the stroke had debilitated him. Fetterman insisted that one debate is typical — although two is more customary — and that Oz's focus on debates was a cynical ploy to lie about his health.

Democrats noted that the televised debate setting likely would have favored Oz even without questions about the stroke.

Oz is a longtime television personality who hosted “The Dr. Oz Show” weekdays for 13 seasons after getting his start as a regular guest on Oprah Winfrey’s show in 2004. Fetterman, by contrast, is a less practiced public speaker who is introverted by nature.

“This was always going to be an away game for John Fetterman,” said Mustafa Rashed, a Democratic political consultant based in Philadelphia.

Fetterman asked for, and was granted, a closed-captioning system for the debate that displayed in writing everything said on a large screen behind the moderators.

The Fetterman campaign said in a memo ahead of the debate that the closed captioning would be “typed out by human beings in real time, on live TV,” warning that it could lead to time delays, transcription errors and miscommunication. “It is impossible to control and unavoidable,” the memo said.

Donald Trump endorsed Oz earlier in the year and campaigned alongside the Pennsylvania Republican in September.

Fetterman, meanwhile, has embraced Biden — even if he was reluctant to do so earlier in the year.

The Democratic president campaigned with Fetterman in Pittsburgh during the Labor Day parade and just last week headlined a fundraiser for Fetterman in Philadelphia. There, Biden said the “rest of the world is looking” and suggested a Fetterman loss would imperil his agenda.

Biden is also scheduled to headline the state Democratic Party’s annual pre-election dinner in Philadelphia on Friday.

Oz has faced pointed questions about his residency throughout the campaign.

For much of the year, Fetterman has seized on Oz’s tenuous connections to the state in witty social media posts and media campaigns.

Oz was born in Ohio, was raised in Delaware and has lived in New Jersey for decades. In 2020, People magazine ran a feature on the New Jersey mansion that Oz and his wife, Lisa, “built from scratch 20 years ago.”

Later that year, Oz formally adopted a Pennsylvania address. And the next year, 2021, he launched his Senate campaign.

Meanwhile, questions about Fetterman's physical and mental strength have persisted.

Fetterman has rebuffed calls to release medical records or let reporters question his doctors. Last week he released a note from his primary care physician, who wrote that Fetterman is recovering well, shows no cognitive effects and “can work full duty in public office.”

Fetterman’s campaign insists he is healthier than ever now that he is paying closer attention to his diet and daily exercise regimen of walking several miles a day. He is participating in regular sessions with a speech therapist and taking medication.

Original Article

Fetterman, in Debate With Oz, Tries to Play Down Health Challenge

Fetterman, in Debate With Oz, Tries to Play Down Health Challenge John Fetterman and Mehmet Oz look on (AP)

MARC LEVY and STEVE PEOPLES Tuesday, 25 October 2022 08:40 PM EDT

Pennsylvania Democrat John Fetterman acknowledged health challenges knocked him down, but tried to make the case that he'd "keep coming back up" in the opening moments of his debate against Republican Mehmet Oz on Tuesday. The highly anticipated clash could prove pivotal in the state's high-stakes U.S. Senate contest.

Fetterman, 53-year-old lieutenant governor, has said he "almost died" after suffering a stroke in May. On Tuesday night, he addressed what he called the "elephant in the room."

"I had a stroke. He's never let me forget that," Fetterman said, speaking haltingly at times of his Republican opponent. "I might miss some words during this debate, mush two words together. … It knocked me down and then I'm going to keep coming back up."

Fetterman insists he is prepared for the demands of the Senate as he continues to recover from the stroke. Independent experts consulted by The Associated Press before the debate said he appears to be recovering well.

He did use closed-captioning during the debate to help him process the words he hears.

Oz, a celebrity heart surgeon, has hammered Fetterman on the issue repeatedly during the campaign. On Tuesday night, though, he attacked Fetterman's policies on crime, saying he is "trying to get as many murders out of jail as possible."

"These radical positions extend beyond crime," Oz charged.

While debates have rarely swayed elections in the modern era, the intense national interest in the prime-time affair – particularly in Fetterman's performance, given critics' talk of his poor health – suggested this debate could prove decisive in an election central to the Democrats'uphill battle to retain their congressional majority.

For much of the year, it looked as if Fetterman was the favorite. But as Election Day nears, the race has tightened. And now, just two weeks before the final votes are cast, even the White House is privately concerned that Fetterman's candidacy is at risk.

Voting is already well underway across the state. As of Tuesday, 639,000 votes had already been cast.

"The debate looms very large, bigger than usual for a Senate debate," said Republican activist Charles Gerow, a veteran of two decades of Sunday TV political talk shows.

The Pennsylvania Senate hopefuls faced each other inside a Harrisburg television studio. No audience was allowed, and the debate host, Nexstar Media, declined to allow an AP photographer access to the event.

The meeting was the first and only major statewide debate this year in Pennsylvania, since Democrat Josh Shapiro and Republican Doug Mastriano couldn't reach an agreement on terms for a gubernatorial debate.

Fetterman is a star in progressive politics nationwide. But his health has emerged as a central issue over the election's final weeks, even as candidates elsewhere clash over issues like abortion, crime, and inflation.

Oz had pushed for more than a half-dozen debates, suggesting that Fetterman's unwillingness to agree to more than one is because the stroke had debilitated him. Fetterman insisted that one debate is typical — although two is more customary — and that Oz's focus on debates was a cynical ploy to lie about his health.

Democrats also contended that the televised debate setting likely would have favored Oz even without questions about the stroke.

Oz is a longtime television personality who hosted "The Dr. Oz Show" weekdays for 13 seasons after getting his start as a regular guest on Oprah Winfrey's show in 2004. Fetterman, by contrast, is a less practiced public speaker who is introverted by nature.

