Small win over McCarthy, Pelosi re-elected as House Speaker as bipartisan checks and balances intensify
U.S. 117th Congress opens House Speaker election shows the decline of leftist power
U.S. House Speaker’s Election Shows Leftist Momentum
Trump: Joe Secretary of State can’t answer my under-the-table ballot question
The January 6 pro-Trump march in Washington DC lengthens to two days
We don’t need to accept the “new normal” imposed by the left
Sunday’s election for Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives was settled, with Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi narrowly winning the election, leaving the Democrats with a declining advantage and a growing bipartisan balance. The election was marred by a hiccup when a fight broke out over a mask before a meeting between members of both parties. Republican lawmakers: Infected Democratic lawmakers still traveled to DC to vote for Pelosi to the floor.
President Trump tweeted Sunday that the Joe Secretary of State was evasive and clueless about my election fraud questions.
Update: The pro-Trump march in Washington DC on Jan. 6 was extended to two days.
In the lost year of 2020, there are a lot of “new normal” in America, are they a blessing or a curse for America?
Trump: Joe’s Secretary of State Can’t Answer My Under-the-Table Ballot Question
President Trump tweeted on Sunday (Jan. 3), “I spoke with (Joe) Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger yesterday about voter fraud in Fulton County and Georgia.”
Trump said Raffensperger “was unwilling, or unable, to answer questions about ‘under the table ballot’ fraud, ballot destruction, out-of-state ‘voters’, dead voters, etc. He simply doesn’t have a clue!”
Trump is referring in the article to video footage from the State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Fulton County, from the night of Nov. 3 to the early morning hours of Nov. 4. The video shows that from about 11 p.m. on Nov. 3 until about 1:30 a.m. on Nov. 4, Fulton County workers were secretly counting votes without supervisors.
January 6 pro-Trump march in Washington DC lengthens to two days
At a joint session of Congress on Jan. 6, 12 senators and more than 100 House members will challenge the Electoral College votes in election fraud states. The latest news is that the pro-Trump event in Washington DC has been extended to two days.
Victoria We The Kraken” wrote in a tweet.
January 5|1pm at Freedom Plaza
Jan. 6|9 a.m. Oval Lawn (Presidential Park South)
Jan. 6|1 p.m. Capitol Hill (North East Dr)
She also made a special reminder to always stay indoors or in groups after dark. Subway closure claims are rumors and there is no official information on subway closures at this time.
These streets below will be closed on the 6th. Under normal conditions, it is a 35-minute walk from the Oval Lawn to Capitol Hill.
She also shared information about her accommodations while in DC for your reference.
She tweeted that there are two hotels in town that will be closed because they are places where the Proud Boys like to congregate. I booked a hotel in a satellite city in the suburbs and everything was fine and very reasonably priced. The restaurant can’t dine-in, but you can take out.
Small win over McCarthy, Pelosi re-elected as House speaker, bipartisan checks and balances intensify
Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) received enough votes in the House of Representatives on Sunday (Jan. 3) to get elected to her fourth term as speaker of the House.
Pelosi is the California U.S. Representative who has led the House Democrats since 2003. Pelosi received 216 votes on Sunday, while Republican House leader and California U.S. Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R) won 209 votes. McCarthy was re-elected as House Minority Leader. Two Democrats voted against Pelosi’s re-election that day.
In November’s election, Democrats lost 11 House seats, outpacing Republicans by a slim majority of 222-212. British media pointed out that moderates of all parties are more likely to flex their political muscle as the balance of power in the House and Senate narrowed this year.
The epidemic played a negative role in Sunday’s congressional session. Last week, a newly elected House Republican died of the virus, while a Democratic lawmaker also tested positive and several other lawmakers declared self-quarantine and did not attend due to the outbreak. Due to the outbreak, House members voted as a group, causing procedural delays. House leaders announced guidelines for social distancing, limiting access to the chamber to 72 lawmakers at a time.
Photo: House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy (right) and Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (left).
In the Senate, there were 52 Republicans and 48 Democrats in the Senate last year. But the current number is 51 Republicans and 48 Democrats. The runoff for Georgia’s two senators will take place on Jan. 5.
