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Watch: Hillary Clinton Gets In The Game With Impassioned And Powerful Speech To NH Democrats

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Hillary Clinton this weekend finally delivered the rip-roaring, fight-filled, impassioned speech Democrats have been waiting to see.

In April, Hillary Clinton announced she was running for President by unveiling a well-crafted video and campaign website. Two months later, she delivered a strategic and well-drafted speech in New York City, explaining why she was running. Since then, thanks in part to the mainstream media’s obsession with Donald Trump, and thanks in part to her decision to not deliver many public speeches – unlike her chief rival, Bernie Sanders – Clinton has been labeled as passionless, cold, not engaged, and criticized for having trouble connecting to voters.

All those critiques are fair, and her campaign owns a good portion of the blame. They’ve been slow to respond to attacks, and either they’re not telling her what’s going on, or they’re not seeing it, or she’s not listening. Regardless, her poll numbers reflect the public’s frustration with her.

In the past few weeks the campaign decided to show off the more “human” sides of Clinton – they exist, and were on full display when she was Secretary of State. They have been flooding her Twitter feed with videos of her dancing, mocking Donald Trump with Jimmy Fallon, and retweeting positive comments about her Snapchat account.

But on Saturday at the 2015 New Hampshire Democratic Party State Convention, Hillary Clinton decided to become the candidate her supporters, and all Democrats, have been waiting to see.

She delivered a speech that recognized the very real issues progressives have been fighting to fix, offered solutions, and laid out a platform few Democrats could oppose.

And she did it brilliantly, but – given the current state of the polls – perhaps most importantly, did it with passion, integrity, believability, and fire. Not to mention a few well-chosen and targeted punches at her GOP rivals.

After watching a repeat on C-SPAN yesterday, I (forgive my language, it’s rare I swear in public!) sent out this tweet:

I recognize that asking anyone to sit through a 40+ minute speech (video above) is asking a lot, but you owe it to yourself, your friends, your family and its future, and the issues you are fighting for to invest as many minutes as you can, even if you just play it in the background.

If you can’t, here’s a clip:

To be clear, this is not a personal or professional endorsement of Hillary Clinton, nor, as the publisher of The New Civil Rights Movement have I even decided if we will endorse any candidate during the primaries. This is simply a news story identifying the fact that, as the title says, Hillary Clinton has decided to get in the game.

And that alone is newsworthy.

For those who prefer reading, I reached out to the Clinton campaign for a transcript of her remarks, which I’ve copied below:

HILLARY CLINTON:  (Cheering and applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you, New Hampshire Democrats.  Thank you all.  Whoa, thank you so much.  Thank you all.  Thank you.  Oh, thank you.  Thank you.  Are we going to win this election in 2016?  (Cheers and applause.)  Yes, we are.  Thank you.  My heart is just racing.

I am so, so excited to be here, grateful for everything you and this state have meant to me and to my family.  I’m honored to have the support of so many proud New Hampshire Democrats and – (cheers and applause) – especially, especially your terrific governor – (cheers and applause) – your amazing senator who used to be governor.  (Cheers and applause.)  Maggie and Jeanne are women who know how to solve problems and they bring common sense and common purpose to everything they do. 

I also want to thank Congresswoman Annie Kuster, all the state senators and representatives, executive councilors, local leader, grassroots organizers, and especially volunteers who are working their hearts out for this campaign.  (Cheers and applause.)  I have a great idea.  I think we should just transport all of you everywhere we go around the country together.  (Cheers and applause.) 

As much fun as this is, as exciting as the atmosphere in here is, we have work to do as Democrats.  I want to be your partner to build our party here in this state and across our nation to keep our progress going. 

We’ve come a long way, haven’t we, these past six and a half years?  And thanks to the hard work and sacrifice of the American people and to the leadership of the Democratic President in the White House, Barack Obama – (cheers and applause) – we’re standing again but we’re not yet running the way America should.  Wages still aren’t rising for most people.  The cost of everything from college to prescription drugs keeps going up.  Inequality is still too big a problem.  And in America, if you work hard and you do your part, you should be able to get ahead and stay ahead.  That is the basic bargain of this country.  (Cheers and applause.) 