"This was always going to be an away game for John Fetterman," said Mustafa Rashed, a Democrat political consultant based in Philadelphia.

Fetterman asked for, and was granted, a closed-captioning system for the debate that displayed in writing everything said on a large screen behind the moderators.

The Fetterman campaign said in a memo ahead of the debate that the closed captioning would be "typed out by human beings in real time, on live TV," warning that it could lead to time delays, transcription errors, and miscommunication. "It is impossible to control and unavoidable," the memo said.

Donald Trump endorsed Oz earlier in the year and campaigned alongside the Pennsylvania Republican in September.

Fetterman, meanwhile, has embraced Biden — even if he was reluctant to do so earlier in the year.

The Democrat president campaigned with Fetterman in Pittsburgh during the Labor Day parade and just last week headlined a fundraiser for Fetterman in Philadelphia. There, Biden said the "rest of the world is looking" and suggested a Fetterman loss would imperil his agenda.

Biden is also scheduled to headline the state Democrat Party's annual preelection dinner in Philadelphia on Friday.

Oz has faced pointed questions about his residency throughout the campaign.

For much of the year, Fetterman has seized on Oz's tenuous connections to the state in witty social media posts and media campaigns.

Oz was born in Ohio, was raised in Delaware, and has lived in New Jersey for decades. In 2020, People magazine ran a feature on the New Jersey mansion that Oz and his wife, Lisa, "built from scratch 20 years ago."

Later that year, Oz formally adopted a Pennsylvania address. And the next year, 2021, he launched his Senate campaign.

Original Article

Hillary’s Conspiracy Theory: GOP Already Plans ’24 Election Theft

Hillary's Conspiracy Theory: GOP Already Plans '24 Election Theft Hillary's Conspiracy Theory: GOP Already Plans '24 Election Theft Hillary Clinton

By Jack Gournell | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 07:13 PM EDT

"Right-wing extremists" have a plan already in place to "literally steal the next presidential election, and they’re not making a secret of it,” Hillary Clinton says in a video recently posted to Twitter.

In the video, posted by the progressive group Indivisible, the former first lady, Senator from New York, secretary of state and Democratic presidential nominee looks straight into the camera and says, "The right-wing-controlled Supreme Court may be poised to rule on giving state legislatures the power to overturn presidential elections."

She is referring Moore v. Harper, currently before the court, which involves a 2019 ruling by a panel of judges that invalidated what they called "extreme gerrymandering" by the GOP legislature.

If the conservative high court overturns the case, state legislatures could get more power to regulate elections for federal office.

Such as move, Clinton warns in the video, could result in the next presidential election not being decided by the popular vote, "or even the anachronistic Electoral College,” but by Republican-controlled state legislatures.

Clinton herself was stung by an Electoral College loss in 2016, when Republican Donald Trump won 304 electoral votes to her 227. Clinton received nearly 2.9 million more popular votes than the Trump, the largest margin ever by a losing presidential candidate in American history, the New York Post noted.

Clinton immediately afterward and up to the present has continued to say that election was "stolen."

In an October 2020 interview with The Atlantic's politics podcast "The Ticket," she said, "There was a widespread understanding that this election [in 2016] was not on the level. We still don’t know what really happened."

She added: "There’s just a lot that I think will be revealed. History will discover."

No election fraud of any kind other than Clinton's public statements have ever been alleged or discovered.

Also in 2020, Clinton advised then-Democratic nominee Joe Biden not to concede if the returns on election night were close.

"Joe Biden should not concede under any circumstances because I think this is going to drag out, and eventually I do believe he will win if we don’t give an inch and if we are as focused and relentless as the other side is," she was quoted by Politico.

She also famously was the author of the "vast right-wing conspiracy" theory during her husband's presidency.

"Right-wing extremists" have a plan already in place to "literally steal the next presidential election, and they’re not making a secret of it,” Hillary Clinton says in a video recently posted to Twitter.

In the video, posted by the progressive group Indivisible, the former first lady, Senator from New York, secretary of state and Democratic presidential nominee looks straight into the camera and says, "The right-wing-controlled Supreme Court may be poised to rule on giving state legislatures the power to overturn presidential elections."

She is referring Moore v. Harper, currently before the court, which involves a 2019 ruling by a panel of judges that invalidated what they called "extreme gerrymandering" by the GOP legislature.

If the conservative high court overturns the case, state legislatures could get more power to regulate elections for federal office.

Such as move, Clinton warns in the video, could result in the next presidential election not being decided by the popular vote, "or even the anachronistic Electoral College,” but by Republican-controlled state legislatures.

Clinton herself was stung by an Electoral College loss in 2016, when Republican Donald Trump won 304 electoral votes to her 227. Clinton received nearly 2.9 million more popular votes than the Trump, the largest margin ever by a losing presidential candidate in American history, the New York Post noted.

Clinton immediately afterward and up to the present has continued to say that election was "stolen."

In an October 2020 interview with The Atlantic's politics podcast "The Ticket," she said, "There was a widespread understanding that this election [in 2016] was not on the level. We still don’t know what really happened."

She added: "There’s just a lot that I think will be revealed. History will discover."

No election fraud of any kind other than Clinton's public statements have ever been alleged or discovered.

Also in 2020, Clinton advised then-Democratic nominee Joe Biden not to concede if the returns on election night were close.

"Joe Biden should not concede under any circumstances because I think this is going to drag out, and eventually I do believe he will win if we don’t give an inch and if we are as focused and relentless as the other side is," she was quoted by Politico.

She also famously was the author of the "vast right-wing conspiracy" theory during her husband's presidency.

Original Article

Hillary’s Conspiracy Theory: GOP Already Plans ’24 Election Theft

Hillary's Conspiracy Theory: GOP Already Plans '24 Election Theft (Newsmax/"Rob Schmitt Tonight")

By Jack Gournell | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 07:53 PM EDT

"Right-wing extremists" have a plan already in place to "literally steal the next presidential election, and they're not making a secret of it," Hillary Clinton says in a video recently posted to Twitter.

