Another Florida Republican backs Trump for president



GOP Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida has endorsed former President Donald Trump for president, joining a group of Sunshine State Republicans who have thrown their support behind Trump even as the possibility that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis may throw his hat into the ring looms large.

"There is only one leader at this time in our nation’s history who can seize this moment and deliver what we need - to get us back on track, provide strength and resolve, and Make America Great Again. That is why I am honored to endorse President Donald J. Trump for President in 2024, and I ask my fellow Americans to join me today," Donalds said in a statement.

\u201cI am honored to endorse President Donald J. Trump for President in 2024, and I ask my fellow Americans to join me today.\n\nRead my entire statement here: \nhttps://t.co/OAsUwWuoUk\u201d
— Byron Donalds (@Byron Donalds) 1680796271

Republican Reps. Anna Paulina Luna and Matt Gaetz, both of Florida, had already declared their support for Trump.

During a Trump rally in Texas last month, Gaetz said that DeSantis and U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas should both endorse the former president.

\u201cWATCH: At the Trump Rally in Waco, @MattGaetz calls on Ron DeSantis and Ted Cruz to stand with MAGA and endorse Donald Trump for President.\n\nCrowd erupts in a standing ovation.\u201d
— Donald Trump Jr. (@Donald Trump Jr.) 1679775317

While DeSantis has not announced a presidential bid, GOP Reps. Chip Roy of Texas and Thomas Massie of Kentucky have both already endorsed him.

DeSantis has said that he believes he has what it takes to be president and that he thinks he could defeat President Joe Biden.

Biden has not yet launched a re-election bid but has said that he intends to run. Democrat Marianne Williamson, who ran during the last election cycle before ultimately dropping out, is running again. And a statement of candidacy filed with the Federal Election Commission indicates that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is poised to run for president as a Democrat.

So far on the Republican side, Trump is being challenged by former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, author and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson.

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'Uncle Tom's Cabin' sent to Republican lawmaker's DC office



Republican Rep. Byron Donalds' Washington, D.C., office received a copy of Harriet Beecher Stowe's classic novel "Uncle Tom's Cabin."

"Today, my D.C. office received a copy of the world-renowned book "Uncle Tom's Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Whoever sent this book did so w/ hate in their heart & the desire to depict me as a sellout," a tweet on the congressman's @RepDonaldsPress Twitter account stated.

GOP Rep. Burgess Owens of Utah called the stunt "a clear example of bullies, cowards, intellectual dwarfs and racists who thrive in the shadows of anonymity."

"'Uncle Tom’s Cabin' is a book everyone should read," Grace to You director of digital platforms Darrell B. Harrison tweeted. "Only those who are ignorant of its gospel-themed narrative would view that book with such hateful and spiteful intent as this."

\u201c\u201cUncle Tom\u2019s Cabin\u201d is a book everyone should read. Only those who are ignorant of its gospel-themed narrative would view that book with such hateful and spiteful intent as this.\u201d
— Darrell B. Harrison (@Darrell B. Harrison) 1674159144

Earlier this month, after voting twice for California Republican Kevin McCarthy to become House speaker, Donalds joined the ranks of more than a dozen GOP lawmakers who had been voting against McCarthy. In many of the voting rounds, all or some of the McCarthy opponents voted for Donalds. Donalds voted for Ohio Republican Jim Jordan on the third round, then for himself from the fourth through 11th rounds. He and many others in the group voted for McCarthy from the 12th round on, though McCarthy did not secure the speakership until the 15th round when six lawmakers voted present.

Democratic Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri called Donalds "a prop."

"FWIW, @ByronDonalds is not a historic candidate for Speaker. He is a prop. Despite being Black, he supports a policy agenda intent on upholding and perpetuating white supremacy. His name being in the mix is not progress—it's pathetic," Bush tweeted.

"FWIW, nobody asked @CoriBush her opinion on the matter. Before you judge my agenda, let's have a debate over the policies and the outcomes. Until then, don't be a crab in a barrel!" Donalds tweeted.

Donalds, a Florida Republican, has served as a U.S. congressman since 2021.

