Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America applaud the Trump Administration for finally designating the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps a “foreign terrorist organization” after the group has for years sponsored and participated in terrorism throughout the Middle East. They also worry that the revolving door of cabinet officials in the Trump administration is causing too much instability as Kirstjen Nielsen resigns as secretary of the Department Homeland Security. And they wonder if former Auburn football coach Tommy Tuberville has a chance to overcome one of the nation’s fiercest college football rivalries and win the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate race in Alabama.
Senate
Trudeau in Trouble, Pelosi Rips Moderate Dems, Roy Moore Running Again?
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Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America discuss the sudden political turmoil for Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau after his former attorney general says Trudeau told her go easy on a major business that was under investigation and then removed her as attorney general when she refused. They also have fun as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi berates moderate House Democrats for siding with Republicans on multiple motions to recommit and warns that they’ll get less help from the party in 2020 if they don’t vote the way she wants. And they slam their heads against their desks as Roy Moore considers another run for the Senate seat he lost in 2017.
‘This is Such Extreme Depths of Depravity’
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Pro-life activists are deeply upset that Democrats derailed legislation to protect babies who are delivered after attempted abortions, but they say the silver lining is that there is no doubt where Democrats now stand on infanticide.
“It’s actually immensely helpful. It reveals with such clarity what the abortion lobby wants, which is a right to a dead child no matter what,” said Susan B. Anthony List Vice President of Communications Mallory Quigley.
On Monday, the Senate failed to reach 60 votes in favor of the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act. The vote was 53-44. Three Democrats voted in favor of the plan. Three Republicans missed the vote.
In explaining their opposition to the bill sponsored by Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse, Democrats cited their pro-choice commitments.
Washington Sen. Patty Murray argued that the legislation would force women to accept “care that may directly conflict with your wishes at a deeply personal, often incredibly painful moment in your life — because politicians in Washington decided their beliefs mattered more than yours.”
“Republican politicians just tried (and failed) again to score political points at the expense of women. Enough. Women and their doctors should decide what’s best for their health – not the Republican politicians just tried (and failed) again to score political points at the expense of women. Enough. Women and their doctors should decide what’s best for their health – not the @SenateGOP,” tweeted Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren.
Quigley says those arguments aren’t even relevant in this debate.
“This is not a bill about abortion. It’s about infanticide and protecting babies that are born alive during failed abortions, completely separate entities from their moms. What are we going to do with them? All this bill would do is require that those infants receive the same care that we would give and expect for a preemie baby born at the same stage,” said Quigley.
Maine GOP Sen. Susan Collins supported the legislation. Quigley says Collins is strongly pro-choice and her vote proves this bill was not about abortion.
Other Democrats said the legislation was unnecessary because infanticide is already banned through the 2002 Born-Alive Infant Protection Act. Quigley says that’s very misleading.
“The 2002 bill was really a statement about what we believe about these babies, but it didn’t require anything. There were no legal teeth and no legal requirements,” said Quigley.
The Sasse bill allows for mothers to prosecute providers for not caring for their child once it’s born and prescribes jail time for those who refuse to attempt life-saving care.
Quigley says this should have been an easy vote on the merits and in pleasing the public.
“It’s not just the morally right position to take. It’s very popular. Seventy-seven percent of voters support this legislation. Fifty-five percent strongly support it,” she said.
Quigley expects this issue to resonate loudly in the 2020 campaign now that Americans can see where Democrats stand.
“This is such extreme depths of depravity. It’s really horrifying that we’re in a place where we have to have these conversations, but I’m thankful for the clarity, because at least having this conversation allows us to change people’s hearts and minds,” said Quigley.
Listen to the full podcast to hear Quigley respond to other objections from Democrats on the legislation, how pro-life lawmakers are working to force a vote on this in the House of Representatives, and how President Trump is taking steps to reduce taxpayer funding of Planned Parenthood by as much as $60 million.
Sasse Explains Why Dems Refuse to Ban Infanticide
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Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse vows to press forward on a federal ban on infanticide, says opposition is rooted in the big dollars of the abortion industry, and believes many critics are convincing themselves that active killing of newborns is wrong but passively killing them is not.
Last week, the U.S. Senate failed to pass the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act by unanimous consent. Washington Democratic Sen. Patty Murray objected, saying the bill is unnecessary because infanticide is already illegal. Later she suggested there was more to the bill than requiring care for a baby born alive after an abortion.
Sasse authored an op-ed in USA Today on Tuesday, imploring readers not to think of infanticide as a partisan issue.