In the video, posted by the progressive group Indivisible, the former first lady, senator from New York, secretary of state, and Democrat presidential nominee looks straight into the camera and says, "The right-wing-controlled Supreme Court may be poised to rule on giving state legislatures the power to overturn presidential elections."

She is referring Moore v. Harper, currently before the court, which involves a 2019 ruling by a panel of judges that invalidated what they called "extreme gerrymandering" by the GOP legislature.

If the conservative high court overturns the case, state legislatures could get more power to regulate elections for federal office.

Such a move, Clinton says in the video, could result in the next presidential election not being decided by the popular vote, "or even the anachronistic Electoral College," but by Republican-controlled state legislatures.

Clinton herself was stung by an Electoral College loss in 2016, when Republican Donald Trump won 304 electoral votes to her 227. Clinton received nearly 2.9 million more popular votes than Trump, the largest margin ever by a losing presidential candidate in American history, the New York Post noted.

Clinton immediately afterward and up to the present has continued to say that election was "stolen."

In an October 2020 interview with The Atlantic's politics podcast "The Ticket," she said, "There was a widespread understanding that this election [in 2016] was not on the level. We still don't know what really happened."

She added: "There's just a lot that I think will be revealed. History will discover."

No election fraud of any kind other than Clinton's public statements has ever been officially alleged or discovered.

Also in 2020, Clinton advised then-Democrat nominee Joe Biden not to concede if the returns on election night were close.

"Joe Biden should not concede under any circumstances because I think this is going to drag out, and eventually I do believe he will win if we don't give an inch and if we are as focused and relentless as the other side is," she was quoted by Politico.

She also famously popularized the "vast right-wing conspiracy" theory during her husband's presidency.

In a 1998 interview with the "Today" show's Matt Lauer, Clinton said all the scandals surrounding Bill Clinton's presidency could be attributed to Republicans out to get him.

"I do believe that this is a battle," she said. "I mean, look at the very people who are involved in this — they have popped up in other settings. This is — the great story here for anybody willing to find it and write about it and explain it is this vast right-wing conspiracy that has been conspiring against my husband since the day he announced for president."

Despite ridicule from some quarters over the comment, she never abandoned the theory, saying when asked about it in 2016, "At this point it's probably not correct to say it's a conspiracy because it's out in the open."

Texas Rep. Harrison: Parents Fear CDC Decision Will Force Vax on Kids

Texas Rep. Harrison: Parents Fear CDC Decision Will Force Vax on Kids (Newsmax)

By Jack Gournell | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 06:10 PM EDT

A CDC recommendation that children as young as 6 months old be vaccinated against COVID-19 has many parents fearing mandates may not be far behind, GOP Texas state Rep. Brian Harrison, tells Newsmax.

A June recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention expanded COVID vaccine availability to children from 6 months to 5 years old and advised parents to add the vaccine to the regular vaccine schedule.

But Harrison, appearing Tuesday on "The Chris Salcedo Show," said that although the CDC's advice is only a recommendation, many local and state governments end up relying on the CDC's advice and simply mandating them as policy.

Harrison, who served as chief of staff of the Department of Health and Human Services in the Trump administration, currently serves the 10th District in the Texas House and was one of 20 state representatives who signed a letter to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky asking that the recommendation be rescinded.

"This will have the result of millions of schoolchildren across the country being forcibly vaccinated because of many local and state governments saying, 'Whatever the CDC recommends, we're going to force it on our kids,'" Harrison said. "And myself and 19 other colleagues are standing up rebuking the CDC and saying, 'No, that will not happen here in the state of Texas."

Further, Harrison said, are concerns that children will be harmed by getting vaccines they don't need.

"It's been, I think, almost a year now, perhaps even longer, that respected researchers at Johns Hopkins and others have put out data showing that absent severe co-morbidity, very serious underlying health issues like cancers, leukemias extreme autoimmune disorders, children are statistically zero risk of dying from COVID alone," he said.

"Kids are infinitely more likely to die in a car being driven to school or from school than they are from COVID that they catch at school," he added. "And so we're going to be mass vaccinating indiscriminately millions of schoolchildren knowing for a fact that even if it's small, even if it's one in 5,000, some kids are going to develop myocarditis from this, and other adverse events, as a result of the vaccination for a population where there's no statistical benefit?"

The CDC put out the recommended schedule "without any clinical data whatsoever, with zero evidence of efficacy," Harrison said, adding that was a "completely political decision by unelected bureaucrats, the CDC, and they've got to be stopped."

President Joe Biden should end all the "tyrannical mandates coming out of D.C.," adding that heavy-handed government methods of enforcing mandates have done more to spark distrust in vaccines in general than the anti-vax movement has.

"It's why I introduced legislation next session to ban all COVID vaccine mandates in the state of Texas. I mean, this is a line-in-the-sand issue for liberty," he said.

"If unelected bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. can force needles into our arms and Texas against our will, we might as well give up on individual liberty freedom, state sovereignty, the 10th amendment, medical autonomy, informed consent in the entire Constitution," he said.

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Fetterman, Oz Meet for Highly Anticipated Pa. Senate Debate

Fetterman, Oz Meet for Highly Anticipated Pa. Senate Debate Fetterman, Oz Meet for Highly Anticipated Pa. Senate Debate (Dreamstime)

MARC LEVY and STEVE PEOPLES Tuesday, 25 October 2022 05:20 PM EDT

Democrat John Fetterman and Republican Mehmet Oz will meet Tuesday for one of the most highly anticipated debates of the midterm elections as they wage a fierce contest for a U.S. Senate seat from Pennsylvania that could decide control of the chamber and the future of President Joe Biden’s agenda.