\u201cFWIW, nobody asked @CoriBush her opinion on the matter. Before you judge my agenda, let's have a debate over the policies and the outcomes. Until then, don't be a crab in a barrel!\u201d
— Byron Donalds (@Byron Donalds) 1672875094

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'Who was behind it?' Rubio calls on Republicans to use their oversight role to investigate 2020 BLM riots



Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) has called for congressional hearings into the BLM riots that beset 140 American cities in 2020, claiming the lives of dozens of people and injuring over 2,000 police officers.

With Republicans poised to win a majority in the House and potentially also the Senate, Rubio suggested that the GOP will soon be in a position to "stop bad things from happening" and to preclude "crazy people from getting into positions of power."

Rubio's call for accountability

On Monday night, Rubio appeared on Fox News' "The Ingraham Angle," where he delineated actions that Republicans must take after the midterms.

Extra to addressing the leftist terror attacks committed this year against pro-lifers and pro-life pregnancy centers, in response to which no arrests have been made, Rubio suggested it was time to "use our oversight role ... to have hearings on the riots of summer 2020."

Suggesting that "there has been no accountability about the summer of 2020," Rubio posed the questions: "Who was behind it? How much did the political rhetoric lend itself to it?"

The senator also referenced efforts to bail out rioters and questioned whether that encouraged criminals to take to the streets to reoffend.

Rubio promises accountability if GOP takes back control youtu.be

Republican support

Rubio is not the first to call for such an investigation.

On Sept. 22, 2020, 24 members of Congress, including Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), sent a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray requesting that he "use every tool available to the FBI to investigate local, state, and national organizations helping to fuel the criminally violent riots."

The letter alleged that the actions taken by "ANTIFA and other similar extremist groups, as well as actors of a variety of different political persuasions" constituted "domestic terrorism and federal charges must be brought against those who are aiding and abetting the criminal actions of these organizations."

The Sun reported that former President Trump similarly demanded accountability, recommending that Republicans in the House and Senate should study the "murders, riots, and fire bombings in Portland, Minneapolis, Seattle, Chicago, and New York."

Voters also wanted answers concerning the violent events that occurred after the death of George Floyd. A survey conducted last year by Rasmussen Reports revealed that 66% of likely U.S. voters think Congress should investigate "last year's violent protests."

The BLM riots

Between May 25 and July 31, there were 8,700 BLM "protests" nationwide; 574 of those were declared riots. BLM terrorism continued unabated for months. For instance, on Aug. 23, 2020, BLM terrorists torched a police station in Portland, Oregon.

\u201cPrinceton University group studies 3 months of Black Lives Matter protests. Intent is to show they are 'overwhelmingly peaceful.' But report reveals nearly 570 violent demonstrations--riots--in nearly 220 locations spread all across country. https://t.co/it60GBbTZT\u201d
— Byron York (@Byron York) 1599308201

The Guardian reported that at least 25 people were killed in the BLM riots. The Major Cities Chiefs Association indicated that over 2,000 law enforcement officers were injured in the first weeks of the riots.

In September 2020, Axios reported that the "mostly peaceful" BLM riots "will result in at least $1 billion to $2 billion of paid insurance claims." By way of comparison, the Washington Post reported that the Jan. 6 protests caused $1.5 million in damage to the Capitol.

While the looting, vandalism, and killings during the riots were horrific, the fallout of the BLM riots was also consequential. The Sun reported that cities targeted by BLM violence saw murder rates skyrocket, with between "1,000 and 6,000 additional murders" committed.

Violent rhetoric and Democrat support

Last year, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) criticized the Democrats for their hyperbolic characterization of the Jan. 6 protests, noting that while their rhetoric may not correspond to what happened in 2021, it certainly fits with the violence that took place the previous year. He said, "Some [Democrats] have cited the metaphor that the president lit the flames. ... Well, they lit actual flames!"

Former Virginia Democrat Gov. Ralph Northam exacerbated racial tensions after Floyd's death, suggesting that the career criminal was one of those "people being killed for the color of their skin."

Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) told MSNBC in 2020, "There needs to be unrest in the streets for as long as there's unrest in our lives."

In a June 17, 2020, appearance on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," then-candidate for vice president Kamala Harris said of the BLM riots: "They're not going to stop, and everyone beware, because they're not going to stop. ... They're not going to let up, and they should not and we should not."