That’s the promise that my grandfather believed in when he went to work every day in the Scranton Lace Mills.  I’m the granddaughter of a factory worker who believed in America and that life could be better for his children, and it was.  His three sons went to college.  My dad, after serving in the Navy in World War II, he started a small business.  He saved and he sacrificed because he believed his small business, printing fabric in Chicago, could provide us with a middle-class life.  And you know what?  It did.  And now within three generations, from that factory worker to that small business owner, I’m standing here asking for your support to be president of this great country that we love.  (Cheers and applause.) 

And so that is what we are fighting for as Democrats.  We are fighting to make sure that dream, that promise, is just as vital and real tomorrow and the years later as it was for my grandfather and my father.

When my husband put people first – (cheers and applause) – in the 1992 campaign, where New Hampshire was so supportive, when he got into the White House he realized that he had inherited real economic problems from his Republican predecessors.  That seems to happen, have you noticed?  (Laughter.)  I say this without trying to be partisan or personal, but the economy just works better when we have a Democrat in the White House.  (Cheers and applause.) 

And so after eight years of hard work, a lot of political heavy lifting, the end of Bill’s second term, there was a really important set of statistics that represented the progress we made: 23 million new jobs, a balanced budget.  But you know what was most important to me?  For the first time in decades, everybody benefited – not just those at the top, but people in the middle, people at the bottom.  Everybody saw their incomes go up.  (Cheers and applause.) 

I went to the Senate – the good people of New York sent me to the Senate in 2001, and I was excited because I thought, look at what we’ve accomplished: we have turned around the economy; we have taken control over our fiscal future.  Just think of what we could have done with that balanced budget and a surplus.  We could have made Social Security solvent for as far as the eye could see.  (Cheers and applause.)  We could have invested in education and science and research to make us smarter and stronger and richer.  (Cheers and applause.)

But you know what happened.  The Republicans went back to trickle-down economics, one of the worst ideas ever to come out of the 1980s right along with big hair.  (Laughter.)  They took their eyes off the financial markets, took their eyes off the mortgage markets, and President Obama inherited an even bigger mess.  I remember when he called me right after the election, asked me to come see him in Chicago.  I didn’t know why at the time.  Turned out he wanted to ask me to be Secretary of State, but when I got there – (cheers and applause) – when I got there, what he wanted to talk about was how dangerous the economic situation was.  He said it’s so much worse than they told us.  He was worried about a great depression, not just a great recession.  And he had to really work hard.

Under his leadership and thanks to the sacrifice of so many Americans, we pulled back from the brink of depression, saved the auto industry, curbed Wall Street abuses, and provided health care to 16 million people.  (Cheers and applause.)  Now, the only way that the Republicans can win is if they count on collective amnesia from the American people.  (Laughter.)  President Obama deserves a lot more credit than he gets for helping us avoid an economic catastrophe.  (Applause.)  And I know it’s very inconvenient for our Republican friends, but the facts do speak for themselves:  Economic growth is stronger under Democratic presidents, unemployment is lower, the stock market rises faster, businesses do better, and deficits are smaller.  (Applause.)  And one of my favorite inconvenient facts:  Under Republicans, recessions happen four times as frequently as under Democrats.  (Applause.)

So one would have to wonder, why would anybody who cares about the economy, which is all of us – why would anybody who cares about seeing paychecks rise again, fighting inequality, raising the minimum wage, dealing with the challenges that confront us, believe that going back to the failed policies of trickle-down economics would help anybody except for those people at the top? 

I am not running for my husband’s third term or President Obama’s third term.  I’m running for my first term – (cheers and applause) – and I will proudly carry forward this record of Democratic achievement.  We know what works and what doesn’t.  It works when middle-class families get a raise.  That will be my mission from my first day as president to the last.  We need growth that is strong, fair, and long-term so the rewards of success don’t just go to those at the top.

