Texas State Rep. Harrison to Newsmax: Urgency Rising on Immigration

Texas State Rep. Harrison to Newsmax: Urgency Rising on Immigration brian harrison appearing on newsmax State Rep. Brian Harrison, R-Texas (Newsmax)

By Fran Beyer | Monday, 21 November 2022 09:46 AM EST

Texas Republican state lawmakers have to be laser-focused on border security, an issue of increasing importance as the end of Title 42 looms, GOP Texas state Rep. Brian Harrison said Monday on Newsmax.

In an interview on Newsmax's "Wake Up America," the former chief of staff at the Department of Health and Human Services said "we've got to not voluntarily give… any power back to Democrats that they didn't earn from the voters."

Harrison said the political pushback is particularly important as the Biden administration seeks an end to the public health order that expels migrants to Mexico.

Title 42 "was the regulation that allows for immediate deportations" and secured the southern border ever since its imposition early in the coronavirus pandemic, Harrison noted.

"I was a member of the Trump administration, the chief of staff at HHS. We were the agency that issued the now famous Title 42 order, which is about to go away," Harrison said. "All [President] Joe Biden had to do was nothing when he took office."

But Biden instead "went out of his way" and took "every action possible to make the border as unsecure as possible," Harrison said.

According to Harrison, the state of Texas has already had to take $3 billion to $4 billion for border security efforts "on our own."

"We have to do more with the court striking down Title 42," he said, referring to a federal judge's Nov. 16 decision giving the Biden administration until Dec. 21 to wind down its use of Title 42 to expel migrants.

"We need a Texas style Title 42 law that allows for us to immediately be able to begin — or I should say resume — deportations immediately on the southern border," Harrison said. "Because if we don't do this, the Biden administration [by] their own numbers… are saying [there are] 18,000 illegal border crossings a day."

Harrison added that Texas was once an "entirely Democrat state."

"But that was an entirely different, completely different Democratic Party than the party of today, the party of Joe Biden, the party of socialism and open borders and inflation and stripping parents of their rights," he said.

"This is not a party that is to be negotiated with right now," he added, vowing to force a vote to change some state rules "and hopefully, we'll be successful here in January."

Original Article

McCarthy Still Has Work to Do to Become Speaker

McCarthy Still Has Work to Do to Become Speaker (Newsmax)

By Charlie McCarthy | Monday, 21 November 2022 01:18 PM EST

Uncertainty remains about whether House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., will become the chamber's next speaker.

Although McCarthy won the House Republicans' vote 188-31, he must be approved by the entire chamber – and he cannot afford 31 GOP members to be against him in the Jan. 3 vote.

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That is because Newsmax projects the GOP has won 219 seats (with five races still uncalled), a very slim majority in the next Congress. Besides that, several lawmakers within the Republican conference have vowed not to back McCarthy.

"Look, we have our work cut out for us. We've got to have a small majority. We've got to listen to everybody in our conference," McCarthy said in a press conference last week after the GOP leadership vote.

Words, however, might not be enough to sway come McCarthy critics.

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"The hard thing for Kevin, realistically, is there are a fair number of people who have said very publicly they're 'Never Kevin.' Like, there's nothing that Kevin can do to get their vote," said Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, who declined to express his thoughts on McCarthy, The Hill reported.

Reps. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., and Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., former House Freedom Caucus chair and someone who challenged McCarthy for the speaker nomination last week, have pledged not to vote for the minority leader on the House floor.

The House Freedom Caucus during the summer released a list of rule change demands for both the conference and the entire House that seek to reduce the power of leadership and distribute more of it to individual members.

"I refuse to elect the same people utilizing the same rules that keep us from – members like me from participating," Rep. Matt Rosendale, R-Mont., said on Stephen Bannon's "War Room" show.

McCarthy supporters note that some GOP lawmakers who voted against the leader via secret ballot in the conference will not want to be on the record publicly opposing him in a floor vote.

Still, opponents continue to put pressure on McCarthy.

"The Leader does not have 218 votes," said Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., current chair of the Freedom Caucus, The Hill reported. "It is becoming increasingly perilous as we move forward."

During the GOP press conference last week, McCarthy pointed to former Speakers Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., becoming speaker despite experiencing major pushback within their conferences. However, Ryan (2015) and Pelosi (2019) had more substantial majorities.

With Republicans holding such a narrow majority, it's worth noting that McCarthy does not necessarily need 218 floor votes to win the speakership.

A candidate needs a majority of votes cast to become speaker. Thus, such things as unforeseen illness and bad weather could affect a vote.

Also, The Hill reported that a Congressional Research Service report noted "present" votes also lower the final number needed to win, with current House practice dictating that the speaker needs to win a majority "voting by surname."

Some House Republicans could opt to vote "present" rather than for either McCarthy or an alternative candidate without jeopardizing the leader's bid.

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Original Article

Trump: Biden’s ‘Corrupt,’ Elections Are ‘Rigged’

Trump: Biden's 'Corrupt,' Elections Are 'Rigged'

(Newsmax/"Prime News")

By Jack Gournell | Sunday, 20 November 2022 07:43 PM EST

Former President Donald Trump took to his social media platform, Truth Social, to share his opinion on midterm elections and President Joe Biden.

"Our Country has never seen a Weaponized 'Justice' Department, and FBI, like they are witnessing right now," Trump wrote on Truth Social.

"They are doing everything they can, much of it unlawful, to protect an incompetent and corrupt President, and his drug addicted criminal son. The system is Tainted and Rigged, just like our Elections are Tainted and Rigged, and just like our Border is for sale to the highest bidder, OPEN, and a disgrace to humanity. In the meantime, our Country is failing at a level never seen before!!!"

Trump did not copy the message to his old Twitter account.

Trump has seemingly rejected returning to Twitter, but as he embarks on a new presidential campaign, will he be able to resist? All eyes were on his account Sunday for any activity, after it was reinstated by the platform's new owner Elon Musk.

Twitter had issued a "permanent" ban on Trump in the wake of the January 6, 2021 attack by his supporters on the U.S. Capitol, as he sought to overturn his election loss to Biden.

But Musk, who describes himself as a "free speech absolutist," posted a Twitter poll Saturday that saw a majority support the former president's reinstatement, and the platform's new owner wasted no time in acting on it.

As of 11:30 a.m. EST Sunday, the revived account of the "45th President of the United States of America," with its blue "verified" checkmark, had not posted any new messages.

The last message dates from January 8, 2021, when the billionaire said he would not attend Biden's inauguration ceremony.