\u201cFLASHBACK: As violent rioting continues across Democrat controlled cities, Kamala Harris' comments from June are striking: Protesters "should not" let up.\n\nDoes Harris believe the rioting and rampant vandalism in Kenosha should let up?\u201d
— Steve Guest (@Steve Guest) 1598544042

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) tweeted, "Congratulations to all who are out on the streets today. ... Together, we will defeat Trump."

\u201cCongratulations to all who are out on the streets today peacefully protesting.\n\nTogether, we will end police brutality.\n\nTogether, we will defeat Trump.\n\nTogether, we will fight for a government based on justice and compassion, not greed and lies.\u201d
— Bernie Sanders (@Bernie Sanders) 1591468130

Democrats not only championed the BLM riots, but bailed out rioters, enabling them to hit the streets and reoffend. Kamala Harris was among those who helped raised money to spring rioters from jail.

\u201cIf you\u2019re able to, chip in now to the @MNFreedomFund to help post bail for those protesting on the ground in Minnesota. \nhttps://t.co/t8LXowKIbw\u201d
— Kamala Harris (@Kamala Harris) 1591043641

New poll shows devastating outcome for Liz Cheney ahead of Wyoming primary — but Dems try to prevent the inevitable



Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) is nearly 30 points underwater in the fight to win the Republican nomination for Wyoming's at-large congressional seat.

What are the details?

A new poll conducted by the Wyoming Survey & Analysis Center shows that Cheney trails her main opponent, Republican Harriet Hageman, by 29.6% among voters who will likely vote in the Republican primary next week.

The data, when broken down along party lines, is telling.

The survey found that among Republicans Cheney trails Hageman by more than 50 points — 68.1% to 15.4%. Among Democratic voters, however, 97.8% support Cheney, while just 2.2% support Hageman.

\u201cPolls keep getting worse for Liz Cheney in Wyoming GOP primary. New University of Wyoming survey has Cheney down 30 points to challenger Harriet Hageman among likely voters: https://t.co/3oj4trnSCF\u201d
— Byron York (@Byron York) 1660233001

The poll results are shocking for an incumbent Republican who once enjoyed broad support as a leader among House Republicans.

However, Cheney's outspoken opposition to former President Donald Trump, and her position as the ranking member on the House committee investigating Jan. 6., have tarnished her standing among Wyoming voters, which are overwhelmingly Republican.

CNN recently interviewed Wyoming voters about Cheney — and they all bashed her. Voters described Cheney as "an embarrassment" and said she has "lost touch with the values of the people." Others said Cheney has "done us dirty," while another voter told CNN they "wouldn't vote for [Cheney] if she was the last candidate out there."

Anything else?

Cheney's re-election prospects are so dismal that Democrats are now urging their own Wyoming voters to support Cheney.

In a recent video, for example, Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.) urged Wyoming voters to "please consider temporarily switching parties and voting for Liz Cheney on or by August 16th."

In another video, Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.) said Wyoming Democrats could put "country over party ... by registering to vote for [Cheney] in the Republican primary."

For her part, Cheney told the New York Times that she is OK losing re-election because she feels she has done the right thing.

"If the cost of standing up for the Constitution is losing the House seat, then that’s a price I’m willing to pay," she told the newspaper.

MSNBC guest: Republicans love 'negroes' like Herschel Walker who 'do what they're told'



On Saturday, the Nation contributor Elie Mystal asserted on MSNBC’s "The Cross Connection" with Tiffany Cross that Georgia's Republican candidate for Senate Herschel Walker was “unintelligent” and bereft of “independent thoughts.” The self-professed justice correspondent then proceeded to accuse Republicans of backing Walker because he “is going to do what he’s told ... That’s what Republicans want from their negroes: to do what they’re told.”

Elie Mystal has repeatedly and publicly denigrated Herschel Walker’s intelligence and made wild racially-charged accusations as a means to support Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock's bid to stay in power.

Some have taken to Twitter to point out the apparent double-standard when it comes to racially-charged language on the left and the absence of consequence for Democrat-adjacent racial hatred.

\u201cIf a Republican pundit had said on Fox what was said of @HerschelWalker on Fox, major news outlets would be shoving microphones in Raphael Warnock's face demanding he denounce it.\u201d
— Erick Erickson (@Erick Erickson) 1659380055

Radio show host Erick Erickson suggested that comparable language uttered by a Republican would have prompted calls for denunciation.

Florida Rep. Byron Donalds called out Mystal, saying: "If you are a Black Republican, they will...question your Blackness, and insult your intelligence."