When a company does well, shareholders and executives aren’t the only ones who should benefit.  The people who work at that company should as well.  (Cheers and applause.)  The people who actually produce the profits should share in them.  If it can work for Market Basket across New England, it can work across America.  (Cheers and applause.)  But here’s what doesn’t work:  When 25 hedge fund managers earn more each year than all the kindergarten teachers in America combined.  There’s a tax loophole that lets them treat their pay like investment gains – you’ve heard of it, the carried interest loophole – rather than normal income like everyone else.  I have called for the ending of that loophole since 2007.  I am sick of multimillionaires – (applause) – paying a lower tax rate than a teacher or a nurse.  That is wrong.  I’ll close that loophole – (applause) – and I will reform our tax code so everyone pays their fair share, particularly those who have the most benefits.

I have proposed incentives to encourage long-term investments in small businesses, hard-hit communities, and building our country – not the quick speculation and trading that goes on.  I want to see tax credits that will encourage apprentices and profit sharing.  I want young people brought into our economy again so that they have a chance to have a better future.  (Cheers and applause.)  

I’ll raise the minimum wage so no one who works hard in America has to live in poverty.  I’ll fight for small businesses that create the jobs in America.  (Cheers and applause.)

We’re a small business country.  I want to be the small business president.  I don’t think we should be tilting our tax code, our economic policy, toward big businesses that can hire lawyers and lobbyists.  Most jobs in America come from small businesses.  That’s why I have a plan to make it easier for entrepreneurs to get loans and avoid red tape.  I’ll hold corporations accountable when they gouge Americans on drug prices or pollute our environment or bust unions and exploit workers.  (Cheers and applause.)

And that’s just the beginning.  We’re going to do what works, because as important as economic worries are – and I hear them everywhere – they’re not the only ones that families face today, are they?  If you get out there and you actually listen to people, as I’ve done all over New Hampshire, you hear about problems that rarely make the headlines but that keep families up at night.  I’ve listened to those stories.  I’ve heard about the heartaches and the hopes.  It really has motivated me to roll up my sleeves to come up with solutions that can help make a difference in the lives of families here and everywhere across our country.

For example, I never expected that substance abuse and mental health would be major issues in my campaign until I came to Keene on my very first trip.  And then I started listening.  I heard story after story about heroin, pills, meth, alcohol, other addictions.  I met a grandmother who’s taking responsibility for raising her grandchild because her daughter is struggling with addiction.  She can’t be the parent she should be.  I’ve sat and listened to moms and dads who’ve lost their children, counselors and doctors and police officers who’ve done everything they can to help save people.  One man in Laconia said to me the other day, “I don’t want to go to more funerals.”

When you hear those stories, it’s hard not only to be moved and sad, but it’s also motivating.  At my first town hall about this issue in Keene, hundreds and hundreds of people packed in to the gymnasium and they told their stories.  And then in Laconia just a few day ago, we heard about solutions.  I’ve got a plan to do something about this epidemic: more and better treatment and prevention, especially for young people; making sure everyone who writes prescriptions is trained in addition; putting rescue drugs like naloxone in the hands of first responders; criminal justice reform so nonviolent drug users get time to heal instead of time in jail.  (Cheers and applause.)

There are so many stories that people share with me.  That’s what drives my campaign.  That’s what gets me up every day.  Often I’m asked, “How can you do this?”  Well, it is challenging.  (Laughter.)  It’s also incredibly rewarding because I meet people who are so resilient, so filled with purpose and hope.  I want to be the president who takes on the big challenges.  Look, we have to worry about how we make sure Iran never gets a nuclear weapon.  We have to deal with the refugee crisis in Europe and so much else. 

But I also want to be the president who keeps listening, who hears about the challenges you talk about around your kitchen table, like student debt.  (Cheers and applause.)  A student here in New Hampshire – a student really summed it up for me, saying that paying for college shouldn’t be the hardest thing about going to college.  And yesterday, Governor Hassan and I were at the University of New Hampshire, where we were talking about my plan, and where we heard from two students who very clearly and emotionally talked about what their challenges were trying to get the education they’ve always dreamed of.

I call my plan the New College Compact.  As president, I will make sure families can afford to send your kids to college.  Everyone with student debt can refinance that debt just like a mortgage or a car loan.  (Cheers and applause.)  Cost won’t be a barrier anymore and debt won’t hold anyone back.