On the same day, Twitter banned the account, which was being followed by some 88.8 million people, citing the risk of further incitement to violence.

Trump's followers numbered 86.6 million as of Sunday — though it was unclear how many of those were real and how many were bots — while the number of accounts followed by him went from zero to 49.

The account also linked to a campaign website seeking donations for Trump's 2024 presidential run.

It was not clear who linked the website to the account or what any changes in the number of followers means — mass layoffs in recent weeks under Musk have seen Twitter's communications team decimated.

Trump reveled in using Twitter as a mouthpiece during his presidency, posting policy announcements, attacking political rivals and communicating with supporters.

More than 15 million votes were cast in Musk's poll — Twitter has 237 million daily users — with 51.8 percent in favor of reinstating Trump's controversial profile and 48.2 percent against.

Musk asked for a simple "yes" or "no" response to the statement, "Reinstate former President Trump."

On Saturday, while the poll was still underway, Trump posted a link to it on Truth Social, the Twitter alternative he founded, urging his 4.6 million followers there to vote for him.

But he also wrote: "don't worry, we aren't going anywhere. Truth Social is special!"

And, appearing via video at a gathering of the Republican Jewish Coalition in Las Vegas, Trump said he welcomed the poll and was a fan of Musk, but appeared to reject any return to the platform.

"I don't see it, because I don't see any reason for it," he said.

AFP contributed to this report.

Original Article

Trump: Biden’s ‘Corrupt,’ Elections Are ‘Rigged’

Trump: Biden's 'Corrupt,' Elections Are 'Rigged' (Newsmax/"Prime News")

By Jack Gournell | Sunday, 20 November 2022 07:43 PM EST

Former President Donald Trump took to his social media platform, Truth Social, to share his opinion on midterm elections and President Joe Biden.

"Our Country has never seen a Weaponized 'Justice' Department, and FBI, like they are witnessing right now," Trump wrote on Truth Social.

"They are doing everything they can, much of it unlawful, to protect an incompetent and corrupt President, and his drug addicted criminal son. The system is Tainted and Rigged, just like our Elections are Tainted and Rigged, and just like our Border is for sale to the highest bidder, OPEN, and a disgrace to humanity. In the meantime, our Country is failing at a level never seen before!!!"

Trump did not copy the message to his old Twitter account.

Trump has seemingly rejected returning to Twitter, but as he embarks on a new presidential campaign, will he be able to resist? All eyes were on his account Sunday for any activity, after it was reinstated by the platform's new owner Elon Musk.

Twitter had issued a "permanent" ban on Trump in the wake of the January 6, 2021 attack by his supporters on the U.S. Capitol, as he sought to overturn his election loss to Biden.

But Musk, who describes himself as a "free speech absolutist," posted a Twitter poll Saturday that saw a majority support the former president's reinstatement, and the platform's new owner wasted no time in acting on it.

As of 11:30 a.m. ET Sunday, the revived account of the "45th President of the United States of America," with its blue "verified" checkmark, had not posted any new messages.

The last message dates from January 8, 2021, when the billionaire said he would not attend Biden's inauguration ceremony.

On the same day, Twitter banned the account, which was being followed by some 88.8 million people, citing the risk of further incitement to violence.

Trump's followers numbered 86.6 million as of Sunday — though it was unclear how many of those were real and how many were bots — while the number of accounts followed by him went from zero to 49.

The account also linked to a campaign website seeking donations for Trump's 2024 presidential run.

It was not clear who linked the website to the account or what any changes in the number of followers means — mass layoffs in recent weeks under Musk have seen Twitter's communications team decimated.

Trump reveled in using Twitter as a mouthpiece during his presidency, posting policy announcements, attacking political rivals and communicating with supporters.

More than 15 million votes were cast in Musk's poll — Twitter has 237 million daily users — with 51.8 percent in favor of reinstating Trump's controversial profile and 48.2 percent against.

Musk asked for a simple "yes" or "no" response to the statement, "Reinstate former President Trump."

On Saturday, while the poll was still underway, Trump posted a link to it on Truth Social, the Twitter alternative he founded, urging his 4.6 million followers there to vote for him.

But he also wrote: "don't worry, we aren't going anywhere. Truth Social is special!"

And, appearing via video at a gathering of the Republican Jewish Coalition in Las Vegas, Trump said he welcomed the poll and was a fan of Musk, but appeared to reject any return to the platform.

"I don't see it, because I don't see any reason for it," he said.

AFP contributed to this report.

Original Article

Sen. Mark Warner: TikTok an ‘Enormous Threat’

Sen. Mark Warner: TikTok an 'Enormous Threat'

(Newsmax/"Eric Bolling The Balance"

By Brian Pfail | Sunday, 20 November 2022 07:06 PM EST

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the social media platform TikTok is an "enormous threat" and that parents should be "very concerned" about their children using the app.

"TikTok is an enormous threat. It's a threat on two levels. One, it is a massive collector of information, oftentimes of our children. They can visualize even down to your keystrokes. So if you're a parent and you got a kid on TikTok, I would be very, very concerned," Warner told host Shannon Bream on "FOX News Sunday."

"All of that data that your child is inputting and receiving is being stored somewhere in Beijing," Warner added, and it's difficult to "separate out TikTok from the fact that the actual engineers [are] writing the code in Beijing."

TikTok is owned by Chinese-based company ByteDance, which has spurred some concern among lawmakers about user data and the company's ties to the Chinese government.

The second threat level "is that TikTok, in a sense, is a broadcasting network" for the Chinese Communist Party, said Warner.

"The China law states that if they suddenly want to dial up the fact that we are going to decrease content that criticizes Chinese leadership but increase the content that your kids may be seeing saying, 'Hey, you know, Taiwan really is part of China.' That is a distribution model that would make RT or Sputnik or some of the Russian propaganda models pale in comparison," Warner said.

The Trump administration warned about TikTok and its influence, attempting to ban the social media platform in 2020. The Biden administration, in a move praised by China, replaced former President Donald Trump's executive orders last year.

"I think Donald Trump was right," Warner said Sunday.

Earlier this year, Warner joined Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., to urge the Federal Trade Commission to investigate TikTok's "apparent deception" over data practices.

"This is not something you would normally hear me say, but Donald Trump was right on TikTok years ago," Warner told Australia's Sydney Morning Herald last month.