\u201cIf you are a Black Republican, they will call you a coon, sell out, question your Blackness, and insult your intelligence.\n\nIt's easy for people like @ElieNYC to talk "tough" without any push back from one of the "Republicans' negros." @TiffanyDCross invite me on, let's talk.\u201d
— Byron Donalds (@Byron Donalds) 1659367327

Javon A. Price regards Mystal's comments on MSNBC as more evidence of the racist mindset possessed by the left.

\u201cCalling Black men \u201cnegroes\u201d is apparently okay if you\u2019re speaking about Black conservatives. \n\nFrom Herschel Walker to Justice Thomas, the Left\u2019s bigotry & racism seems to always reveal itself when Black folks start to question/challenge the Democrat\u2019s narrative\u201d
— Javon A. Price \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@Javon A. Price \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1659368091

Race, a leftist obsession

Seizing upon the resultant uproar, Mystal doubled down on Twitter, suggesting Walker's only qualification is his race. Walker's race is, for the Nation contributor, something of an obsession.

In April, the Nation published an article written by Mystal entitled “The Herschel Walker Senate Campaign is an Insult to Black People,” wherein Mystal called Walker “an animated caricature of a Black person drawn by white conservatives.” He suggested that his campaign was a “political minstrel show.” In the same piece, he simultaneously argued that Georgia Republicans don’t support black candidates yet excitedly support Herschel. He concluded by demanding that black Americans vote as a racial bloc against Walker. Failing to do so, says Mystal, would render them "clapping seals."

Herschel hits back with kindness and prayer

Herschel took to Twitter on August 1 to hit back. In a video response, he said, “Shame on MSNBC and shame on him...I’m going to pray for both of them, because they need Jesus.”

\u201cMy response to @MSNBC and the man who called me the N word. \n\n@ReverendWarnock and the left wing crazies believe America is a fundamentally bad country full of racist people. But you and I know this is a great country, full of good people. #gasen\u201d
— Herschel Walker (@Herschel Walker) 1659377897

Walker noted further that Mystal's screed reminded him of the stark differences between the "leftwing crazies" in the Warnock camp and himself. The former "want to divide us, turn us against each other."

Notwithstanding the MSNBC guest's racial framing, Walker underlined how America is a "good country full of good people."

Oklahoma Republican's bill would ban critical race theory from being taught in school



An Oklahoma state lawmaker is seeking to ban teaching "divisive concepts" from critical race theory in state schools, pushing a for a law that would permit teachers to be fired for doing so.

State Sen. Shane Jett (R) is the author of Senate Bill 803, legislation that would explicitly prohibit the teaching of critical race theory and its components in the state of Oklahoma. In an interview with TheBlaze Wednesday, Jett said that while proponents of critical race theory promise to improve race relations, what's being taught in schools actually creates a racial divide.

"It's teaching divisive concepts and ideology to young people," Jett told TheBlaze. "It is Marxist in origin and it's designed to cause children to, instead of looking at what makes us unique and special and American, it causes them to pit themselves against each other based on the color of their skin."

Jett's bill prohibits Oklahoma public schools and public charter schools, starting from kindergarten to high school, from "teaching, instructing or training" any student to believe in "divisive concepts."

Divisive concepts as defined in the legislation would, for example, promote the idea that "one race or sex is inherently superior to another race or sex" or that "the United States is fundamentally racist or sexist." Schools would not be allowed to teach that "an individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, is inherently racist, sexist or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously" or that "an individual should be discriminated against or receive adverse treatment solely or partly because of his or her race or sex."

Other "divisive concepts" include the idea that "an individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, bears responsibility for actions committed in the past by other members of the same race or sex," or that "meritocracy or traits such as a hard work ethic are racist or sexist or were created by a particular race to oppress another race."

"The fundamental equality that is part of the American ideal is what we're trying to underscore here," Jett said.

Opponents of the bill accuse Jett of wanting to silence conversations about race in public schools.

"It was racially insensitive I thought. It was not a well-written bill; it seems like it said we don't care and we are going to say these things," Democratic state Sen. George Young said in an interview with KFOR.

"You are going to penalize teachers that teach the truth," he charged.

Shannon Fleck, executive director of the Oklahoma Conference of Churches, told KFOR that "race is an active issue" for people of color in Oklahoma.

