7 GOP Senators Most Likely To Stand Between Trump And His Dream Cabinet

7 GOP Senators Most Likely To Stand Between Trump And His Dream Cabinet

7 GOP senators join Democrats in confirming Biden judicial nominee



Seven Republican senators joined with Democrats and independents on Tuesday in voting to confirm President Joe Biden's nomination of Judge Tanya Monique Jones Bosier to serve as an associate judge on the Superior Court of D.C.

Lawmakers voted 57-41 in favor of confirmation, with all 41 of the opposing votes coming from Republicans.

'In DC it's business as usual.'

The seven GOP senators who voted to confirm included Susan Collins of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, James Lankford of Oklahoma, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah, Mike Rounds of South Dakota, and Thom Tillis of North Carolina.

"The GOP nominee was convicted in a kangaroo court Thursday. Just 5 days later AT THEIR FIRST CHANCE Sens. @LindseyGrahamSC @SenatorRounds @SenatorLankford @SenThomTillis voted yes on ANOTHER Biden judicial nominee. They won't stop Democrat Lawfare. In DC it's business as usual," Blaze Media's Christopher Bedford tweeted.

"Democrats didn't need these Republicans to confirm their judge. They didn't need @lisamurkowski @MittRomney @SenatorCollins either. These senators are simply adding their seals of approval. Even a controlled opposition at least pretends to oppose. There are no excuses," he added.

Last week, a jury found former President Donald Trump, the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee, guilty on all counts in a New York criminal trial.

Some GOP senators signed onto a pledge that declares, in part, that they will not vote to confirm any Biden administration political and judicial nominees.

"The White House has made a mockery of the rule of law and fundamentally altered our politics in un-American ways. As a Senate Republican conference, we are unwilling to aid and abet this White House in its project to tear this country apart. To that end, we will not 1) allow any increase to non-security related funding for this administration, or any appropriations bill which funds partisan lawfare; 2) vote to confirm this administration's political and judicial appointees; and 3) allow expedited consideration and passage of Democrat legislation or authorities that are not directly relevant to the safety of the American people," the pledge declares.

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Meet The Republican Senators Who Lied About Prioritizing Border Security Over Ukraine Funding

Republicans do not care about the southern border or American sovereignty, but they sure love Ukraine.

Independent Sen. Angus King of Maine says voters should get to decide about Trump: 'This is the ultimate check within our Constitutional system'



In response to Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows' move to block former President Donald Trump from the primary ballot, Sen. Angus King of Maine, an independent who is listed as a member of the Senate Democratic caucus, issued a statement in which he suggested that voters should get to decide the fate Trump's presidential candidacy.

"Under the established Constitutional process, the Senate was called upon to determine this precise question in Donald Trump's impeachment trial in January, 2021. While I voted with a bipartisan majority to convict, the required two-thirds of the Senate did not do so," King said in the statement.

While the House voted to impeach then-President Trump in the wake of the January 6, 2021 Capitol riot, the Senate vote — which occurred in February after Trump had already departed from office — fell short of the threshold necessary for conviction.

"Although I respect the Secretary of State's careful process — which she was specifically required to undertake under Maine law — absent a final judicial determination of a violation of the 14th Amendment's disqualification clause, I believe the decision as to whether or not Mr. Trump should again be considered for the presidency should rest with the people as expressed in free and fair elections. This is the ultimate check within our Constitutional system," King concluded.

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In her decision, Bellows stated that evidence demonstrated "the falsity of Mr. Trump's declaration that he meets the qualifications of the office of the presidency," and she declared that "as required ... I find that the primary petition of Mr. Trump is invalid."

But her ruling may never actually take effect, because she stipulated, "I will suspend the effect of my decision until the Superior Court rules on any appeal, or the time to appeal under 21-A, Section 337 has expired."

"We will quickly file a legal objection in state court to prevent this atrocious decision in Maine from taking effect," Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said in a Thursday statement.

Democratic Rep. Jared Golden of Maine said in a statement that unless Trump is determined to be guilty of insurrection, he should be permitted to be appear on the ballot.