Sen. Mark Warner: TikTok an ‘Enormous Threat’

Sen. Mark Warner: TikTok an 'Enormous Threat'

(Newsmax/"Eric Bolling The Balance"

By Brian Pfail | Sunday, 20 November 2022 07:06 PM EST

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the social media platform TikTok is an "enormous threat" and that parents should be "very concerned" about their children using the app.

"TikTok is an enormous threat. It's a threat on two levels. One, it is a massive collector of information, oftentimes of our children. They can visualize even down to your keystrokes. So if you're a parent and you got a kid on TikTok, I would be very, very concerned," Warner told host Shannon Bream on "FOX News Sunday."

"All of that data that your child is inputting and receiving is being stored somewhere in Beijing," Warner added, and it's difficult to "separate out TikTok from the fact that the actual engineers [are] writing the code in Beijing."

TikTok is owned by Chinese-based company ByteDance, which has spurred some concern among lawmakers about user data and the company's ties to the Chinese government.

The second threat level "is that TikTok, in a sense, is a broadcasting network" for the Chinese Communist Party, said Warner.

"The China law states that if they suddenly want to dial up the fact that we are going to decrease content that criticizes Chinese leadership but increase the content that your kids may be seeing saying, 'Hey, you know, Taiwan really is part of China.' That is a distribution model that would make RT or Sputnik or some of the Russian propaganda models pale in comparison," Warner said.

The Trump administration warned about TikTok and its influence, attempting to ban the social media platform in 2020. The Biden administration, in a move praised by China, replaced former President Donald Trump's executive orders last year.

"I think Donald Trump was right," Warner said Sunday.

Earlier this year, Warner joined Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., to urge the Federal Trade Commission to investigate TikTok's "apparent deception" over data practices.

"This is not something you would normally hear me say, but Donald Trump was right on TikTok years ago," Warner told Australia's Sydney Morning Herald last month.

Original Article

Poll: 71 Percent of Democrats Say Biden to Win Reelection

Poll: 71 Percent of Democrats Say Biden to Win Reelection

(Newsmax/"Eric Bolling The Balance")

By Brian Pfail | Sunday, 20 November 2022 06:21 PM EST

Seventy-one percent of Democrats say President Joe Biden could win if he were to run for another term, according to a new USA Today-Ipsos Poll.

The share of Democrats jumped 11 points since August when 60% expressed confidence in the president.

Half of the Democratic voters believe Biden "should be the nominee and deserves reelection," which is up by six points from August.

The poll released Sunday indicates Democrats are starting to feel better about Biden after surprising wins in critical races across the nation, such as in Pennsylvania, Nevada and Arizona, where candidates backed by former President Donald Trump were favored to win.

A sitting president's party typically loses big in an off-year election. Still, Democrats retained control of the Senate, while Republicans took control of the House by smaller margins than anticipated.

The USA Today-Ipsos poll found voters' perceptions, notably among women, jumped by tremendous margins. Fifty-five percent of women in August favored Biden, compared to 71% favoring him in November. Among voters ages 18 to 34, Biden saw an increase of 16 percentage points.

The poll was conducted from Nov. 15 through Nov. 16, surveying 843 Democratic voters with a credibility interval of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

Original Article

Haley Tests Waters of ’24 Presidential Run: ‘I’ve Never Lost’

Haley Tests Waters of '24 Presidential Run: 'I've Never Lost'

(Newsmax/"Eric Bolling The Balance")

By Nick Koutsobinas | Sunday, 20 November 2022 05:02 PM EST

Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley tested the waters on a 2024 presidential run, The Hill reported.

Speaking Saturday at the Republican Jewish Coalition in Las Vegas, Haley said she's "never lost" an election.

"A lot of people have asked if I'm going to run for president. Now that the midterms are over, I'll look at it in a serious way and I'll have more to say soon."

"For now, I'll say this," she continued. "I've won tough primaries and tough general elections. I've been the underdog every single time. When people underestimate me, it's always fun. But I've never lost an election. And I'm not going to start now."

The former South Carolina governor has long been a rumored 2024 candidate and has skirted questions on whether former President Donald Trump should run for reelection.

Last week, Trump announced his 2024 White House run. His announcement followed a number of disappointing midterm results for Republicans.

Original Article

Trump: US Jews ‘Don’t Appreciate Israel the Way They Should’

Trump: US Jews 'Don't Appreciate Israel the Way They Should' (Newsmax)

By Eric Mack | Sunday, 20 November 2022 01:22 PM EST

Former President Donald Trump once again hailed his work to support Israel, also lamenting once again that Jewish people in America do not do enough to do the same.

"I just grew up with a great fondness and a great feeling for Jewish people and for Israel, and I hope people in the United States share that, because some people in the United States — Jewish people — don't appreciate Israel the way they should," Trump said, repeating a remark that his critics and political enemies used to claim anti-Semitism of a man who has Jewish children and grandchildren.

"And I'll tell you who does appreciate Israel very much are the evangelicals, because evangelicals are on your side. The Evangelical Christians, they really are on your side."

Trump remarks came during a virtual appearance at the Republican Jewish Coalition convention in Las Vegas on Saturday.

Trump called himself "the greatest friend Israel ever had in the White House."

"But I appreciate Israel, and it's an honor to have, I think, done far more for Israel than any other president," Trump told the hosts. "I don't think any other president comes close. And it's a great honor for me."

Trump did not hold back on President Joe Biden, as he is wont to do, on myriad topics, but specifically denounced Biden having ruined the U.S.-Israel ties, which are "not even strong by a little bit" now, claiming Biden has "betrayed Israel and the Jewish community."

Trump also hailed Truth Social as a platform strong on supporting Jewish voices in America.

"It's taking care of voices that really want to be taken care of and really smart voices, brilliant voices, voices that in many cases are both sides, but I can tell you there's a lot of voice for Israel and power for Israel," Trump added, The Times of Israel reported.

Original Article

Ohio’s Electorate Shift Makes Sen. Sherrod Brown ‘Ripe for the Picking’ in ’24

Ohio's Electorate Shift Makes Sen. Sherrod Brown 'Ripe for the Picking' in '24 (Newsmax)

By Brian Pfail | Sunday, 20 November 2022 12:34 PM EST

Both Senator-elect John Fetterman, D-Pa., and former Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, sought Senate seats during the 2022 midterms appealing to the working class.

Ryan lost in a close race with Senator-elect J.D. Vance, but both races showed a divergence of both paths. Pennsylvania is a battleground that usually falls towards Democrats, while Ohio has been dropped from that competitive list of states.