I also have to say that I’ve heard a lot about another challenge that gets too little attention in our long-term looking forward into the future about what kind of country we’re going to be and how we can help people live up to their potential, and that is the caregiving crisis in America.  (Applause.)  I met a woman in Dover who’s caring for her husband with Alzheimer’s and her mother with Alzheimer’s.  I just met a young man backstage who’s had to go to part-time work to take care of his mother with Alzheimer’s.  People don’t know where to turn.  They don’t know where to get help.

As a senator, I passed a law giving family caregivers more support, and as president I will make this a national priority for families, number one.  (Cheers and applause.)  Every one of us knows somebody who could benefit: the veterans, who deserve better care; the parents of children with autism who need help and solutions; families who can’t find facilities to provide mental health treatment for their loved ones no matter how hard they try.  (Cheers and applause.)

It was summed up for me by the single mom who’s juggling a job and courses at a community college while raising three kids alone.  She said, “Look, I don’t expect anything to come easy,” but she asked me, “Isn’t there anything we can do so it isn’t quite so hard?”  These are all challenges leaders should care about.  Problems that don’t get nearly enough attention on the campaign trail or in Washington. 

Well, I’m not only paying attention; as president, we will get results together.  Because if you want a president – if you want a president who will tell you everything that’s wrong with America and who’s to blame for it, you’ve got plenty of other choices.  (Cheers and applause.) And my goodness, didn’t we hear enough of that the other night at the Republican debate?  But if you want a president who will listen to you, work her heart out to make your life better and together to build a stronger, fairer, better country, then you’re looking at her.  (Cheers and applause.)

Because you know – you know, folks, this election ultimately is about finding a leader with a vision for the future broad enough to encompass this great country of ours and the skill and determination to lead us there.  Someone who can defend and build on the progress we’ve made, not let it slip away or get ripped away.  I will stand up to all the attacks from the super PACs and the Koch brothers every chance I get.  And I will do what I have always done to try to overcome the dysfunction in Washington, actually to get things done like I did when I was First Lady and we didn’t get healthcare that time, and then I turned around and I worked with Ted Kennedy to get the Children’s Health Insurance Program to take care of more than 8 million kids.  (Cheers and applause.)  Or when I was in the Senate and I realized that our National Guard didn’t have the same access to health care and I teamed up with Lindsey Graham and we passed it, so now every single one of our National Guards has that same option that they should have had before.  (Cheers and applause.) 

I have been fighting my whole life to even the odds for people who have those odds stacked against them.  That’s what I’m going to keep doing – fighting for families, fighting for fairness, fighting for you.  And I’ve learned that through a lot of experiences, but I really learned it first from my own mother – abandoned and mistreated by her family, she was out on her own at 14 working as a housemaid.  She channeled her hardships into a deep commitment to serving and respecting others.  She’s been my touchstone, guiding me through my life of service.  My first job out of law school wasn’t at some big New York law firm; it was with the Children’s Defense Fund standing up for kids who needed a fighter.  (Cheers and applause.)

Every step along the way, I’ve stood up for women, for children, for families, for underdogs – everyone who needs a champion, and I’m just getting warmed up.  (Cheers and applause.)  I believe in America, but I believe in America, we should have each other’s backs.  (Applause.)  We should lift each other up, not tear each other down.  (Cheers and applause.)  And that is especially true when it comes to lifting up women who deserve equal pay for equal work.  (Cheers and applause.)  And that means too every family deserves access to quality, affordable childcare so they can actually go to work.  (Cheers and applause.)  Every American should have access to paid family leave so you don’t have to choose between a paycheck and taking care of your baby or your mom or your dad.  (Applause.)

I’m a proud Democrat because we’re the ones who stand up and say the Affordable Care Act is here to stay.  (Cheers and applause.)  We have come too far, we have fought too hard, to let anyone take it away.  We’re the ones also who understand we have to make Social Security even stronger, and especially for widowed, divorced, and single women who are the poorest older people in America.  (Cheers and applause.)  We’re the ones who support teachers, not scapegoat them.  (Cheers and applause.)  Who will invest in universal prekindergarten and early childhood education so all of our kids get the best possible start.  (Cheers and applause.)

It is past time for us to get over the toxic debates about education that have paralyzed us for too long.  Let’s focus on what actually works to help teachers teach and children learn.  (Cheers and applause.)  As president, I’m going to actually listen to teachers and learn what they know from being in those classrooms every single day.  (Cheers and applause.)  I will fight for strong public schools in every ZIP code and community across America.  (Cheers and applause.)  And I am honored, I am honored to have earned the endorsement of the NEA right here in New Hampshire.  (Cheers and applause.)