“Every single public servant should be able to say it’s wrong to leave newborn babies to die. Sadly, that’s not happening,” he wrote.
In a Tuesday interview with Radio America, Sen. Sasse says he is genuinely surprised that there is any opposition to his Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act.
“If there’s anything the U.S. Senate ought to be able to get done 100-0, it’s something like this, stating the basic truth that babies that are born alive deserve a fighting chance at life,” said Sasse.
Sasse has been pushing he bill for two-and-a-half years but says there is much greater urgency after the New York law that repealed requirements for medical personnel to take all possible steps to care for babies that survive abortions.
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam was under fire on this issue before his yearbook scandal pushed the infanticide issue off the front pages. In a live interview, Northam said babies that survive abortions should be resuscitated if that’s what the family wants and then kept comfortable while a discussion ensues – presumably about whether to continue to provide care for the newborn infant.
The Virginia abortion bill was defeated but Sasse finds Northam’s comments telling in how opponents are parsing the issue.
“I think they would draw a distinction between active and passive. They say, ‘Well, if these babies survive an abortion, no one is proactively taking a pillow and putting it over the baby’s face and smothering them to death. Since we have laws against murder already, that is infanticide. And the passive tolerance of these babies being killed, that’s a different thing and we don’t need any protections for that.'”
“That logic breaks down entirely when you consider the fact that a 12-month-old baby would also die if you left her out in the elements to die by exposure. By the way, in human history, lots of cultures have done abhorrent things like that.
“The Aztecs and the Greeks both practiced infanticide. If they thought a baby was undesirable, if she had birth defects, they would leave them out in the cold to die. So their argument here is that passive killing is not really that big of a problem. Only active killing needs to be prohibited. That’s total nonsense,” said Sasse.
Sasse says the refusal of many Democrats to stand up for babies even after they are born is more understandable when you follow the money.
“A lot of these folks are motivated by the zealotry of an abortion industry that makes lots and lots and lots of money off the status quo,” said Sasse.
Sasse says he will keep pushing his legislation in the Senate, although it could take months or even years to get a floor vote. But he wants ever member of the Senate and the Democratically-controlled House to be on the record about where they stand on infanticide.
“Love is bigger than politics and everybody with a heart should believe that we should be able to have consensus around a common sense, pro-compassion, pro-science fact that a baby that’s born alive deserves a fighting chance,” said Sasse.
“We have a moral obligation to provide the same sort of care for those babies that would be provided to any other baby at that stage of gestation.”
Listen to the full podcast to hear Sasse explain why the celebration of late term abortion legislation in New York was a perversion of a unifying symbol and offer his full analysis of Gov. Northam.
Senate Says No Collusion, McSally…We Have A Problem, Fake Apologies
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Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America welcome reports that Senate Intelligence Committee Republicans and Democrats agree that there is no direct evident showing a conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia in 2016. They also shudder for GOP Senate prospects in 2020 as astronaut Mark Kelly, husband of former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, announces he will run against Arizona Sen. Martha McSally next year. And Jim sounds off on the insincere apologies offered by the likes of Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam and Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar.
Inside the Koch Confab, We’re Not Getting A Wall, Covering Up Kamala’s Cronyism
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America review Jim’s trip to the Koch Seminar Network and how the billionaire brothers that Democrats and the media like to describe as evil are pouring money into charities so struggling Americans don’t have to depend solely on the government. They also sigh as reports make clear that Senate Republicans have no intention of allowing another government shutdown, meaning they aren’t prepared to play hardball over border wall funding. And they take aim at a Washington Post opinion column arguing that it’s somehow sexist to question whether Kamala Harris got help in launching her political career due to prominent appointments she received from a man she was having an affair with at the time.
Cuccinelli: GOP Emboldened on Border Wall Fight
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Democrats now control the House of Representatives, but former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli says Republicans appear more committed than ever to funding the border wall demanded by President Trump.
A partial government shutdown has been in effect since Dec. 22 over a stalemate between Republicans and Democrats over funding the border wall. Prior to Thursday, the stagnation was due to the Senate’s inability to find 60 votes for the funding.
The House Democratic majority has no plans to even consider a bill with money for the wall, but Cuccinelli says the GOP seems much more resolute than usual.
“You don’t hear me say this very often. I was pleased to see (Senate Majority Leader) Mitch McConnell say we’re not going to pass along the House bill that doesn’t include this funding. So he has expressly sided with the president. And I think that’s a first on this issue,” said Cuccinelli.