Democrats will have to make do with a highly unfavorable Senate map while narrowly holding control. In 2024, Democrats will defend Senate seats in red states, including Montana, West Virginia and Ohio.

With the great victory over Ohio, Republicans will prepare to take on Sen. Sherrod Brown, whose long-term credibility with blue-collar voters was essentially the template for Ryan’s run.

Sen. Brown said last week he planned to seek a fourth term in 2024.

“The state dynamics have changed,” Bob Paduchik, the chairman of the Ohio Republican Party, said before the state Chamber of Commerce. “The Ohio Republican Party is a working-class conservative party. Sherrod has portrayed himself as a working-class Democrat, and there just aren’t many of those left around in Ohio.”

Brown’s top political adviser, Justin Barasky, who also worked on Ryan’s campaign, acknowledged “the national Democratic Party brand has suffered significantly with working-class voters,” including prospective Black and Hispanic voters.

“Ohio is not going the way of Missouri and Iowa, that’s why we have a Democratic senator, and they don’t,” he said. “But we’re not Pennsylvania anymore, and we’re not Wisconsin, and we’re not Michigan.”

“Yes, Tim lost, and the governor’s race was a blowout, so it’s very simple to say, ‘Oh, man, Sherrod is in big trouble,’” he added. The result “leads you to believe Sherrod is in a relatively strong position,” he said, citing Ryan’s higher share of votes in counties that President Joe Biden once won in 2020.

Ohio previously voted twice for former President Barack Obama before swinging to former President Donald Trump, who appealed to cultural and economic issues of white voters without college degrees.

Ryan, a grandson of a steelworker, ran on an anti-China and pro-union platform, telling voters if they want a culture war, “I’m not your guy.”

Northeast Ohio, which Ryan represented in Congress for 20 years, was once a Democrat stronghold built upon organized labor and heavy industry. But this region moved more to the right than any part of Ohio. Mahoning County, which includes his district, gave Vance a larger share of the vote than what the county had for Trump in 2020; that was the first time in nearly 50 years a Republican presidential candidate won Mahoning County.

“Youngstown should be the heart and soul of the Democratic brand – it’s not,” said Irene Lin, a Democratic strategist in Ohio. “Can Sherrod survive? I’m not sure.”

Democratic strategists argue besides the demographics, Ryan had outperformed expectations this year, improving by two points on President Biden’s 2020 loss of Ohio. They also predicted Brown would run a more competitive race in 2024, citing defeats of leading state Republicans in Senate races of DeWine in 2006 and Mandel in 2012.

“The theory of our case was that he was a fraud, was pretending to be something he wasn’t,” said Chabria, Vance’s chief strategist.

“Sherrod Brown is ripe for the picking,” he added. “I think that there’s a huge opportunity.”

Ohio Republicans are exploring options like Frank LaRose, the newly re-elected secretary of state; Mark Kvamme, a venture capitalist; and Matt Dolan, a co-owner of the Cleveland Guardians MLB team.

Original Article

Pence Defends Trump, Warns About AG Garland, Partisan DOJ

Pence Defends Trump, Warns About AG Garland, Partisan DOJ (Newsmax)

By Eric Mack | Sunday, 20 November 2022 12:18 PM EST

After years of breaking from former President Donald Trump, former Vice President Mike Pence offered a limited defense of Trump, questioning whether Trump broke any laws, while denouncing Attorney General Merrick Garland and a politicized Justice Department.

"I don't know if it is criminal to listen to bad advice from lawyers," Pence told NBC News' "Meet the Press" on Sunday about the continued pursuit of Trump for the Jan. 6 Capitol protest, calling efforts to investigate, if not jail, the former president as projecting the image of a "third-world country."

Additionally, Pence rebuked the Justice Department which circumvented normal procedures to secure presidential records for the National Archives. Both the records and Jan. 6 led Garland to appoint another DOJ special counsel to look for criminality of Trump.

"I've not hesitated to criticize the president when I think he was wrong – and clearly, possessing classified documents in an unprotected area is not proper," Pence told NBC host Chuck Todd. "But I have to tell you, I was on the Judiciary Committee for 10 years in the House of Representatives. I know how the Justice Department works. And there had to be many other ways to resolve those issues and collect those classified documents.

"They didn't try everything. And I have to tell you, going to the last resort of executing a search warrant against a former president of the United States I think sent the wrong message. It was a divisive message in this country."

Pence said he once considered the U.S. the "gold standard" of justice in the world, but seeking to find wrongdoing against Trump, including raiding his private residence at Mar-a-Lago in August is something a "third-world" nation does.

"I put the blame for the decision to execute a search warrant at the personal residence of the former president of the United States on the leadership of the Justice Department," Pence said. "It's inconceivable to me that that wasn't a decision that was made at the very highest levels, and approved at the highest levels.

"It was a divisive message in this country. But I think worse still, it was the wrong message to the wider world that looks to America as the gold standard.

"I want to see the credibility of the Justice Department restored after years of politicization during the Trump-Pence administration.

Pence added, "America should never be associated with that image at all," and while he admits "no one is above the law," Pence said assigning yet another special counsel to look for crimes has him skeptical of Garland.

"I have great difficulty with the decision that he made," Pence said. "I have great concerns about his judgment and his leadership at the Justice Department."

"But I would hope the Justice Department would give careful consideration before they take any additional steps in this matter," he concluded.

In another interview with CBS's "Face the Nation," Pence blasted the partisan nature of the House Jan. 6 Select Committee to host Margaret Brennan.

"I served for 12 years in the Congress: It's inconceivable to me that one party would appoint every member of a committee in Congress," Pence said. "That's antithetical to the whole idea of the committee system. That being said, I never stood in the way of senior members of my team cooperating with the committee and testifying. But Congress has no right to my testimony. We have a separation of powers under the Constitution of the United States.

"And I believe it would establish a terrible precedent for the Congress to summon a vice president of the United States to speak about deliberations that took place at the White House.

"I am closing the door on that."

That same argument is used by Trump in his claims of executive privilege, which was quashed by the Justice Department and President Joe Biden in their continued pursuit of their chief political rival.

Original Article

Sen.-elect Mullin to Newsmax: Title 42 Keeps Dangerous Migrants Out of U.S.

Sen.-elect Mullin to Newsmax: Title 42 Keeps Dangerous Migrants Out of U.S. (Newsmax/"Wake Up America Weekend")

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Sunday, 20 November 2022 11:52 AM EST

The use of Title 42 restrictions put in place at the border during the Trump administration has kept dangerous migrants from entering the United States and should remain in place, Rep. Markwayne Mullin, who was elected this month to the U.S. Senate, said on Newsmax Sunday.