Republicans will consolidate the Republican majority led by Mitch McConnell as long as they win one or two seats in Georgia. If Democrats win two seats in Georgia on Jan. 5, it will likely produce a 50:50 Senate. The vice president-elect will automatically become the president of the Senate when he is sworn in.
Congressional War Preview Pelosi Spells Out Infected Democrat Lawmakers Vote in the Flesh
On Sunday (Jan. 3), during the first session of the 117th Congress, freshman Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and another new Republican lawmaker broke out in a heated argument with Democrats. Rep. Greene, one of the parties involved, said the cause had to do with the mask she was wearing.
According to Politico, the argument between Rep. Greene and another unnamed Republican broke out inside the Capitol after they told a Democratic staffer that “they don’t wear masks. However, Green later said the reports were false.
“I actually do have a mask,” Green tweeted Sunday, posting a photo of himself wearing a mask with the words “Trump (Trump) won.
Green said, “(Democratic) Speaker Pelosi changed the rules of the epidemic because she is obsessed with the Speaker’s gavel. No one could attack me about the gavel when Pelosi got Democrats with confirmed epidemics to vote for her.”
The Democrat Greene was talking about was Wisconsin Rep. Gwen Moore. Fox News reported that Moore was diagnosed with the Chinese Communist virus (coronavirus) six days ago, but showed up at the polls on Sunday without providing a negative test. Three other members of Congress remain in quarantine, but are still voting remotely in the speaker’s race through “special arrangement channels.
We don’t need to accept the “new normal” imposed by the left
Over the past year, all of us have seen and heard things that were unthinkable in 2019, but today they are happening almost daily. We call these transformative events the “new normal. So what are the “new normals” in the United States? Are they a blessing or a curse for the United States?
Karen Besner, writing in the American Thinker on January 2, explores this question in depth. Caren Besner is a retired teacher who writes for several conservative media outlets in the United States.
The North American Conservative Review compiles and reports that examples of the new normal are all around us, affecting every aspect of our lives.
Cutting police funding while crime rates soar is the new normal; prisoners being put back on the streets while barbers and restaurateurs are fined and sometimes jailed is the new normal; Big Tech and the mainstream media shutting down all opposition to their agenda while extolling the virtues of democracy and free speech is the new normal.
A CNN reporter describing protesters as “peaceful protesters” while the skyline burns behind him is the new normal; closing all restaurants, places of worship and small businesses while allowing protesters to burn, riot and loot in the name of “social justice” and allowing strip clubs, abortion clinics and marijuana outlets to open is the new normal.
It is the new normal for inmates in some states to receive COVID vaccines while vulnerable seniors must wait; and it is the new normal for the latest COVID relief bill to include only modest relief for tens of millions of desperate Americans while giving billions in foreign aid.
Moreover, the “peaceful protesters” have made the police the number one target of vilification, especially in blue states and cities, where state and local governments and radical district attorneys acquiesce to all the demands of the protesters and refuse to prosecute them for their crimes, leaving them free to do exactly as they wish.
These are just a few of the many examples of the new normal that assaults and numbs our senses on a daily basis.
The late publisher William Randolph Hearst addressed this issue nearly a century ago, on May 7, 1924, when he wrote: “The day this nation ceases to formulate its foreign policy primarily for the safety and welfare of the American people will be its national doom -and its international doom- the day it does.”
We have forgotten the ideals that once made us great, replacing the “old normal” of freedom, individual responsibility, equality and solidarity with the “new normal” of identity politics, nihilism, deculturation and critical race theory.
In a speech more than a century ago, on May 14, 1920, President Warren G. Harding warned the nation, “What America needs now is not heroism, but healing; not narcotics, but normalcy; not revolution, but restoration.” The time has come again for Americans to advocate for normalcy and recovery. And then, yes, America can and will be great again.
North American conservative commentary says that the so-called “new normal” is nothing more than a reversal of the existing American political and legal system, foreign policy, economic order, and cultural orientation to life, while what President Trump has been striving for for four years is to preserve the political and legal system created by America’s founding fathers, to oppose the globalization policies of the communist utopia, to restore America First, reducing government regulation of business, letting go of the laws of the economy, and restoring traditional Judeo-Christian conservative values, all of President Trump’s efforts are in the will of God. The 2020 election is an excellent time to tell the difference between good and evil.
Recent Comments