"I voted to impeach Donald Trump for his role in the January 6th insurrection," Golden said in the statement. "I do not believe he should be re-elected as President of the United States. However, we are a nation of laws, therefore until he is actually found guilty of the crime of insurrection, he should be allowed on the ballot."

Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, who was one of the seven GOP senators who voted to convict Trump after the House voted to impeach him in 2021, does not think that Bellows' decision should stand.

"Maine voters should decide who wins the election – not a Secretary of State chosen by the Legislature. The Secretary of State's decision would deny thousands of Mainers the opportunity to vote for the candidate of their choice, and it should be overturned," a post on the @SenatorCollins X account reads. The social media account indicates that "All tweets originate from the Press Office of Senator Susan Collins."

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Maine Democrat says Trump should be permitted on primary ballot 'until he is actually found guilty ... of insurrection'



In response to the Maine secretary of state's move to block former President Donald Trump from the primary ballot, Democratic Rep. Jared Golden of Maine said in a statement that Trump should be permitted on the ballot until he is determined to be guilty of insurrection.

"I voted to impeach Donald Trump for his role in the January 6th insurrection," Golden said in the statement. "I do not believe he should be re-elected as President of the United States. However, we are a nation of laws, therefore until he is actually found guilty of the crime of insurrection, he should be allowed on the ballot."

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In her decision, Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows declared that evidence showed "the falsity of Mr. Trump's declaration that he meets the qualifications of the office of the presidency," and she found "that the primary petition of Mr. Trump is invalid." However, she suspended the impact of her ruling "until the Superior Court rules on any appeal, or the time to appeal ... has expired."

Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said in a statement, "We will quickly file a legal objection in state court to prevent this atrocious decision in Maine from taking effect, and President Trump will never stop fighting to Make America Great Again."

GOP Sen. Susan Collins of Maine apparently does not believe the decision should stand.

"Maine voters should decide who wins the election – not a Secretary of State chosen by the Legislature. The Secretary of State's decision would deny thousands of Mainers the opportunity to vote for the candidate of their choice, and it should be overturned," a tweet on the @SenatorCollins X account declares. The account description notes that "all tweets originate from the Press Office of Senator Susan Collins."

"Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows ignores the fact that, for purposes of Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, Trump was not 'an officer of the United States.' Thus, even if Trump had engaged in insurrection (to be sure, he has not), he still couldn’t be excluded," GOP Sen. Mike Lee of Utah tweeted.

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Four Republican senators sign letter urging Biden to send missile systems to Ukraine



Four Republican senators have signed a letter urging President Joe Biden to send missile systems to Ukraine as that embattled Eastern European nation struggles to defend itself against a Russian invasion.

"I wrote to President Biden with my colleagues and urged him to provide Ukraine with the missiles its military needs to win. Not doing so will only prolong the war and cost lives," Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas tweeted.

In the letter, Cotton and fellow GOP Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Susan Collins of Maine, and Roger Wicker of Mississippi pressed Biden to provide Ukraine with MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile Systems.

"Additional delay will only further undermine U.S. national security interests and extend this conflict," the letter asserts. "It is essential that the United States immediately provide ATACMS so Ukraine can achieve vital objectives before winter and deny Russia the ability to fortify its positions."

"The U.S. is fully capable of providing these weapons without any appreciable risk to its own combat capability. Ukraine has significantly degraded Russian combat power and only requires a small portion of our stockpiled ATACMS. Further, the U.S. has the capability to produce hundreds of ATACMS and Precision Strike Missiles a year and replenish its inventory in the near term," the lawmakers wrote. "We urge you to authorize the immediate shipment of ATACMS to Ukraine."

In response to a post from Cotton about the letter, Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida tweeted, "How long till the Ukraine First caucus wants to send nukes?"

"When does this actually end, Senator? What are the United States' interests and objectives here?" Jenna Ellis asked.

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The U.S. has allocated billions to support Ukraine, but Biden and many lawmakers want to approve even more assistance for the war-torn country.

Graham has previously claimed that it is "imperative" for the U.S. to to keep supporting the Ukrainian military.