"A lot of people don't even understand what Title 42 did," the Oklahoma Republican told Newsmax's "Wake Up America." "It allows us to ship people back either to Mexico or back to the country that they came from because of COVID if they were a single male traveling alone."

Last month, immigration officials caught nine men traveling alone and determined they were on the terrorist watch list, Mullin pointed out.

"We were up 334% on crosses just last month alone since Trump was in office, but you just think about the dangers that we have," he said. "Because of Title 42, we were able to apprehend and hold onto those nine people for three days until we could figure out where they came from, and that's when they got a hit."

But without Title 42, the men would have been released within 24 hours, meaning that there would have been a "huge national security issue," said Mullin.

"You have the administration trying to tell us that the border is secure," he added. "What a joke. What are they trying to do here to the American people, mislead us? Well, that's what they've been doing since they've been in office."

Meanwhile, there are calls to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, and while Mullin is leaving the House for the Senate, he warned that it is a "high threshold" to reach when considering impeachment.

"I do not want Republicans to misuse it," he said. "It's got to be treason or a high crime or misdemeanor committed. The question is, is President [Joe] Biden actually the one calling the shots here, or is it somebody else? I think all of us believe that Biden is a puppet president, to begin with and that somebody else is calling the shots. Unless it's directly related to him, then it's not impeachable. He would have to get the direct order for that to take place."

However, Mullin said he does think there are many people "downstream" who should be removed from office, and Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the incoming speaker, has said there will be investigations.

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Mark Morgan to Newsmax: Mayorkas ‘Most Dangerous’ in Administration

Mark Morgan to Newsmax: Mayorkas 'Most Dangerous' in Administration Mark Morgan to Newsmax: Mayorkas 'Most Dangerous' in Administration (Newsmax/"Wake Up America")

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Sunday, 20 November 2022 10:37 AM EST

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas is the "most dangerous man" in the Biden administration and "he's got to go" Mark Morgan, the acting Customs and Border Patrol Commissioner under former President Donald Trump, said on Newsmax Sunday.

"I hope that the Republican party shows the strength and courage and the political will to do the right thing," Morgan said on Newsmax's "Wake Up America" Sunday while referring to calls to impeach Mayorkas. "We have to hold people accountable and what's going on on our southwest border is killing people every single day…he's got to and the American people need to see it live and in color."

Mayorkas, he added, is responsible for the nation's homeland security but he is the "chief architect for open borders. That's impacting every aspect of our nation's public health, public safety, and necessary security, but he's lying to the people about it."

Morgan said he thinks the reason the border issues did not become a "kitchen table" issue in the election was that the Biden administration was "lying to them, telling them that there's nothing to see here. That's important."

Meanwhile, a federal judge last week gave the administration until Dec. 21 to wind down its use of Title 42 to expel migrants. Morgan said that when the regulation, set in place under the Trump administration in March 2020 to control migrants' entries under U.S. and international law on grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19 expires, it will have a "domino effect" on the border.

"First of all, this is going to be used by the cartels," said Morgan. "This provides another message to the entire world that now is the time to come, to continue to break into our country illegally because this government has just now made it easier for them to do so."

Secondly, the incentive to remove migrants will be gone, after millions were removed under Title 42, said Morgan.

"The majority of those now are going to be allowed to illegally enter, and then they will be released into the interior United States," said Morgan.

Also on Sunday, Morgan rejected arguments from Ken Cuccinelli, a Department of Homeland Security acting deputy secretary under Trump, who said last week that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's declaration that the situation at the border is lip service without deportations.

"Gov. Abbott has done more than any other governor in the state of our country to try to fill the void left by this administration and the catastrophic crisis they created with their open border policies, said Morgan.

Abbott's "Operation Lone Star" has also been effective in not just stopping illegal migrants, but tens of thousands of pounds of drugs, including fentanyl, from coming into the country, he said.

"The one thing, though, is he can't enforce immigration law, but that's the one thing that he needs to do," said Morgan. "He needs to be able to detain and remove illegal aliens for this crisis to start to have some relief. That's the one thing he's not doing so under the limitation clause."

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With a Smile, Musk Roils Twitter Hate From Critics for Reinstating Trump’s Account

With a Smile, Musk Roils Twitter Hate From Critics for Reinstating Trump's Account (Newsmax)

By Eric Mack | Sunday, 20 November 2022 10:26 AM EST

Elon Musk's restoring former President Donald Trump's Twitter account was hailed as a "middle finger" to the woke leftists and roiled up talk of mass protests and boycotts.

Among the loudest voices opposing restoring the former president's right to free speech on Twitter were CBS immediately boycotting the social media site, the N.A.A.C.P. president calling for a boycott and divestment protest, and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) "defaming" Musk for doing it.

"I'm disgusted," Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon, tweeted in response to chief Democrat rival getting his constitutional right to free speech back.

ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt suggested Musk was feeding hate, while hating on Musk's move to reinstate the former president's account – which has yet to even be used and Trump has vowed to never return to using.

"For @elonmusk to allow Donald Trump back on Twitter, ostensibly after a brief poll, shows he is not remotely serious about safeguarding the platform from hate, harassment and misinformation," Greenblatt tweeted.

Greenblatt added a call for Twitter to be silenced, sharing disdain for Musk's new leadership after the billionaire spent $44 billion to buy the platform.

".@elonmusk's decisions over the last month have been erratic and alarming, but this decision is dangerous and a threat to American democracy. We need to ask — is it time for Twitter to go?" Greenblatt tweeted.

Musk merely responded by trolling the troll.

"Hey stop defaming me!" Musk tweeted.

Another anti-hate group hated on Musk and Twitter, calling for a BDS-like boycott.

"Any advertiser still funding Twitter should immediately pause all advertising," N.A.A.C.P. President Derrick Johnson tweeted.

An EndWokeness Twitter user noted the irony of Trump having far greater reach than his primary political rivals:

"Follower count as of this tweet:

@realDonaldTrump: 83 million

@POTUS: 27.5 million

@VP: 13.8 million

@WhiteHouse: 8.1 million"

Another conservative tweeter hailed Musk's bold move in the face of vitriolic cancel culture.

"Elon Musk reinstating Donald Trump's Twitter account is a middle finger to all of mainstream media, woke leftists & Big Tech," Steven Crowder tweeted. "If you claim to support free speech, this should have you smiling from ear to ear."