And Democrats believe we don’t have to choose between protecting our environment, combating climate change and growing our economy.  We can do that by embracing clean, renewable energy.  (Cheers and applause.)  I want us to set big goals in this country again.  I can remember – I think there’s a few of you who also can remember – when President Kennedy challenged us to send a moon mission that would land a man on the moon and bring him back within a decade.  And a lot of people thought that was impossible, didn’t they?  Nobody knew what would happen.  I was sure because the president set that goal that America could get it done, and we did. 

That’s the kind of president I want to be.  I want to challenge us again, particularly young people again.  (Cheers and applause.)  So by the end of my first term, we will have installed a half a billion more solar panels – (cheers and applause) – and by the end of my second, we will produce enough renewable energy to power every home in America.  We can do this.  (Cheers and applause.)  We can take on climate change – not deny it, but take it on, and at the same time create millions of new jobs and businesses that will make America the clean energy superpower of the 21st century.  (Cheers and applause.)

And boy, Democrats believe – and we’re the only ones left who believe this – (laughter) – we have to stop the flow of secret, unaccountable money that distorts our elections and drowns out the voices of American voters.  (Applause.)  It’s predicted by some that our next president may have as many as three appointments to the Supreme Court.  (Applause.)  Now, if you weren’t convinced to vote for a Democrat before, I hope you are now.  (Applause.)  I will appoint justices who will protect every citizen’s right to vote instead of every corporation’s right to buy elections.  (Cheers and applause.)  And if necessary, I will work to pass a constitutional amendment to undo the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United. 

And we Democrats believe that no matter who you are, what you look like, what faith you practice, or who you love, America has a place for you, and you should have the same opportunity as anyone else to live up to your potential.  (Cheers and applause.)

So we have a great agenda.  We know what it means to be a Democrat.  We’re going to fight back against those who will do, say, and spend whatever it takes to turn our country in a very different direction.

Who watched the Republican debates the other night?  Oh, you gluttons for punishment, you.  (Laughter.)  Fifteen candidates, five hours, not a single fighter for the middle class.  And the fact-checkers are having a field day with their answers.  The Republicans’ positions are not just factually inaccurate, they are deeply out of touch and out of date.  Not one of them offered a credible plan to make college more affordable, or combat climate change.  Did you hear anything about family leave or preschool?  Or what about putting an end to the gun violence that plagues our communities every single day?  (Cheers and applause.)

Not one of them – not one of them is willing to say loudly and clearly: black lives matter.  (Cheers and applause.)

And of course, no solutions for skyrocketing prescription drug costs.  No ideas about how to raise incomes.  No ideas at all, when you stop to think about it.

But there was one statement I had to agree with.  Yeah.  Hard to believe, right?  As Lindsey Graham said, “Hillary Clinton has list a mile long to help the middle class.”  (Cheers and applause.)  Well, he’s right about that.  He’s absolutely right about that; I do.  It was the most honest thing anyone said that night.  And I’m going to keep adding to that list, keep fighting for the middle class, keep showing that voters have a real choice in this election

Don’t be distracted by their flamboyant front-runner, trying to bully and buy his way into the presidency.  His latest outrage – the way he handled the question about President Obama – was shocking but not surprising.  He’s been trafficking in prejudice and paranoia throughout this campaign.  (Cheers and applause.)

But I got to tell you, if you look at the policies of the other Republican candidates, they are just Trump without the pizazz or the hair.  (Laughter.)  He says hateful things about immigrants.  They don’t support a real path to citizenship.  We need comprehensive reform, not demagoguery and deportations.  (Cheers and applause.)

And we have heard Mr. Trump insult and demean women.  And by the way, Donald, when you say you cherish women, that really doesn’t make it better.  Why don’t you stop cherishing women and start respecting women?  (Cheers and applause.)

But listen closely – listen closely, he’s not the only one.  All of the Republican candidates want to defund Planned Parenthood.  Many are willing to shut down our government to do it, no matter the consequences for our country.  We are talking about a women’s health service that provides half a million breast cancer exams every year.  That’s what they want to stop.