Much of the focus is on Fetterman, who has spent the past several months fending off an escalating series of attacks from Oz about his health and fitness for office. Fetterman, who is Pennsylvania’s lieutenant governor, had a stroke in May, a health scare that was so severe he said he “almost died.”

But he has insisted he is prepared for the demands of the Senate. Since his stroke, Fetterman has struggled at times to speak clearly in public events. Independent experts consulted by The Associated Press, however, said he appears to be recovering remarkably well. He will use closed-captioning during the debate to help him process the words he hears.

Still, Tuesday’s debate could prove to be a decisive moment in a race that represents the best chance for Democrats to flip a Republican-held Senate seat this year. It will provide an opportunity for Fetterman to prove that he has the stamina for the job and shift the focus to Oz, who Fetterman has argued is a carpetbagger from New Jersey with no understanding of the state. Oz, meanwhile, will have a high-profile chance to unite Republicans and appeal to moderates who could decide the race.

“The debate looms very large, bigger than usual for a Senate debate,” said Republican activist Charles Gerow, a veteran of two decades of Sunday TV political talk shows.

The high-stakes debate — the first and only in the contest — comes just two weeks before Election Day in what polls say is a close race to replace retiring two-term Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey. It’s the only major statewide debate happening this year in Pennsylvania since Democrat Josh Shapiro and Republican Doug Mastriano couldn’t reach an agreement on terms for a gubernatorial debate.

Fetterman has grown as a national brand thanks in part to his extraordinary height, tattoos and unapologetic progressive stances. But the 53-year-old Pennsylvania Democrat's health has emerged as a central issue over the election's final weeks, even as candidates elsewhere clash over issues like abortion, crime and inflation.

Oz, trailing in the polls, had pushed for more than a half-dozen debates, suggesting that Fetterman's unwillingness to agree to more than one is because the stroke had debilitated him. Fetterman has insisted that one debate is typical — two is more customary — and that Oz's focus on debates was a cynical ploy to lie about his stroke recovery.

Meanwhile, Fetterman’s lead in polls has shrunk as Oz's Republican allies poured tens of millions of dollars into a perennial battleground state that Biden won by just 1 percentage point in 2020.

Fetterman's allies fear that the 60-minute live televised debate may represent a no-win situation for the Democrat, even if the typical audience for a Senate debate is quite small. Much of the attention will likely focus on how Fetterman — who is blunt and plainspoken — can communicate in a high-pressure situation.

His campaign has acknowledged the built-in disadvantage of putting Fetterman on stage with Oz, a longtime TV personality who hosted “The Dr. Oz Show” weekdays for 13 seasons after getting his start as a regular guest on Oprah Winfrey’s show in 2004.

“This was always going to be an away game for John Fetterman,” said Mustafa Rashed, a Democratic political consultant based in Philadelphia.

The debate host, Nexstar Media, declined to allow an AP photographer access to the event, and the AP declined to accept handout photos.

Fetterman's stroke happened just days before his resounding victory in the Democratic primary. Recovery kept him out of the public eye for much of the summer, though the campaign said he was meeting with aides, taking long daily walks, driving and doing household errands.

Oz, who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump, barely survived his own primary, beating Republican rival David McCormick by 951 votes out of more than 1.3 million cast after a dayslong recount.

Fetterman has rebuffed calls to release medical records or let reporters question his doctors, but last week he released a note from his primary care physician, who wrote that Fetterman is recovering well, shows no cognitive effects and "can work full duty in public office.”

Fetterman acknowledges that he continues to stumble over the occasional word and that a common condition of his stroke — called auditory processing disorder — means that his brain's language network cannot quickly and accurately turn sound into meaning. That requires him to use closed-captioning during interviews and at the debate.

Malcolm Kenyatta, a Democratic state lawmaker who is campaigning for Fetterman after unsuccessfully challenging him in the primary, said Fetterman should talk about his priorities as a senator and be selective about which of Oz's attacks to respond to.

Fetterman should “to the extent possible ignore the clown show that’s happening on the other side and, if he does that, I think that's a win,” Kenyatta said.

Original Article

Mark Meadows Asks Judge to Block Subpoena in Georgia Probe

Mark Meadows Asks Judge to Block Subpoena in Georgia Probe Mark Meadows Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows talks to reporters at the White House on Oct. 21, 2020 in Washington, D.C. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

By Brian Pfail | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 05:10 PM EDT

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows is asking a South Carolina judge to block a subpoena from a Georgia probe into possible interference in the 2020 election.

In the filing, Meadows claimed the Georgia probe could not require him to testify since it's not a criminal investigation.

Since Meadows is a South Carolina resident, the probe must get a judge's approval in his home state. He has urged the court in Pickens County, South Carolina, to deny the request on the grounds that South Carolina's law on out-of-state witnesses does not apply to a civil inquiries like that of the Georgia probe.

Meadows tried to assert executive privilege and has said the subpoena is no longer valid since he was supposed to appear on Sept. 27.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis issued the subpoena. She is also spearheading the Georgia investigation.

The former White House chief of staff was in Georgia in December, 2020, visiting to observe a post-election audit. He was also on a January, 2021, call between former President Trump and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.

The call is now infamously known for Trump asking Raffensperger to “find” 11,780 more votes.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., has also attempted to avoid a subpoena from the probe. He went as far as to submit an emergency application to the Supreme Court after a lower appeals court declined to prevent the testimony.

Just days before the senator was expected to respond, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas granted Graham's request on Monday.