But perhaps the most eyebrow-raising response was that of a liberal news organization, CBS News, which vowed to halt its official Twitter activity only to restore it anyway.

"In light of the uncertainty around Twitter and out of an abundance of caution, CBS News is pausing its activity on the social media site as it continues to monitor the platform," CBS correspondent Jonathan Vigliotti said in a segment Friday.

"CBS News is leaving Twitter because they hate free speech," Brigitte Gabriel tweeted.

"CBS News is officially leaving Twitter. @elonmusk already cleaning up the misinformation," Hodgetwins, an account for Black conservatives, tweeted.

But, with the busy Sunday morning coming to promote its political content, CBS News restored its ability to reach its followers.

"After pausing for much of the weekend to assess the security concerns, CBS News and Stations is resuming its activity on Twitter as we continue to monitor the situation," the CBS News press account tweeted.

CBS News and related accounts then continued to promote their content on Twitter.

Original Article

Rep. Van Drew to Newsmax: ‘Good Riddance’ to Pelosi

Rep. Van Drew to Newsmax: 'Good Riddance' to Pelosi

(Newsmax/"Saturday Agenda")

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Saturday, 19 November 2022 06:20 PM EST

The United States is facing its "most difficult time" since the Civil War when it comes to losing the nation's integrity, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who is stepping back from a party leadership role after Republicans took control of the chamber in the midterm elections, is "responsible for that," Rep. Jeff Van Drew said on Newsmax Saturday.

"Good riddance," the New Jersey Republican said on Newsmax's "Saturday Agenda." "I'm sorry that she's even staying in the House of Representatives. I have never supported her. I would not support her."

Pelosi is "a wheeler and dealer and she's done well for herself," Van Drew continued, but "she has not done well for the United States of America. We are in the worst position in many ways that we have ever been in, and we are on the precipice of losing our country, and so much of that is due to her and her leadership."

And even if Pelosi won't be leading the House Democrats officially, "she's going to come up with some crazy ideas of her own," and her replacement as party leader "may even be worse and more radical," said Van Drew. "I'd love to see some moderate, normal Democrats come in."

Under Pelosi's leadership, he added, "all the Democrats did was investigate Donald Trump over and over and over again, and now they're doing it again."

The Russian collusion allegations about Trump were shown to be untrue, he added, and the papers he had been keeping at his Mar-a-Lago estate will prove to be no "big deal."

Further, Pelosi was a "part and parcel" in changing the vision of America, including how children are educated in ways that "are just totally inappropriate and wrong, and some of it is kind of sick," said Van Drew.

Pelosi also did not push against President Joe Biden, but she "pushed further for more radical left-wing issues," the congressman said.

"She used to support a [border] wall," he continued. "We need to have more border police. We need to have borders that are intact. We need to control our spending more. She's a very much part of that. Instead, we spend trillions upon trillions upon trillions of dollars."

Meanwhile, Van Drew dismissed reports that his party is divided, pointing out that "you're never going to have 100% people happy 100% of the time."

However, he said that the party will come together and be united.

"We have to be strong," he said. "The Democrats want us fragmented. The Democrats want us to fail. Democrats don't want us to pull forward and move forward, and we can't let that happen."

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Herschel Walker, Gov. Kemp Campaign in Georgia Together for First Time

Herschel Walker, Gov. Kemp Campaign in Georgia Together for First Time (Newsmax)

BILL BARROW Saturday, 19 November 2022 05:53 PM EST

Fresh off his commanding reelection, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp on Saturday played the role of dutiful Republican soldier as he campaigned for the first time alongside Senate hopeful Herschel Walker after spending months steering clear of his ticket-mate.

The joint appearance reflects how important Kemp's broad coalition will be in determining whether Walker can unseat Sen. Raphael Warnock in a Dec. 6 runoff. The fact it occurred only now underscores the challenges that Walker, a celebrity athlete turned politician, has had appealing to many independents and moderate Republicans amid an intense focus on his rocky past.

"We cannot rest on our laurels, everyone," Kemp told a few hundred supporters standing in the parking lot of a gun store in suburban Atlanta, urging them to cast one more ballot in a midterm election year that was underwhelming for Republicans nationally.

Kemp was the top vote-getter in Georgia's general election, drawing 200,000 more votes in his matchup with Democrat challenger Stacey Abrams than Walker did in his challenge to Warnock. The result: Kemp defeated Abrams by 7.5 percentage points, while Walker trailed Warnock by about 36,000 votes or almost 1 percentage point. Warnock fell just shy of a majority, however, triggering the four-week runoff blitz.

The governor campaigned throughout the fall mostly for his own reelection, though he made appearances with several of GOP nominees for lower statewide offices. All of them won without runoffs. The notable absence was always Walker, with Kemp sometimes avoiding even saying his name when reporters asked about the distance between the two campaigns. Kemp would often say only he backed the "entire ticket."

Since securing a second term, Kemp has become more explicit in his support, even if still calculated. He's signed over his voter turnout operation to a Republican political action committee aligned with Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell and endorsed Walker anew in recent interviews. On Saturday, he pitched Walker as a fiscal and cultural conservative who would back tax cuts and support law enforcement and the military, and he repeated Republicans' principal attack on Warnock: That he votes with President Joe Biden "96% of the time."

"I know that Herschel Walker will fight for us," Kemp said. "He will go and fight for those values that we believe in here in our state."

Yet Kemp also used his brief time on stage as a personal victory lap, nodding to his coming second term and mentioning Abrams before he said anything about Walker or Warnock. "I've never been more optimistic about the future of our state, and we're going to keep our state moving in the right direction because we stopped Stacey and saved Georgia," he said.

Republicans see Kemp as a critical validator for Walker, especially since the Georgia runoff is now more locally focused because Democrats already have secured 50 seats and hold Vice President Kamala Harris's tie-breaking vote.

For much of the year, Walker and Republicans tried to nationalize the race because it was among the battlegrounds that would determine Senate control, as Georgia did two years ago with concurrent Senate runoffs won by Democrats Warnock and Sen. Jon Ossoff.

The strategy was partly about tying Warnock to Biden because of the president's lagging approval ratings and generationally high inflation. But it was also seen as a necessity because of some of Walker's liabilities.

Walker has on multiple occasions exaggerated his academic achievements, business success and philanthropic activities. He's faced accusations of violence against his first wife. During the campaign, he acknowledged multiple children he'd not previously talked about publicly, doing so only after media reports on their existence. In October, two women Walker once dated alleged that he encouraged and paid for their abortions despite his stance as a candidate for a national abortion ban with no exceptions.