Here in New Hampshire, you know about this.  Last month, your executive council cut off funding to Planned Parenthood in this state.  Well, actually, three men on the executive council voted to deny women access to healthcare across New Hampshire.

I’d like them, along with the Republican candidates, to meet the mom who caught her cancer early thanks to a screening, or the teenager who avoided an unintended pregnancy because she had access to birth control, or the survivor of sexual assault who got emergency contraception.  (Cheers and applause.)

These extreme views might be right for a Republican primary, but they are dead wrong for America.  And now, I know that when I talk like this, some of the Republicans say I’m playing the gender card.  Well, if calling for equal pay and paid leave and women’s health is playing the gender card, deal me in.  (Cheers and applause.)

I am going to keep fighting.  I’m going to fight until every woman has the rights, the opportunities, and the respect she deserves, until every little girl in America knows without a doubt she can grow up to be anything she wants – even president of the United States.  (Cheers and applause.) 

So, my friends, let’s go out and wage this campaign and elect Democrats at every level.  Let’s take back school boards.  Let’s take back the legislatures.  Let’s take back every position, all the way to the White House.  Because if this election is about America’s future, not America’s fear, Democrats will win.  (Cheers and applause.)  And when you hear Mr. Trump saying he wants to make America great again, respond: America is great – we just need to make it work for all the people in our country again.  (Cheers and applause.) 

So I think we’re going to have a great campaign.  It’s going to be fun.  Because what makes the other folks uncomfortable is what makes America what we are today – our diversity, our ingenuity, our innovation, the signs of American dynamism, our immigrant culture – all that we do to really build a country where everybody has a place, where there are no limits on what we can achieve when we put our common interest ahead of our self-interest, and our common sense ahead of nonsense. 

I am fighting for that America.  I’m fighting for all Americans, not just some – for the struggling, the striving, and the successful.  I’m fighting for everyone who’s ever been knocked down but refused to be knocked out.  I am fighting for you, Democrats, and New Hampshire, and America.  Let’s go out and make the future we want to see.

Thank you all and God bless you.  (Cheers and applause.)

 

 

Image: Screenshot via C-SPAN

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News

‘Repercussions’: Democrats and Republicans Stand Against ‘Pro-Putin’ House GOP Faction

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Some House Democrats and House Republicans are coming together toward a common opponent: far-right “pro-Putin” hardliners in the House Republican conference, who appear to be led by U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA).

Congresswoman Greene has been threatening to oust the Republican Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson. Last month she filed a “motion to vacate the chair.” If she chooses to call it up she could force a vote on the House floor to try to remove Speaker Johnson.

House Democrats say they are willing to vote against ousting Johnson, as long as the Speaker puts on the floor desperately needed and long-awaited legislation to fund aid to Ukraine and Israel. Johnson has refused to put the Ukraine aid bill on the floor for months, but after Iran attacked Israel Johnson switched gears. Almost all Democrats and a seemingly large number of Republicans want to pass the Ukraine and Israel aid packages.

RELATED: Marjorie Taylor Greene, ‘Putin’s Envoy’? Democrat’s Bills Mock Republican’s Actions

Forgoing the possibility of installing Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries as Speaker, which is conceivable given Johnson’s now one-vote majority, Democrats say if Johnson does the right thing, they will throw him their support.

“I think he’ll be in good shape,” to get Democrats to support him, if he puts the Ukraine aid bill on the floor, U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) told CNN Thursday. “I would say that there’s a lot of support for the underlying bills. I think those are vital.”

“If these bills were delivered favorably, and the aid was favorably voted upon, and Marjorie Taylor Greene went up there with a motion to remove him, for instance, I think there’s gonna be a lot of Democrats that move to kill that motion,” Congressman Krishnamoorthi said. “They don’t want to see him getting punished for doing the right thing.”

“I think it is a very bad policy of the House to allow one individual such as Marjorie Taylor Greene, who is an arsonist to this House of Representatives,” U.S. Rep. Dan Goldman (D-NY) told CBS News’ Scott MacFarlane, when asked about intervening to save Johnson. He added he doesn’t want her “to have so much influence.”