"It's offensive to all people in Oklahoma that conversations about racism are so divisive that they shouldn't be happening. That's the opposite of how to solve problems in our country and in our state," she said.

Jett, a Cherokee American, strongly objected to critics who say his bill would punish teachers for discussing racial issues in schools.

"My wife is from Brazil, a third of her family down in Brazil would be considered people of color, and racism isn't something that we tolerate," Jett said. "I'm a Cherokee Indian. My mom is Cherokee, my dad is Irish. And so we talk about things that happen in the past honestly, engaged, hard-hitting. How do we fix it? How do we make sure it doesn't happen in the future?"

But critical race theory, in Jett's view, teaches some American children that they are oppressed and that their classmates with a different skin color are the oppressors.

"Instead of teaching equality and harmony and celebrating our progress in American history, this experiment in freedom, they are instead telling children to forget that. The very foundation of the American government is flawed, is racist. And if you're white, you are by definition a racist and you don't even know it. And if you're a person of color, then you are oppressed and you've been victimized. And it's by the other side of the classroom who are white, they have done it and their ancestors," Jett said.

"They are literally teaching animosity," he continued, characterizing the tenets of critical race theory as child abuse. "The bill basically says you can no longer do this. You cannot abuse public school kids at taxpayers' expense and try to get them to distrust each other, distrust American history and then completely rewrite our history."

By introducing his bill, Jett said he wants to have a dialogue and honest debate about race in America "in the context of truth and not in the context of a Marxist ideology that completely ignores the tremendous progress that this society has made."

Critical Race Theory

Jett's legislation is a direct repudiation of popular concepts in academia collectively known as critical race theory. CRT is a worldview that claims most laws and systems in America were historically rooted in the racist oppression of black people and other marginalized groups. It began as a legal movement in the 1970s in response to perceptions that progress made by the civil rights movement was insufficient. Among its influences are Marxism, post-modernism, radical feminism, and other schools of leftist political and cultural thought.

As defined by University of Alabama law professor Richard Delgado and his wife Jean Stefancic in their book, "Critical Race Theory: An Introduction," CRT is "a collection of activists and scholars interested in studying and transforming the relationship among race, racism, and power."

"Unlike traditional civil rights, which embraces incrementalism and step-by-step progress, critical race theory questions the very foundations of the liberal order, including equality theory, legal reasoning, Enlightenment rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law," they wrote.

According to this worldview, racism in the United States is structural. America's laws, institutions, and cultural representations are viewed to work together in ways that perpetuate racial inequity, or the unequal distribution of society's benefits or burdens based on skin color. "White privilege" is the historical and contemporary advantage supposedly shared by people with a fair skin color, their access to society's benefits and shielding from society's burdens. American national values like individualism, individual responsibility, meritocracy, fairness, or equal treatment are said to ignore the realities of structural racism tell a lie that anyone in this country can make whatever they want of themselves, regardless of what they look like or where they come from.

This worldview has found widespread acceptance in academia and became mainstream in American politics and news media following racial unrest nationwide after the death of George Floyd in police custody and subsequent violent protests by the Black Lives Matter movement.

The New York Times' controversial "1619 Project," which sought to reframe American history "understanding 1619," the year the first African slaves were brought to America, "as our true founding," is one example of critical race theory's widespread influence.

Another recent example is the controversy involving Coca-Cola, in which an employee claimed racial sensitivity training used a course called "Confronting Racism" that taught employees "to be less white." The training stated that "To be less white is to:" "be less oppressive," "be less arrogant," "be less certain," "be less defensive," "be less ignorant," "be more humble," "listen," "believe," "break with apathy," and to "break with white solidarity."

Aspects and assumptions of "whiteness," as explained by a publication from the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History & Culture that went viral on social media, include ideas like "self-reliance," "the nuclear family," emphasis on the scientific method, "the primacy of Western (Greek, Roman) and Judeo-Christian tradition," the Protestant work ethic, "Christianity," "rigid time schedules," and more.

The National Museum of African American History & Culture wants to make you aware of certain signs of whiteness: In… https://t.co/YsjtzZQYJO
— Byron York (@Byron York)1594814759.0

This is all derivative of critical race theory.

Believers, proponents, and defenders of CRT argue the worldview helps identify areas where racial inequities exist and give policy makers and educators the tools to correct longstanding injustices.