Walker denies he ever paid for an abortion and has answered with a withering assault on Warnock, focusing in recent weeks on the poor living conditions at an Atlanta apartment building owned by a foundation of the Ebenezer Baptist Church where Warnock serves as senior pastor. Walker has used apparent eviction notices issued to some tenants and complaints by its residents to cast Warnock as a "hypocrite" and "wolf in sheep's clothing."

Still, the cumulative effect has fed Warnock's efforts to tag Walker as "not ready" and "not fit" for the Senate, and it's made Walker much less popular than Kemp, especially among independents and moderate Republicans. That's more concerning in an environment where the GOP can't use Senate control as the incentive for wary GOP-leaning voters to back Walker.

Walker's electoral shortcomings were especially acute in suburban Atlanta. While Walker ran about 5 points behind Kemp statewide, that gap was almost 7 points in Cobb County, where Saturday's rally was held, with similar gaps in several other metro area counties that are critical to Republicans' statewide coalition.

Indeed, an AP VoteCast survey of the general electorate found that 7 in 10 voters who backed Kemp said they did so enthusiastically, but only about half of Walker's voters said the same. Among Walker supporters, about 4 in 10 said they backed him with reservations and about 1 in 10 said they were opposing the other candidates.

Further, Kemp seems to have reaped benefits from having resisted former President Donald Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia and nationally. Only 29% of Georgia's voters said Kemp supports former President Trump too much, according to AP VoteCast, while 43% said that of Walker, who is a friend of Trump and is running with his endorsement.

"Brian Kemp is clearly the most popular Republican in Georgia, and he clearly has the most significant organization," said Josh Holmes, an influential Republican strategist in Washington and former chief of staff to McConnell.

Even Democrats concede the point, holding a press conference earlier Saturday featuring voters who said they voted for Kemp and Warnock.

Herschel Walker, Gov. Kemp Campaign in Georgia Together for First Time

Herschel Walker, Gov. Kemp Campaign in Georgia Together for First Time (Newsmax)

BILL BARROW Saturday, 19 November 2022 05:53 PM EST

Fresh off his commanding reelection, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp on Saturday played the role of dutiful Republican soldier as he campaigned for the first time alongside Senate hopeful Herschel Walker after spending months steering clear of his ticket-mate.

The joint appearance reflects how important Kemp's broad coalition will be in determining whether Walker can unseat Sen. Raphael Warnock in a Dec. 6 runoff. The fact it occurred only now underscores the challenges that Walker, a celebrity athlete turned politician, has had appealing to many independents and moderate Republicans amid an intense focus on his rocky past.

"We cannot rest on our laurels, everyone," Kemp told a few hundred supporters standing in the parking lot of a gun store in suburban Atlanta, urging them to cast one more ballot in a midterm election year that was underwhelming for Republicans nationally.

Kemp was the top vote-getter in Georgia's general election, drawing 200,000 more votes in his matchup with Democrat challenger Stacey Abrams than Walker did in his challenge to Warnock. The result: Kemp defeated Abrams by 7.5 percentage points, while Walker trailed Warnock by about 36,000 votes or almost 1 percentage point. Warnock fell just shy of a majority, however, triggering the four-week runoff blitz.

The governor campaigned throughout the fall mostly for his own reelection, though he made appearances with several of GOP nominees for lower statewide offices. All of them won without runoffs. The notable absence was always Walker, with Kemp sometimes avoiding even saying his name when reporters asked about the distance between the two campaigns. Kemp would often say only he backed the "entire ticket."

Since securing a second term, Kemp has become more explicit in his support, even if still calculated. He's signed over his voter turnout operation to a Republican political action committee aligned with Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell and endorsed Walker anew in recent interviews. On Saturday, he pitched Walker as a fiscal and cultural conservative who would back tax cuts and support law enforcement and the military, and he repeated Republicans' principal attack on Warnock: That he votes with President Joe Biden "96% of the time."

"I know that Herschel Walker will fight for us," Kemp said. "He will go and fight for those values that we believe in here in our state."

Yet Kemp also used his brief time on stage as a personal victory lap, nodding to his coming second term and mentioning Abrams before he said anything about Walker or Warnock. "I've never been more optimistic about the future of our state, and we're going to keep our state moving in the right direction because we stopped Stacey and saved Georgia," he said.

Republicans see Kemp as a critical validator for Walker, especially since the Georgia runoff is now more locally focused because Democrats already have secured 50 seats and hold Vice President Kamala Harris's tie-breaking vote.

For much of the year, Walker and Republicans tried to nationalize the race because it was among the battlegrounds that would determine Senate control, as Georgia did two years ago with concurrent Senate runoffs won by Democrats Warnock and Sen. Jon Ossoff.

The strategy was partly about tying Warnock to Biden because of the president's lagging approval ratings and generationally high inflation. But it was also seen as a necessity because of some of Walker's liabilities.

Walker has on multiple occasions exaggerated his academic achievements, business success and philanthropic activities. He's faced accusations of violence against his first wife. During the campaign, he acknowledged multiple children he'd not previously talked about publicly, doing so only after media reports on their existence. In October, two women Walker once dated alleged that he encouraged and paid for their abortions despite his stance as a candidate for a national abortion ban with no exceptions.

Walker denies he ever paid for an abortion and has answered with a withering assault on Warnock, focusing in recent weeks on the poor living conditions at an Atlanta apartment building owned by a foundation of the Ebenezer Baptist Church where Warnock serves as senior pastor. Walker has used apparent eviction notices issued to some tenants and complaints by its residents to cast Warnock as a "hypocrite" and "wolf in sheep's clothing."

Still, the cumulative effect has fed Warnock's efforts to tag Walker as "not ready" and "not fit" for the Senate, and it's made Walker much less popular than Kemp, especially among independents and moderate Republicans. That's more concerning in an environment where the GOP can't use Senate control as the incentive for wary GOP-leaning voters to back Walker.

Walker's electoral shortcomings were especially acute in suburban Atlanta. While Walker ran about 5 points behind Kemp statewide, that gap was almost 7 points in Cobb County, where Saturday's rally was held, with similar gaps in several other metro area counties that are critical to Republicans' statewide coalition.

Indeed, an AP VoteCast survey of the general electorate found that 7 in 10 voters who backed Kemp said they did so enthusiastically, but only about half of Walker's voters said the same. Among Walker supporters, about 4 in 10 said they backed him with reservations and about 1 in 10 said they were opposing the other candidates.