Related Stories:

Original Article

Dick Morris to Newsmax: Hillary Clinton Viral Rant a Prelude to ’24 WH Run

Dick Morris to Newsmax: Hillary Clinton Viral Rant a Prelude to '24 WH Run (Newsmax/"American Agenda")

By Jay Clemons | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 04:51 PM EDT

Dick Morris, a best-selling author, TV host, and adviser to former Presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, has a simple explanation for Hillary Clinton's seemingly out-of-the-blue rant about the Republicans, or "right-wing extremists literally" having a plan to "steal" the 2024 presidential election.

From Morris's perspective, Hillary Clinton will pursue the Democratic Party nomination two years from now — regardless of President Joe Biden's final determination of his own plans.

"By Hillary getting out here and saying this, it means she's running for president," Morris told Newsmax Tuesday afternoon, while appearing on "American Agenda" with hosts Bob Sellers and Katrina Szish.

The only hurdle left to clear regarding 2024: Morris believes Clinton's camp must wait out the upcoming midterm elections (Nov. 8), before making any public pronouncements.

"If Democrats [and by extension, Biden] lose massively in the midterms, then Hillary would jump in," says Morris, the author of "The Return: Trump's Big 2024 Comeback."

Note: Get Dick Morris' new book "The Return" on Trump's secret plan for 2024. See It Here!

Regarding Morris's latest book, he's been foretelling the Clinton-camp strategy of painting Hillary as the moderate option among Democrat voters — or someone with more centrist appeal than President Biden.

As such, Morris says it only makes sense that Clinton would come out against 2024 Republicans so quickly — since they have always been her true focus.

"Good for her, I've been saying the same thing for five months" in the book, added Morris, while sporting a large grin.

Morris says that Clinton's rant also serves as a narrative warning shot against the Supreme Court hearing a pending case — Moore v. Harper — which involves a "strict" interpretation of the U.S. Constitution, regarding the various state Legislatures potentially determining future election results.

The conservative judges on the Supreme Court have agreed to hear the Moore v. Harper case, says Morris. And that could have many Democrats lashing out publicly, since the GOP-controlled state Legislatures would most likely invoke stricter enforcement standards for voting in America.

If Moore vs. Harper goes the Republicans' way, "it will solve the problem" of curbing future voter/election fraud and "force states to listen to their Legislatures," adds Morris, host of "Dick Morris Democracy" on Newsmax.

Note: Get Dick Morris' new book "The Return" on Trump's secret plan for 2024. See It Here!

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Hope Hicks Appears Before Jan. 6 Panel

Hope Hicks Appears Before Jan. 6 Panel (Newsmax)

By Theodore Bunker | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 04:20 PM EDT

Former White House aide Hope Hicks will appear before the House select committee investigating the circumstances surrounding Jan. 6 on Tuesday, according to media reports.

Sources told CNN that Hicks, who left the White House six days after the incident, previously met with the panel for an “informal interview,” and is set to reappear for a formal interview on Tuesday. News of the meeting was first reported by The New York Times.

Several books chronicling the final months of former President Donald Trump’s administration report that Hicks told Trump following his loss in 2020 that she did not believe his claims about election fraud.

Trump is quoted in the book “The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021,” by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser as saying, “Hope doesn’t believe in me,” to which Hicks is quoted as saying, “No, I don’t. Nobody’s convinced me otherwise.”

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Rep. Cammack to Newsmax: Florida Gov. DeSantis Brings Results, Not ‘Fluff’

Rep. Cammack to Newsmax: Florida Gov. DeSantis Brings Results, Not 'Fluff' Rep. Kat Cammack, R-Fla. (AP)

By Jay Clemons | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 03:39 PM EDT

Rep. Kat Cammack, R-Fla., enjoyed seeing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis stay cool under pressure in Monday's gubernatorial debate with Democrat challenger Charlie Crist, believing that Crist — a prohibitive underdog in the governor's race — would attempt to make the experience about viral moments.

"Oh, [the debate] was a fiery one. But I was so proud of Governor DeSantis. He exemplified exactly what a leader should be," Cammack told Newsmax Tuesday afternoon, while appearing on "American Agenda" with hosts Bob Sellers and Katrina Szish.

"[DeSantis] was cool, calm, collected, and wasn't willing to back down," she added.

Cammack added there wasn't "a lot of fluff" to DeSantis' debate presentation. Just sticking to the issues which concern most Floridians.

Republicans "are about freedom," and DeSantis "espoused all of his policies that involve freedom," said Cammack, who oversees the state's 3rd congressional district, covering a large swath of northern Florida.

As for Crist, "you never know what you're going to get on a given day," says Cammack, while reiterating how Crist — formerly Florida's governor a decade ago (2007-11) — has sought various political offices as a Republican, Democrat, and independent.

"[Crist] just goes with the flow," says Cammack, with a hint of sarcasm, while adding that Governor DeSantis always does the right thing for his constituents.

For example, Cammack was proud of DeSantis for not letting Crist paint him into a proverbial corner on Monday, when Crist demanded that DeSantis publicly promise he would serve a "full four-year term" — and not pursue the White House in 2024.

"It's interesting that Charlie Crist wants to talk about somebody else being confused," said Cammack, once again lamenting Crist's political affiliations over the years.

DeSantis isn't only the high-profile Florida politician who's seemingly on solid ground for reelection purposes.

Cammack says she believes that Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., will garner "overwhelming support" from Republicans, independents, and moderate Democrats in his Senate battle with Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla.

According to Cammack, she and Demings previously spent time together in Department of Homeland Security meetings.

"It's clear [Demings] is a Progressive Socialist. She wants to control every aspect of our lives," says Cammack. "And Marco Rubio's fighting for our freedoms — on all fronts."

Cammack also praised Rubio for his tireless efforts during the Hurricane Ian recovery effort, saying the Florida senator regularly "had boots on the ground" and was "doing the work" during a time of crisis.