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Republican senators probing USDA's links to blacklisted Chinese biotech firm and its 'massive effort to sequence all of life'



Republican lawmakers are probing links between the U.S. Department of Agriculture and a blacklisted genomics company that is under the de facto control of the communist Chinese regime.

Sens. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), and Susan Collins (R-Maine) expressed concerns this week that ongoing American collaborations with BGI Genomics could jeopardize U.S. security as well as the nation's competitive edge.

The senators sent a letter to USDA Secretary Thomas Vilsack Tuesday, pressing him for answers concerning the department's relationship with BGI and stressing the importance of vigilance in "safeguarding U.S.-funded research that has potential to be weaponized against the U.S.."

Background on BGI

BGI Genomics, formerly the Beijing Genomics Institute, runs a gargantuan gene databank and has secured DNA-sequencing contracts the world over, including for its COVID-19 and prenatal screening tests.

Axios noted in 2020 that BGI had agreed to build a gene bank and a "judicial collaboration" center in Xinjiang, where Chinese authorities reportedly erected Uyghur concentration camps, and sought to "build up genetics-based surveillance capabilities targeting ethnic minorities."

Reuters conducted a review of scientific papers and company statements in 2021, revealing that BGI sold prenatal tests globally that it had developed in collaboration with the Chinese military and was "using them to collect genetic data from millions of women for sweeping research on the traits of populations."

The review referenced March 2021 warnings from U.S military advisers that the vast bank of genomic data BGI was amassing could provide the communist Chinese regime with a means to a significant economic and military advantage.

This advantage could potentially take the form of a competitive edge in the development of pharmaceuticals, "genetically enhanced soldiers, or engineered pathogens to target the U.S. population or food supply."

While the company denied that it had ever been asked to provide data from its genetic tests "to Chinese authorities for national security or national defense purposes," Reuters pointed out that Beijing stipulated in a 2019 regulation that genetic data could be a national security matter — meaning the regime could ultimately access the data whenever it pleased.

The U.S. Defense Department added BGI and other Chinese companies to a blacklist last October.

The U.S. Department of Commerce indicated in a March 6 statement that BGI poses a "significant risk of being or becoming involved in activities contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the United States."

The department further stated, "The addition of these entities is based upon information that indicates their collection and analysis of genetic data poses a significant risk of contributing to monitoring and surveillance by the government of China, which has been utilized in the repression of ethnic minorities in China."

In light of these concerns, the department added BGI to its Bureau of Industry and Security's Entity List for trade restrictions.

The Chinese threat

Even if presently benign, BGI's regulatory compromise by communist authorities means it could be quickly co-opted and used for nefarious purposes. Beijing's aspirations are, after all, antipodean to America's.

According to the Pentagon's 2022 "Report on Military and Security Developments Involving the People's Republic of China," China "presents the most consequential and systematic challenge to U.S. national security and the free and open international system."

TheBlaze previously detailed how Michael Pillsbury, director of the Center on Chinese Strategy at the Hudson Institute, indicated in the book "The Hundred-Year Marathon" that the CCP's aim is "a world without American global supremacy."

Per the 2022 Pentagon report, China's "strategy entails deliberate and determined efforts to amass, improve, and harness the internal and external elements of national power that will place the PRC in a 'leading position' in an enduring competition between systems."

The report also referenced China's engagement in "biological activities with dual-use applications," which could be brought to bear against the U.S. in a potential conflict.

The four Republican senators seized upon this worry in their July 25 letter, writing that China "has been weaponizing biotech in preparation for strategic advantage in a new domain of biological warfare."

American decoupling

The Republican senators' letter indicated that USDA's Agriculture Research Service previously awarded $1 million to BGI and has collaborated with it on the Earth BioGenome Project since 2018 — an initiative to sequence the genomes of over 1.5 million species over a 10-year period.

"We are gravely concerned that the USDA is participating in this massive effort to sequence all of life with BGI's participation as an active research collaborator," wrote the senators.

The letter highlighted the Chinese regime's obstructionism during the pandemic and subsequent efforts to hamstring investigations into COVID-19's origins as evidence of China's unwillingness to shoot straight and play fair "despite data-sharing agreements and multiple-year collaborations between the PRC and U.S. public health agencies and universities."