Further, Kemp seems to have reaped benefits from having resisted former President Donald Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia and nationally. Only 29% of Georgia's voters said Kemp supports former President Trump too much, according to AP VoteCast, while 43% said that of Walker, who is a friend of Trump and is running with his endorsement.

"Brian Kemp is clearly the most popular Republican in Georgia, and he clearly has the most significant organization," said Josh Holmes, an influential Republican strategist in Washington and former chief of staff to McConnell.

Even Democrats concede the point, holding a press conference earlier Saturday featuring voters who said they voted for Kemp and Warnock.

Original Article

Rep. Sessions to Newsmax: Not Endorsing Trump Yet

Rep. Sessions to Newsmax: Not Endorsing Trump Yet pete sessions

Rep. Pete Sessions (Getty)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Saturday, 19 November 2022 03:15 PM EST

Former President Donald Trump's time in office was a "huge advantage" both nationally and globally, and he'll be "well prepared" to take on President Joe Biden in 2024; but it's not a "done deal" that he'll be the only person seeking the Republican nomination, Rep. Pete Sessions said on Newsmax Saturday.

"I think it's always good to have several people on a state going around the country discussing these issues, so it's certainly not a done deal that President Trump would be that only person," the Texas Republican said on Newsmax's "Saturday Agenda," after he was asked if he endorses Trump at this time. "I think it would be better if we see others who come and add to that debate."

Trump does see where America "not only economically but morally is degraded themselves down to the point where he believes that he can run on not just what he did, but also what needs to be done," Sessions added.

However, he said Trump has not yet asked him for his endorsement. And while it remains to be seen who else will share the stage with him, Sessions noted that American people want to know more about Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

"I served with Ron in Congress for a number of years and know [him]," said Sessions. "He has distinguished himself in the current issues of the time and the current issues of being an executive in office and leading Florida through what seemingly have been difficult times."

Sessions also commented on Attorney General Merrick Garland's move to appoint a special counsel to investigate Trump in connection with the Jan. 6 incidents at the Capitol, the presence of documents at the Mar-a-Lago estate and efforts to undo the 2020 election, saying that the Department of Justice under Biden is "highly political."

"The House committee on Jan. 6 has been at this thing for almost two years," said Sessions. "This is once again a continuation and an excuse to spend money to try and whip the ideas against the former president. To hold not just him, but also our party accountable for the events that happened that day is wholly inappropriate. I think [Trump's] exactly right. It is a misuse of power."

It's also sad that after two years of Democrats dealing with Jan. 6 through the House, "they could not come up with any other answer except to pass it down to the Department of Justice," said the congressman. "The American people had enough of this kind of politicization of these efforts."

He added that he's less worried about the investigation will affect taxpayers than he is about how the Department of Justice has been politicized and what Biden has done concerning inflation and the border.

"He is a president who is well out of touch, and he is making a strong run at Jimmy Carter in the history of this country," Sessions said.

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Giuliani to Newsmax: NY Prosecutors Showed ‘Guts’

Giuliani to Newsmax: NY Prosecutors Showed 'Guts'

(Newsmax/"Saturday Report")

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Saturday, 19 November 2022 12:51 PM EST

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani Saturday told Newsmax that he has a "great deal of respect" for prosecutors in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York for their announcement that there are no charges planned against him in connection with a probe into his interactions with Ukrainian figures.

"Given the political climate we live in and the entirely corrupt attorney general that we have, the pressure on them to do something is enormous," Giuliani, who was also an attorney for former President Donald Trump, told Newsmax's "Saturday Report." "They could just have let it float."

Many times, the conclusion of a grand jury investigation isn't announced, he added, "so it took guts to do that, but it went against the grain of what the Justice Department is doing right now: to persecute anybody connected with Donald Trump."

Giuliani, who at one time headed the U.S. Attorney's office for the Southern District, said he knew the officials finished their investigation three months ago, but said the New York office "is not like some of the other prosecutors' offices."

"They may have kind of gotten overzealous in one of one or two circumstances back during the Trump impeachment and stuff like that, but it's still maybe the only thing we have left," said Giuliani. "It's still a sound prosecutor's office."

The decision against filing charges on Giuliani came after a review of evidence from raids on his home and law office in April 2021 in part of an investigation into whether his dealings with Ukrainian figures in the run-up to the 2020 presidential election required him to be registered as a foreign agent.

"I know I'm innocent and I know that the pursuit of me was unshared, but they didn't know that until they looked at the evidence," said Giuliani.

He also noted that he and Donald Trump Jr. were dropped from the Jan. 6 investigation by an Obama-appointed judge "who has written some very scathing language" about the events of that day but was able to "look at the evidence like a warrior" and say there was no evidence showing he or the president's son did anything to incite violence.

Giuliani also on Saturday spoke out about Attorney General Merrick Garland's appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate Trump, calling accusations against him "make-believe crimes."

"This is a dispute over records in which already they've taken it down from the hysterical exaggeration that originally existed: that there were nuclear secrets," he said. "There's nothing nuclear about them."

There is an argument also about whether Trump had the right to send presidential records to his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, Giuliani said, but he pointed out that former President Barack Obama "still has all kinds of records" that have not yet been digitized.

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Newsmax Has Yet to Call GOP Rep. Valadao’s Reelection

Newsmax Has Yet to Call GOP Rep. Valadao's Reelection (Newsmax)

By Eric Mack | Saturday, 19 November 2022 11:44 AM EST

While some have projected the reelection of Rep. David Valadao, R-Calif., Newsmax has yet to call the 22nd Congressional District race Saturday.

Valadao leads Democrat Rudy Salas by 4,547 votes (44,862-40,315) with 85,177 votes counted, more than a 5-point margin (52.67%-47.33%).

The difficulty to call the race comes due to California's mass mail-in balloting and legalized ballot harvesting laws.

It is one of just five races remaining to be called as Republican hold a 219-211 majority in the House thus far, as just 218 seats clinch the majority.

Among the five remaining race, Republicans lead three of them, including Valadao, Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., in headed for a state-mandated recount, and John Duarte holding a razor-thin lead in California's newly redrawn 15th Congressional District.

If all three of the GOP leads hold, the GOP will hold a 222-213 majority come January.

Valadao was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump in early 2021 after Trump left office. He was targeted in the GOP primary but remains one of only two of those 10 impeachment GOP seats still in Congress, if he wins.

Just one other remains in the House after these midterms: Rep. Dan Newhouse, D-Wash.

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