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Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz: AG Garland ‘Should Be Impeached’ for Bannon Sentence

Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz: AG Garland 'Should Be Impeached' for Bannon Sentence (Newsmax/"Rob Schmitt Tonight")

By Charles Kim | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 02:56 PM EDT

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, is "furious" over the four-month jail sentence for former President Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon on a contempt of Congress conviction.

Attorney General Merrick Garland should be impeached for weaponizing the Department of Justice to go after President Joe Biden and Democrats' political rivals, Cruz said on a podcast Monday.

"I am furious because Merrick Garland has presided over a Department of Justice that now consists of simply being a partisan weapon to attack the political opponents of Joe Biden and the Democrats," Cruz told "Verdict with Ted Cruz." "Merrick Garland should be ashamed, he should resign in disgrace, and if he doesn't, he should be impeached and removed from office."

Cruz said Bannon was sentenced for defying a Congressional subpoena from the House Select Committee on Jan. 6, something Democrats, including former President Barack Obama's Attorney General Eric Holder, have done in the past, but were never given any jail time for the same offense.

Cruz said the committee is nothing more than a "partisan" body created by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., without allowing Republicans to choose their own members, but only allowed two GOP members on that were critical of Trump.

"She didn't want Republicans that would actually oppose the Democrats' partisan agenda," Cruz said. "She vetoed the Republican [choices]. That was unprecedented. She doesn't get to do that."

He said Bannon refused to testify and Garland's Justice Department "stepped forward to prosecute him," highlighting the "double standard" of Holder not being prosecuted while Bannon was.

This is not the first time Cruz has called for Garland to be impeached.

In August, Cruz said the case to impeach Garland "is growing by leaps and bounds every day."

"The more lawless, the more politicized DOJ gets, the more compelling it becomes to impeach Garland," Cruz told his podcast in August.

Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., introduced a bill in the House a year ago to impeach the attorney general, setting out the "high crimes and misdemeanors" he committed at the time.

The resolution accuses Garland of politicizing the DOJ to go after parents at school board meetings that speak out against the schools for what is being taught in their childrens' classrooms.

The resolution also accused Garland and the DOJ of going after political opponents to "punish" them.

After being introduced in the House on Oct. 22, 2021, the legislation was referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary, according to Congress' official website.

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Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz: AG Garland ‘Should Be Impeached’ for Bannon Sentence

Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz: AG Garland 'Should Be Impeached' for Bannon Sentence (Newsmax/"Rob Schmitt Tonight")

By Charles Kim | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 02:56 PM EDT

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, is "furious" over the four-month jail sentence for former President Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon on a contempt of Congress conviction.

Attorney General Merrick Garland should be impeached for weaponizing the Department of Justice to go after President Joe Biden and Democrats' political rivals, Cruz said on a podcast Monday.

"I am furious because Merrick Garland has presided over a Department of Justice that now consists of simply being a partisan weapon to attack the political opponents of Joe Biden and the Democrats," Cruz told "Verdict with Ted Cruz." "Merrick Garland should be ashamed, he should resign in disgrace, and if he doesn't, he should be impeached and removed from office."

Cruz said Bannon was sentenced for defying a Congressional subpoena from the House Select Committee on Jan. 6, something Democrats, including former President Barack Obama's Attorney General Eric Holder, have done in the past, but were never given any jail time for the same offense.

Cruz said the committee is nothing more than a "partisan" body created by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., without allowing Republicans to choose their own members, but only allowed two GOP members on that were critical of Trump.

"She didn't want Republicans that would actually oppose the Democrats' partisan agenda," Cruz said. "She vetoed the Republican [choices]. That was unprecedented. She doesn't get to do that."

He said Bannon refused to testify and Garland's Justice Department "stepped forward to prosecute him," highlighting the "double standard" of Holder not being prosecuted while Bannon was.

This is not the first time Cruz has called for Garland to be impeached.

In August, Cruz said the case to impeach Garland "is growing by leaps and bounds every day."

"The more lawless, the more politicized DOJ gets, the more compelling it becomes to impeach Garland," Cruz told his podcast in August.

Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., introduced a bill in the House a year ago to impeach the attorney general, setting out the "high crimes and misdemeanors" he committed at the time.

The resolution accuses Garland of politicizing the DOJ to go after parents at school board meetings that speak out against the schools for what is being taught in their childrens' classrooms.

The resolution also accused Garland and the DOJ of going after political opponents to "punish" them.

After being introduced in the House on Oct. 22, 2021, the legislation was referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary, according to Congress' official website.

Gallup Poll: Americans More Pessimistic About Children’s Future

Gallup Poll: Americans More Pessimistic About Children's Future (Newsmax)

By Brian Pfail | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 12:46 PM EDT

A new Gallup Poll shows Americans have little optimism for the financial success of their children — its lowest in almost three decades.

Of U.S. adults, 42% think it is very or somewhat likely that today's youth "will have a better living standard, better homes, a better education and so on." The dismal outlook is tied with a previous low in 2011 and marks an 18 percentage point drop since June 2019.

The highest percentage of American optimism was 71% in 1999 and 2001, while the lowest recorded percentage was 11% in 1995.

The economic challenges of unemployment, recession, and high inflation have created a bleak atmosphere; however, the decline in expectation leans Republican and independent.

More than half — 53% — of Democrats and 33% of Republicans think it is likely the lives of today's youth will be better than their parents' lives. Democrat optimism is historically at its lowest by 2 points, while Republicans are short of their 30% low in 2012.

Republican optimism tends to swing greater than Democrats' when the sitting president's party changes. After Donald Trump was elected, it rose 29 points; when Barack Obama came into office, it fell 17 points.

For Democrats, optimism dropped 13 points after Trump became president, but had not changed with Joe Biden's 2020 victory.

Lower-income Americans were found to be more optimistic. A full 52% of those whose income is less than $40,000 have optimism for the next generation's prospects, compared to the 40% of those in the two higher-income groups above $40,000.