U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito, one of several Republicans who won their New York districts in 2022, districts that were previously held by Democrats, opposes Greene’s motion to vacate – although he praised the Georgia GOP congresswoman.

CNN’s Manu Raju reports Republicans “say it’s time to marginalize hardliners blocking [their] agenda.”

D’Esposito, speaking to Raju, called for “repercussions for those who completely alienate the will of the conference. The people gave us the majority because they wanted Republicans to govern.”

U.S. Rep. Mike Lawler, like D’Esposito is another New York Republican who won a previously Democratic seat in 2022. Lawler spoke out against the co-sponsor of Greene’s motion to vacate, U.S. Rep. Tim Massie (R-KY), along with two other House Republicans who are working to block the Ukraine aid bill via their powerful seats on the Rules Committee.

U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-NJ), a former Navy pilot, blasted Congresswoman Greene.

RELATED: ‘They Want Russia to Win So Badly’: GOP Congressman Blasts Far-Right House Republicans

“Time is of the essence” for Ukraine, Rep. Sherrill told CNN Wednesday night. “The least we can do is support our Democratic allies, especially given what we know Putin to do. To watch a report and to think there are people like Marjorie Taylor Greene on the right that are pro-Putin? That are pro-Russia? It is really shocking.”

U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX), as NCRM reported Thursday, had denounced Greene.

“I guess their reasoning is they want Russia to win so badly that they want to oust the Speaker over it,” he said, referring to the Ukraine aid bill Greene and her cohorts want to tank. “I mean that’s a strange position to take.”

The far-right hardliners are also causing chaos in the House.

“Things just got very heated on the House floor,” NBC News’ Julie Tsirkin reported earlier Thursday. “Group of hardliners were trying to pressure Johnson to only put Israel aid on the floor and hold Ukraine aid until the Senate passed HR2.”

HR2 is the House Republicans’ extremist anti-immigrant legislation that has n o chance of passage in the Senate nor would it be signed into law by President Biden.

“Johnson said he couldn’t do it, and [U.S. Rep. Derrick] Van Orden,” a far-right Republican from Wisconsin “called him ‘tubby’ and vowed to bring on the MTV [Motion to Vacate.]”

“No one in the group (Gaetz, Boebert, Burchett, Higgins, Donalds et al.) were threatening Johnson with an MTV,” Tsirkin added. “Van Orden seemed to escalate things dramatically…”

Despite Greene’s pro-Putin and anti-Ukraine positions, her falsehoods about “Ukrainian Nazis,” and Russians not slaughtering Ukrainian clergy, reporters continue to “swarm”:

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‘They Want Russia to Win So Badly’: GOP Congressman Blasts Far-Right House Republicans

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A sitting Republican Congressman is harshly criticizing far-right House Republicans over their apparent support of Russia.

“I guess their reasoning is they want Russia to win so badly that they want to oust the Speaker over it. I mean that’s a strange position to take,” U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, a three-term Texas Republican rated a hard-core conservative told CNN’s Manu Raju, in video posted Thursday. “I think they want to be in the minority too. I think that’s an obvious reality.”

Congressman Crenshaw was referring to the movement led by U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), now joined by U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY), over the Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson’s decision to finally put legislation on the floor to provide funding to Ukraine to support that sovereign nation in its fight against Russia.

“I’m still trying to process all the b*llsh*t,” Crenshaw added.

Crenshaw on Thursday also commented on Speaker Johnson’s remarks, stating he will hold the Ukraine funding vote regardless of attempts to oust him over it.

“To be clear, he’s being threatened for even allowing a vote to come to the floor. For allowing the constitutional process to play out as intended by our Founders. That’s a wild thing to consider, especially when his enemies consider themselves ‘conservative.’ Not conserving the painstaking constitutional process our Founders created, that’s for sure. Conserving Putin’s gains on the battlefield, more like it.”

Journalist Brian Beutler, a former editor-in-chief at Crooked Media, called it, “darkly funny to me that a pincer movement of MAGAns and leftists mock liberals for claiming the GOP works hand in glove with Russia, and then multiple conservative Republican dissenters are like ‘no it’s true, we’re lousy with Russian influence.'”

Watch Crenshaw’s remarks below or at this link.