“I think that show of unity between the new Senate Republican majority, which is bigger than the last one, and the president should be able to hold the line,” said Cuccinelli.
Cuccinelli expects Republicans to stand strong even as the post-holiday media pressure to end the partial shutdown intensifies.
“I don’t see a lot of the usual hand-wringing among Republicans, including establishment Republicans, that I’m used to seeing in circumstances like this. I think, at least for now, they’re girded for a bit of a haul and to salvage some good policy at the border out of this,” said Cuccinelli.
Listen to the full podcast to hear Cuccinelli’s advice for how the GOP’s Senate majority and House minority ought to focus their time and energy over the next two years and how the Trump administration is doing far more to roll back regulations and limit new ones than any administration in recent memory.
Criminal Justice Reform: Is ‘FIRST STEP’ the Right Step?
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President Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan are leading the push to enact the bipartisan FIRST STEP Act, which supporters say will do much more to help prepare convicts to benefit society upon re-entry and address sentencing guidelines for some non-violent offenders.
The House has already passed the bill and a strong majority of senators are expected to support it if it comes to the floor in this lame duck session. Senators still have to address overall spending, a farm bill, and many nominations in those remaining days. But conservative supporters warn that if this doesn’t happen in the next two weeks, it may not happen for years since Democrats are poised to take control of the House in January.
Marc Levin of the Texas Public Policy Foundation says the bill really just takes successes from the state level to the federal level.
“It really builds on the success in many states – especially conservative states like Texas, Georgia, South Carolina – where we’ve basically shown it’s possible to both reduce the prison population and increase public safety,” said Levin.
The sentencing changes are getting the most headlines, especially for non-violent drug offenders. Levin says no one is going easy on those offenders, but there is an effort to make productive citizens out of them.
“There are people now, for a drug offense, ending up with life in prison. This (bill) reduces that mandatory minimum to 25 years. I’d say that’s still pretty tough, but it is moving in the direction of saying, ‘We have to lock up people we’re afraid of, not those we’re mad at,” said Levin.
Critics of the bill, like Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton see provision like inmates being able to earn credits and transition to halfway houses ahead of schedule as likely to put the public in greater danger.
Levin says the credit system does not even apply to violent offenders and some non-violent criminals. He also says the system does not reduce the sentence but does provide an avenue for those prisoners to undergo a more gradual transition back into society.
Listen here for the full podcast, as Levin details the many different programs the bill would facilitate to address why different inmates committed their crimes and to prepare them for productive lives instead of just “warehousing” them and throwing them back on the streets.
‘This Was Quite A Cycle for High Quality Conservatives’
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Democrats succeeded in taking back the majority in the U.S. House of Representatives Tuesday but the blue wave never happened in the Senate, as Republican challengers instead washed out four incumbent Democrats and helped to tighten the GOP’s grip on power.
“This was quite a cycle for high-quality conservative candidates and we’re just very pleased with how it all ended up,” said Senate Conservatives Fund President Ken Cuccinelli, a former Virginia attorney general.
Republicans scored a pick-up in Indiana, where businessman Mike Braun defeated incumbent Democratic Sen. Joe Donnelly. In North Dakota GOP Rep. Kevin Cramer soundly beat Sen. Heidi Heitkamp. Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley scored a convincing victory over Sen. Claire McCaskill, and Florida Gov. Rick Scott upended three-term Sen. Bill Nelson, although that race appears headed for a recount.
Republicans also staved off challenges in Tennessee and Texas. Rep. Marsha Blackburn kept the Tennessee seat for the GOP with a resounding win over former Gov. Phil Bredesen and Sen. Ted Cruz fended off a fierce campaign from Democratic Rep. Beto O’Rourke.
Republicans lost a seat in Nevada, where Rep. Jacky Rosen defeated Sen. Dean Heller and Republican Matt Rosendale fell just short against Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester. In West Virginia, Republican Patrick Morrisey lost to Sen. Joe Manchin. Republican Rep. Martha McSally leads the Arizona Senate race against Rep. Kyrsten Sinema.
Listen to the full podcast as Cuccinelli explains how the Senate brawl over the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh was “an epic turning point” in the battle for the Senate, why he thinks the Republicans really lost control of the House, and whether he thinks Virginia is now a blue state.
Bigger Senate Majority, Dems Flip House, Mixed Results on Governors
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In a recap of the 2018 midterm elections, Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America cheer the expanded Republican majority in the U.S. Senate after four incumbent Democrats were defeated. They also wince as Democrats comfortably take back the House majority. And they look at the surprising GOP wins and disappointing losses in the governor’s races.