Gallup recorded the poll starting in 2008, supplementing it with data collected between 1995 and 2003 by The New York Times and CBS News.

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Gallup Poll: Americans More Pessimistic About Children’s Future

Gallup Poll: Americans More Pessimistic About Children's Future (Newsmax)

By Brian Pfail | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 12:46 PM EDT

A new Gallup Poll shows Americans have little optimism for the financial success of their children — its lowest in almost three decades.

Of U.S. adults, 42% think it is very or somewhat likely that today's youth "will have a better living standard, better homes, a better education and so on." The dismal outlook is tied with a previous low in 2011 and marks an 18 percentage point drop since June 2019.

The highest percentage of American optimism was 71% in 1999 and 2001, while the lowest recorded percentage was 11% in 1995.

The economic challenges of unemployment, recession, and high inflation have created a bleak atmosphere; however, the decline in expectation leans Republican and independent.

More than half — 53% — of Democrats and 33% of Republicans think it is likely the lives of today's youth will be better than their parents' lives. Democrat optimism is historically at its lowest by 2 points, while Republicans are short of their 30% low in 2012.

Republican optimism tends to swing greater than Democrats' when the sitting president's party changes. After Donald Trump was elected, it rose 29 points; when Barack Obama came into office, it fell 17 points.

For Democrats, optimism dropped 13 points after Trump became president, but had not changed with Joe Biden's 2020 victory.

Lower-income Americans were found to be more optimistic. A full 52% of those whose income is less than $40,000 have optimism for the next generation's prospects, compared to the 40% of those in the two higher-income groups above $40,000.

Gallup recorded the poll starting in 2008, supplementing it with data collected between 1995 and 2003 by The New York Times and CBS News.

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Border Patrol Found 98 on Terror Watchlist at the Border

Border Patrol Found 98 on Terror Watchlist at the Border (Newsmax)

By Theodore Bunker | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 10:58 AM EDT

U.S. Customs and Border Protection encountered almost 100 people on a national terrorist watchlist at the southwest border over the course of fiscal year 2022, according to data released this week.

In fiscal year 2022, which began on Oct. 1, 2021, and ended on Sept. 30, 2022, Border Patrol encountered 98 non-U.S. citizens on the Terrorist Screening Dataset at the southwest border. Last fiscal year, Border Patrol made 16 encounters with non-American citizens on the watchlist in between ports of entry.

“The Terrorist Screening Dataset (TSDS) — also known as the ‘watchlist’ — is the U.S. government’s database that contains sensitive information on known or suspected terrorists (KSTs), but has evolved over the last decade to include additional individuals who represent a potential threat to the United States, including known affiliates of watchlisted individuals,” CBP said in a press release.

The release goes on to note that “encounters of watchlisted individuals at our borders are very uncommon.”

The Office of Field Operations reported 380 total encounters with watchlisted individuals in fiscal year 2022, most of which occurred near the northern border, an increase from the previous two years but below the 538 encounters made in fiscal year 2019, when former President Donald Trump was in office.

Previously released data shows that 2.3 million people entered the U.S. illegally in fiscal year 2022.

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Former US Defense Secretary Ash Carter Dies at 68

Former US Defense Secretary Ash Carter Dies at 68 ash carter looks on Former U.S. defense secretary Ash Carter (NOORULLAH SHIRZADA/AFP via Getty)

Tuesday, 25 October 2022 10:44 AM EDT

Ash Carter, who served as a U.S. defense secretary during the Obama administration, died late on Monday at the age of 68 after a sudden cardiac event, his family said in a statement on Tuesday.

A decades-long defense wonk who gradually ascended to the Pentagon's top job, Carter helped oversee the launch of a military strategy that would drive back the Islamic State militant group in Syria and Iraq, and ultimately defeat the organization.

Under Carter, the U.S. military opened all military roles to women and also ended a ban on openly serving transgender service members. He strongly criticized former President Donald Trump's decision in 2017 to reimpose the ban.

"To choose service members on other grounds than military qualifications is social policy and has no place in our military," Carter said at the time.

Before becoming defense secretary, Carter served as deputy defense secretary and chief operating officer in the Pentagon. He also oversaw the Defense Department's weapons purchases from 2009 to 2011 when he led a major restructuring of the F-35 fighter jet program.

"Carter always set politics aside; he served presidents of both parties over five administrations, holding multiple positions within the Department of Defense," his family said in the statement.

Carter held a doctorate in theoretical physics from Oxford University, and on at least one occasion overseas even spoke to the media traveling with him about black holes. Inside the Pentagon, he was seen more as a technocrat than a politician.

He tried, with limited success, to bridge a gaping divide between the Pentagon and Silicon Valley to bring technological innovations to the Defense Department more quickly.

Since leaving public service, Carter led the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard's Kennedy School.

Carter is survived by his wife, Stephanie, and his children, Ava and Will.

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Penn State, Fearing Violence, Cancels Show by Proud Boys Founder

Penn State, Fearing Violence, Cancels Show by Proud Boys Founder a student walks in front of a building at a university A student walks in front of the Old Main building on the Pennsylvania State University campus in State College, Pennsylvania. (AP)

By Jeffrey Rodack | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 11:00 AM EDT

A planned comedy event featuring the founder of the Proud Boys was canceled by Pennsylvania State University on Monday.

The event was to have been co-hosted by Alex Stein and the group's founder, Gavin McInnes. University officials had earlier said the show would go on in the interest of supporting free speech, according to The New York Times, but it was canceled after a demonstration against the speakers turned violent.

Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi said in a statement: "As many of you know, a speaking event on the University Park campus was canceled tonight [Oct. 24] because campus police were concerned about escalating violence and public safety. The event was to feature Gavin McInnes and Alex Stein who are provocateurs known for their abhorrent views and rhetoric.