"It's an approach to grappling with a history of white supremacy that rejects the belief that what's in the past is in the past, and that the laws and systems that grow from that past are detached from it," scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw told Time last September. Crenshaw is one of the founding scholars of critical race theory.

But principles of CRT have been applied to make claims of structural oppression of other groups based on sexuality, gender, class, and disability.

"What critical race theory has done is lift up the racial gaze of America," said John Powell, the director of the Othering & Belonging Institute at the UC Berkeley. "It doesn't stay within law, it basically says 'look critically at any text or perspective and try to understand different perspectives that are sometimes drowned out.'"

Teaching CRT in schools

Critical race theory is not only taught at the university level. A survey taken after George Floyd's death found that 81% of U.S. teachers support Black Lives Matter, with public schools in response seeking ways to "revamp" their history curriculums to focus on racial equity. Several U.S. schools had adopted curricula that uses the New York Times' 1619 Project to teach American history with a focus on the legacy of slavery.

The public school system in Buffalo, New York, for example, has adopted a "woke" curriculum that involves showing kindergarteners a dramatized video of dead black children speaking to them from the grave about the dangers of being killed by "racist police and state-sanctioned violence."

The mainstream promotion of critical race theory among the progressive left has inspired pushback from conservatives like Jett and other critics who say the theory distorts American history and promotes racist thinking. Former President Donald Trump denounced CRT as a "Marxist doctrine" that teaches that "America is a wicked and racist nation, that even young children are complicit in oppression." In an executive order, Trump banned the use of critical race theory as a part of diversity training in the federal government. President Joe Biden has since reversed Trump's policy.

Jett's bill would not ban discussions of racism, or significant historic events like the institution of slavery or the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921, the single worst incident of racial violence in America. Instead, he hopes that school discussions on racial issues will occur as an honest dialogue about how people were wronged in the past, the progress America has made to correct those wrongs, and how America can continue to repudiate racism in the future instead of a blanket worldview that claims racism is inherent in white people.

"We are making tremendous progress," Jett told TheBlaze. "I can see it in my military unit. I served 11 years as a Navy intelligence officer in the United States Navy. We were the complete spectrum of the rainbow, but guess what? We weren't looking at the color of our skin. What we were looking at is making sure our warfighters overseas had the material that they needed, the information they needed so they could get home to their families, American families."

He observed that the prevalence of discussions about critical race theory in America is itself evidence that America has made racial progress and that people are willing to have this debate.

"We are looking to have an honest conversation. We're looking to make this a more perfect union, right? But what they promise and what they deliver are completely two different things. They say we're gonna have a great discussion, we're going to improve. But then when you start drilling down to what they're actually teaching, they're ignoring or even whitewashing, dare I say, our history and then telling us that we are fundamentally racist for being the color that we were born and that people of color are victims of those who are white."

Senate Bill 803 has been assigned to the Education Committee in the state Senate, and while the bill has been endorsed by state House Speaker Charles McCall (R), Jett indicated that some Republican leaders on the committee were hesitant to advance his legislation.

"There's a reluctance to take a stand on this because we get called a racist for wanting to have an honest dialogue," Jett said. "I felt like someone needed to do something, and so I did."

Reporters slammed for giving Biden softball questions; Trump: 'Those questions meant for a child'



Joe Biden fielded questions on Friday, his second press conference this week, after going a month without answering questions from reporters. However, the media didn't exactly press the Democratic presidential candidate.

Critics, as well as President Donald Trump, took note that reporters tossed easy softball questions to Biden.

What are the details?

Many of the questions presented to Biden at Friday's press conference in Wilmington, Delaware, were about Trump.

In reference to The Atlantic article that made the accusations against the president using four anonymous sources, Atlantic staff writer Edward-Isaac Dovere opened up the press conference by asking Biden, "What does it tell you about President Trump's soul and the life he leads?"

Talking about the report, CBS News correspondent Ed O'Keefe asked Biden, "There are people out there who are supporting you or are inclined to not vote for the president who would be inclined to say, 'Why isn't Joe Biden angrier about all of this?'"

ABC News correspondent Mary Bruce asked Biden about President Trump's comments this week about testing the system by voting in-person as well as using mail-in ballots if the vote is not initially tabulated.