"Even if USDA stopped paying BGI directly, through partnering with BGI and sharing U.S. intellectual property, the collaboration could endanger our security by giving China a strategic competitive edge to hold and store data that U.S. scientists have worked hard to develop," they wrote.

Sen. Marshall told the Epoch Times, "Our government must take extreme caution to prevent sponsoring research that gives any sensitive materials and intellectual property to the Chinese Communist Party."

"The CCP views biology as a domain of warfare which includes the study of all plant and animal living organisms," continued Marshall. "The USDA and all government agencies involved in cutting edge biological research must have better oversight when corresponding with CCP-sponsored organizations that are not immediately obvious."

The senators have prompted USDA Secretary Vilsack to answer to the USDA's involvement with the Earth BioGenome Project, its potential funding of research involving dangerous pathogens in "countries of concern," and whether the department has "planned for contingencies if access to data collected by BGI or any other China-based organization is suddenly terminated.

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Senate Democrats advance nomination of pro-abortion 'zealot' to serve as federal judge ​— with the help of Republicans Collins and Murkowski



The U.S. Senate advanced the nomination of Center for Reproductive Rights lawyer Julie Rikelman to be a U.S. Court of Appeals judge for the First Circuit Thursday with a 53-45 vote invoking cloture.

Democrats were aided by pro-abortion Republican Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who similarly voted to end the debate and preclude the possibility of filibuster as it pertains to Rikelman's nomination to the Boston-based court.

Republican Sens. Tim Scott of South Carolina and Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee did not vote.

The Senate is expected to proceed to a roll-call vote on Rikelman's confirmation on June 20. Democrats are sure to have the 60 votes required, especially with Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and John Fetterman (D-Pa.) likely to be physically present.

Conservatives, such as Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), have expressed concerns in recent months that Rikelman, who served for nearly a decade as senior litigation director for the Center for Reproductive Rights, a pro-abortion advocacy organization, was nominated by President Joe Biden as part of a broader effort to "fundamentally change our judiciary."

Cruz told Rikelman in September 2022, one month after her nomination, that her career embodies "precisely this pattern," having spent the majority of her professional life as "an extreme zealot advocating for abortion."

TheBlaze reported that Rikelman regards abortion as a right.

Rikelman, who long worked as vice president of litigation for NBC Universal, suggested in a December 2021 Salon interview that academic, financial, and professional gains enjoyed by women were made possible by abortion, indicating that one of her biggest goals was "to make sure that the voices of women were heard at the court and were present in the courtroom ... to make sure that the impact of taking this right away, something the court hast [sic] never done ... would be felt."

Prior to the Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs ruling, the 51-year-old Ukrainian native recommended "expanding access to abortion," stating that the "status quo is not good enough" and that she was committed to the "battle against outright bans on abortion."

Extra to celebrating abortion, Rikelman has lashed out against the pro-life movement, calling pregnancy resource centers "faux clinics."

Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, noted Tuesday that "Rikelman's career of representing abortionists in court and leading a U.S. litigation team for a pro-abortion organization makes her incapable of acting as an impartial jurist and therefore, unfit for a seat on the federal bench."

Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, wrote in February, "Pro-abortion litigation makes up the singular focus of her legal experience over the last decade and renders her unfit to serve as an impartial judge on the First Circuit. Rikelman's career has been strictly centered around the radical, pro-abortion agenda for over two decades."

While Rikelman has suggested she would keep her pro-abortion advocacy and her prospective role as judge separate, leftist outfits may be under a different impression.

After all, the following are some of the radical groups that have expressed their "enthusiastic support" for her nomination: Gender Justice; NARAL Pro-Choice America; National Abortion Federation; Planned Parenthood Federation of America; Physicians for Reproductive Health; Pro-Choice North Carolina; Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice; Reproaction; Reproductive Equity Now; and another radical pro-abortion group that seeks to undermine parental rights, Unite for Reproductive and Gender Equity.

If the Senate confirms the nomination, Rikelman will serve as a federal judge for life.

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GOP Senators Slam House Republicans For Defense Spending Levels In Debt Bill

'The people who negotiated this, I wouldn't let them buy me a car'