READ MORE: Marjorie Taylor Greene, ‘Putin’s Envoy’? Democrat’s Bills Mock Republican’s Actions

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Marjorie Taylor Greene, ‘Putin’s Envoy’? Democrat’s Bills Mock Republican’s Actions

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For years U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) has been called “Pro-Putin.” As far back as 2021, her first year as a member of Congress, the question had been raised on social media: “Is Marjorie Taylor Greene a Russian asset?

In 2022 The Annenberg Public Policy Center’s FactCheck.org reported: “Marjorie Taylor Greene Parrots Russian Talking Point on Ukraine.”

Back then, as the article highlighted, Greene had said, “there is no doubt that [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s actions in Ukraine are despicable and evil.”

Now, she promotes a far more favorable view of President Vladimir Putin and his illegal war against Ukraine, a sovereign nation which the Russian autocrat wants to incorporate – at least partly – into Russia.

Just last week Greene spread demonstrably false pro-Russia talking points about a “war on Christianity” while defending and promoting President Vladimir Putin.

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“This is a war on Christianity,” Greene told far-right propagandist Steve Bannon. “The Ukrainian government is attacking Christians, the Ukrainian government is executing priests. Russia is not doing that.”

That’s just plain false, as NCRM reported.

Largely in response to her strong opposition to the U.S. supporting Ukraine, and her spreading Russian disinformation and flat-out pro-Putin falsehoods, Greene’s fondness for Putin and Russia has been making headlines.

“Republicans Who Like Putin,” was the headline last month at The New York Times, which observed: “A few Republicans have gone so far as [to] speak about Ukraine and its president, Volodymyr Zelensky, in ways that mimic Russian propaganda. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene has accused Ukraine of having ‘a Nazi army,’ echoing language Putin used to justify the invasion.”

“The Putin Republicans Have the Upper Hand” warned Washington Monthly‘s David Atkins on Wednesday, reporting on “conservative extremists led by Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene.”

“They admire the strongman as a Christian nationalist leader, and won’t support Ukraine. The global consequences of their besotted love affair with the Russian strongman could be cataclysmic.”

“Russia Is Buying Politicians in Europe. Is It Happening Here Too?” The New Republic‘s Alex Finley wrote last week. The photo at the top of the page? Marjorie Taylor Greene.

READ MORE: ‘Used by the Russians’: Moskowitz Mocks Comer’s Biden Impeachment Failure

Finley pointed to Greene’s interview with Bannon, “about Ukraine’s persecution of Christians, which is a Kremlin talking point aimed at boosting the pro-Moscow wing of Ukraine’s Orthodox Church. The U.S. should be spending money on the border with Mexico, not on Ukraine aid? That’s a Kremlin talking point. Russia invaded Ukraine to defend itself against an expanding NATO? That’s a Kremlin talking point. Call for a cease-fire, and give Russia Crimea and eastern Ukraine? That’s a Kremlin talking point.”

Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post last week ran this headline: “Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene says she ‘seriously hates’ people who support sending more aid to Ukraine: ‘Most repulsive, disgusting thing happening’.”

Then there is Greene’s obsession with Nazis. Specifically, equating Ukrainians with Nazis, which she did several times over the past week, including on Wednesday. That earned her the condemnation and wrath of U.S. Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL), who demanded: “Stop bringing up Nazis and Hitler.”

Wednesday night, Congressman Moskowitz, known for his use of humor and sarcasm to make his points, declared: “Just submitted an amendment to Bill drafting appointing MTG [Marjorie Taylor Greene] as Putin’s Special Envoy to the United States Congress.”

Moskowitz’s amendment was in response to Congresswoman Greene’s amendments requiring members to “conscript in the Ukrainian military” if they vote for the Ukraine military funding bill, as Juliegrace Brufke reported.

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The Florida Democrat wasn’t joking, as Axios’ Andrew Solender pointed out Thursday morning.

Moskowitz did not stop there.

He drafted legislation on Thursday to name the Capitol Hill offices occupied by Congresswoman Greene after the British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, infamous for promoting appeasement in dealing with Adolf Hitler.

Chamberlain also signed the Munich Agreement, which allowed Hitler to annex part of Czechoslovakia.

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