Biden was also asked his opinion on QAnon conspiracy theory supporters and why President Trump hasn't rejected it.

"I've been a big supporter of mental health," Biden responded. "I'd recommend that the people who believe it maybe should take advantage of it while it still exists in the Affordable Care Act. It's bizarre. Totally bizarre."

CNN's MJ Lee brought up Trump's comments about Biden wearing a mask.

On Thursday at a rally in Pennsylvania, Trump asked his supporters about Biden's use of face masks, "Did you ever see a man who likes a mask as much as him?"

"He has it hanging down. Because it gives him a feeling of security," Trump continued. "If I were a psychiatrist, right, you know I'd say: 'This guy's got some big issues. Hanging down. Hanging down.'"

Lee asked the former vice president, "I wonder if you worry that this kind of language that comes from the president of the United States can deter some Americans who are tuning into him to not wear masks?"

Watch this question and how it's framed. She essentially gives Biden the answer in her question. She's making a sta… https://t.co/WSqOt30G5c
— Stephen L. Miller (@Stephen L. Miller)1599241845.0

Conservative commentators noticed how the media was treating Biden with kid gloves, including Fox News contributor Byron York.

Many of the questions for Joe Biden after his remarks today consisted of reporters asking Biden to elaborate on how… https://t.co/Z60k4N90x0
— Byron York (@Byron York)1599241306.0

BlazeTV host Mark Levine fired out on Twitter, "Shameless corrupt media and shameful pathetic Biden."

Shameless corrupt media and shameful pathetic Bidenhttps://t.co/mJ8FK4jaZx
— Mark R. Levin (@Mark R. Levin)1599308385.0

"Pathetic performance by reporters at Biden press conference today," said Fox News political analyst Brit Hume. "One softball question after another. Biden, though at times halting and unclear, was more forceful than usual."

Pathetic performance by reporters at Biden press conference today. One softball question after another. Biden, thou… https://t.co/RLNLSApV46
— Brit Hume (@Brit Hume)1599242550.0

"The media are simply the PR wing for the Biden campaign at this point," The Daily Wire's Ben Shapiro stated.

The media are simply the PR wing for the Biden campaign at this point https://t.co/WfiUb2mWXj
— Ben Shapiro (@Ben Shapiro)1599243893.0

"Whether you like the former vice president, dislike him, whether you like President Trump or dislike him, these were decidedly friendlier questions than the president ever enjoys," Fox Business host Neil Cavuto said according to the Washington Examiner.

Mark Hemingway, senior writer at RealClearInvestigations, wrote, "A text from a friend watching the press conference: 'Who are asking Biden these questions?? It's like watching someone make sure a 3 year old wins CandyLand.'"

A text from a friend watching the press conference: “Who are asking Biden these questions?? It's like watching some… https://t.co/XE55wu8IgO
— Mark Hemingway (@Mark Hemingway)1599241268.0

"4 years of 'but her emails' taunts worked," said Washington Examiner executive editor Phillip Klein. "Reporters are worried that if they ask Biden a challenging question they'll be heckled as 'complicit' by the people whose opinions they care about."

4 years of "but her emails" taunts worked. Reporters are worried that if they ask Biden a challenging question they… https://t.co/UWX7GOmDVa
— Philip Klein (@Philip Klein)1599245055.0

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany tweeted, "These are partisan Dem operatives NOT journalists!"

The questions to Joe Biden from self-declared “journalists” are something to behold:🤔 What do you think of Presid… https://t.co/x1WTr7qUBu
— Kayleigh McEnany (@Kayleigh McEnany)1599255855.0

President Trump slammed the media for the softball questions given to his political opponent, saying the inquiries were "meant for a child."

"I watched the interview with sleepy Joe Biden and … you didn't ask questions like that," Trump said at a press briefing on Friday night, reported by The Hill. "They were like, meant for a child. Those questions were meant for a child."

"Smiles on faces of reporters — not like you and you," the president said to reporters in the briefing room. "They were smiles on the reporters. What do you think? Take a look at those questions that they asked him. They were not meant for a grown-up, they were meant for a child."

"I look at that and I think it's a disgrace," Trump said. "And then I watch Biden getting asked questions that are really meant for a child to answer, anybody could answer. And I look at the level of question that you people ask. I mean honestly, it's disgraceful."