"From the start, Penn State's administration firmly denounced the two speakers. However, they were invited to speak on campus by a registered student organization and as an institution of higher education, we support the fundamental constitutional right of free speech and free expression of all members of our community. It is precisely because of this unwavering commitment to free speech that provocative individuals target our campus to deliver speeches.

"Over the coming weeks, let us reflect on the role we must all play in encouraging vigorous debate and also upholding the values we hold dear."

CBS News reported that students estimated there were about 500 demonstrators at one point.

The show had been billed as "politically provocative" comedy. The New York Times reported it was organized by Uncensored America, which it said was founded by Sean Semanko, a radio host who worked as a field organizer for Donald Trump's 2020 presidential campaign.

McInnes is a Canadian who founded the first official chapter of the Proud Boys in 2016.

The Times noted several dozen of the Proud Boys have been indicted in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021 breach at the Capitol.

Semanko, McInnes, and Stein could not be reached by the Times for comment.

Rep. Tenney to Newsmax: Biden Must Take a Cognitive Test Like Trump Did

Rep. Tenney to Newsmax: Biden Must Take a Cognitive Test Like Trump Did (Newsmax/"Wake Up America")

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 10:00 AM EDT

President Joe Biden must be made to take a cognitive test, just like the one that was demanded of former President Donald Trump, who took one and passed, as Biden's incidents and errors are creating a dangerous situation for the United States, Rep. Claudia Tenney said on Newsmax Tuesday.

"This is just a continued pattern," the New York Republican told Newsmax's "Wake Up America," noting that she's signed on with Rep. Ronnie Jackson, R-Texas, the former White House physician under Trump, in a letter calling for Biden to be tested.

"I'm just surprised that his handlers, I call them the shadow government behind him that are actually running everything, continue to allow him to be on the public stage for people to see in plain sight," Tenney said.

Her comments come after Biden on Monday had difficulty figuring out which way to walk after a tree-planting ceremony at the White House.

"Just before this incident occurred he got up in an interview and said that he was the one that got the student loan debt relief bill passed by a few votes," said Tenney. "He did that as an executive order and it was struck down by the court."

But Biden doesn't only have "issues," as he is a "serial liar," she added.

"He's a career politician known for corruption, who's got a corruption scandal swirling around him," said Tenney. "If it weren't for the legacy media protecting him, he would be gone."

Meanwhile, Tenney said one of the "scariest questions" is what will happen if Republicans don't take back the House and Senate majorities in the upcoming elections.

"The Democrats are just looking away, like the emperor has no clothes, the old expression," said Tenney. "This guy is a disaster and they're doing nothing. They're just saying, Well we're just going to shove through legislation. We're going to do whatever we want, and this guy is going to follow along."

She pointed out that in the 2020 presidential primaries, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., was surging in the polls, but the Democrats determined that he couldn't be the nominee, as "'he's not even a Democrat and he's a communist,'" said Tenney.

Sanders, who describes himself as a democratic socialist, has credibility with the far left, Tenney continued, "so all of a sudden, in one day, Amy Klobuchar and Pete Buttigieg tearfully got out and backed Joe Biden. You could see that they were struggling to even have to do this."

But it has been a "false narrative" from the left that Biden is a moderate, but now he's "peddling the far-left policies that Bernie Sanders would have done," said Tenney. "Only it's not Bernie Sanders. It's in the vessel of Joe Biden. It reminds me of a wax figure. It just comes out, and they steer him around. They might as well have him on a remote control."

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Rep. Fleischmann to Newsmax: Biden to Blame for ‘Abysmal Failure’ on Border

Rep. Fleischmann to Newsmax: Biden to Blame for 'Abysmal Failure' on Border chuck fleischmann speaks to a reporter Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, R-Tenn. (AP)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Tuesday, 25 October 2022 08:55 AM EDT

The border situation, including the news in a recent report that 98 people on the terror watch list were apprehended this year alone, has happened because of the "abysmal failure" on the border that was "incentivized" by President Joe Biden's administration even before he took office, Rep. Chuck Fleischmann told Newsmax on Tuesday.

"I had been to the border several times in my role as ranking member on the Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee, but when I went there with President [Donald] Trump, we knew the border was secure," the Tennessee Republican said on Newsmax's "Wake Up America."

Not only was the wall being built, but the Border Patrol was encouraged to "do the right thing at every stage," said the lawmaker.

But now, the Biden administration has "taken this totally in the opposite direction," said Fleischmann. "It has hurt this country and made us less safe."

But now, the situation is affecting "these radical left-wing cities" with migrants being sent to places like New York City, Washington, D.C., and Chicago, and "they don't like it," he added.

"They said they can't deal with it," said Fleischmann, noting that America also can't afford the situation.

"We are seeing millions of illegals come across," he said. "The American people are going to fix this in November. The American people know better than Joe Biden and this group that's in control right now."

The congressman, predicting a "Republican wave across this country," acknowledged that not everyone is as conservative as he is, but said Americans are "by and large overwhelmingly for the American team."

Democrat policies are also harming the nation's cities, Fleischmann said, including moves to defund the police that have left city neighborhoods unsafe.

"We need to uplift the men and women in blue and thank them for the job they do," said Fleischmann. "We need to punish criminals, not the victims."

The congressman also on Tuesday remembered the life and contributions of television actor Leslie Jordan, 67, a Tennessee native who died Monday in an automobile accident in Los Angeles.

Fleischmann said he and his wife Brenda were privileged to be with Jordan this past summer when the actor was the grand marshal of the Chattanooga Riverbend Festival.

"Leslie came and he was so kind and the Chattanooga community just opened up and just loved him, and he loved us," said Fleischmann of Jordan, who was born in Chattanooga. "It was a special day for Americans. He did a great job there as he's done on the screen and TV. He will be sorely missed."

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