All posts tagged "c span"

'Body slammed!' Dem lawmaker praised for takedown of ed secretary Linda McMahon

Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-NJ) received widespread praise on social media Wednesday for her takedown of Linda McMahon during the education secretary's defense of the Trump administration's plan to slash $4.5 billion from the nation's K-12 schools.

McMahon, a billionaire thanks to her involvement with World Wrestling Entertainment, testified before the House Appropriations Committee, echoing the administration's talking points on "waste, fraud, and abuse."

McMahon said the school cuts and Trump-directed dismantling of her department would "shrink bureaucracy and empower states 'to manage education in this country,'” The New York Times reported.

"You can say anything you want because your rhetoric means nothing to me," Coleman said while jabbing her finger at a smiling McMahon.

"What means something to me is the action of this administration, from the President of the United States conducting himself in a corrupt manner to his family enriching himself corruptly, to determine that this administration can tell you what's right, what's wrong, what's lawful, what's not. That it can arrest judges, it can arrest lawyers, it can use its power to bully people. And I'm telling you the Department of Education is one of the most important departments in this country, and you should feel shameful being engaged with an administration that doesn't give a damn."

EXCLUSIVE: Trump accused of new grift that puts Qatari plane in shade

The account of @lilwaltjr305 on X posted, "Ma(d) Shoutout to @RepBonnie Watson Coleman. She just body slammed the Secretary of Wrasslin' Linda McMahon. Hell yeah Auntie Watson Coleman."

Journalist B.J. Bethel posted simply, "Linda McMahon vs. Congresswoman Bonnie Watson Coleman."

"She’s like 'you can bring Hulk Hogan, you can even bring Triple H. I said what I said,'" posted the account of @crosbyt123.

Occupy Democrats lavished praise on Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-PA) in a lengthy post.

"Democratic Congresswoman Madeleine Dean obliterates MAGA Education Secretary Linda McMahon for trying to gut her own Department: 'Why are you in this job at all?' This is what we've all been dying to say to this monster's face..." began the post to the account's nearly 700,000 followers.

At least one Republican was unhappy with McMahon's comments on the department's TRIO educational outreach programs "designed to motivate and support students from disadvantaged backgrounds," according to ed.gov.

USA Today education reporter Zach Schermele wrote, "'I'm not sure that all the expenses in TRIO should be there,' Linda McMahon told members of Congress today. That assertion rankled even Rep. Mike Simpson, a Republican congressman from Idaho who called the program 'highly successful' and said other programs could learn from it.'"

Watch the clip below or at this link.

Democrats compete with ultimate Trump billboard during national convention

CHICAGO — As the Democratic National Convention kicks off Monday, Republican nominee Donald Trump — not Democratic nominee Kamala Harris — arguably has the most permanent and grandiose billboard in town.

It’s not a traditional billboard suspended alongside the highway, although there are plenty of those surrounding the city with decidedly convention-focused messages.

Rather, it’s the massive letters spelling out TRUMP across the 98-story reflective skyscraper, Trump International Hotel and Tower.

Trump International Hotel and TowerClose-up of Trump sign at Trump International Hotel and Tower in downtown Chicago (Photo by Dave Levinthal/Raw Story)

Suspended over the Chicago River in the city’s downtown for the past 15 years, Trump Tower is the second tallest building in Chicago, and it can’t help but attract the attention of millions of visitors and locals who pass by.

Still, Trump’s permanent presence in Chicago hasn’t stopped both conservative and liberal organizations and media from trying to battle out their causes via traditional billboards.

Heading north on Interstate 55, drivers first encounter billboards welcoming visitors to Chicago for the Democratic National Convention about 45 miles outside of the city near the far southwest, historically blue collar suburb of Joliet, Ill.

Then begins a steady stream of conservative billboards ranging from a sign encouraging drivers to “Discover why Jesus created you” to a “Truth & Tradition” ad from The Epoch Times, a conservative newspaper organization, which is in the midst of a scandal involving charges of money laundering. (The same billboard can be seen near O’Hare International Airport, too.)

Epoch TimesAn ad from the conservative Epoch Times newspaper organization, advertising its website to motorists driving toward downtown Chicago from O’Hare International Airport. (Photo by Dave Levinthal/Raw Story)

As drivers approach the city itself, the Illinois Democrats’ presence becomes more pronounced with various billboards highlighting talking points such as: “Record job growth.” “Balancing budgets.” “Rebuilding roads, bridges & schools.” “Protect women’s rights.”

One of several billboards from Illinois Democrats that says "Protect Women's Rights." This particular billboard is sponsored by Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker's campaign committee. (Photo by Matt Laslo/Raw Story)

The Chicago host committee for the convention unveiled a new campaign, “The Future Is Built In Chicago,” featuring local leaders from nine Chicago neighborhoods.The billboards can be seen approaching the city, featuring ambassadors ranging from Shermann “Dilla” Thomas, a historian and popular TikTok creator, to Chris Harris Sr., a pastor of two prominent churches.

An ad featuring Shermann “Dilla” Thomas, a historian and popular TikTok creator, as part of the "The Future Is Built In Chicago,” campaign. (Alexandria Jacobson/Raw Story)

Throughout the city, cause-based ads were interspersed between official party ads, which included an uncredited “Support Our Troops sign, a “Protect and Serve” ad supporting fallen Chicago Police Department officers, a welcome to “Union Town USA” sign from International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 134 and a message from pro-abortion rights organization, Women’s Declaration International USA, that said “Dear Democrats: only WOMEN need ABORTIONS.”

A billboard on Aug. 16, 2024, en route to downtown Chicago, sponsored by pro-abortion rights organization Women’s Declaration International USA. (Photo by Dave Levinthal/Raw Story)

Media organizations took to billboards as well to promote their convention coverage.

Nonprofit public affairs cable network, C-SPAN, advertised its “unfiltered view of the national convention” to travelers at O’Hare International Airport. Fox News advertised its “Democracy ‘24” coverage on a highway billboard.

An advertisement for C-SPAN’s coverage of the Democratic National Convention greets travelers at O’Hare International Airport on Aug. 16, 2024, in Chicago. (Photo by Dave Levinthal/Raw Story)

Another Fox News ad showed viewership graphs boasting the network in a distinct first place compared to competitors NBC, ABC and CBS with the slogan, “America is watching .. are you?

Fox News billboardFox News channel ad with the slogan, "America is watching ... are you?" (Photo by Matt Laslo/Raw Story)

Billboard battles took place last month during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, as well.

Visitors to Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport were greeted with billboards for the Heritage Foundation, the conservative group spearheading the controversial Project 2025 presidential transition” plan, and pro- and anti-Trump groups took to billboard campaigns with ads from the Republican National Committee to a political action committee backed by Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

Attention Lincoln and Reagan: GOP senators scramble history with Trump greatness claim

Seismologists report that the chunks of granite falling from the Mount Rushmore National Memorial come from the laughter of Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Theodore Roosevelt after they read a recent email blast from the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Donald Trump is “the greatest president in American history,” the NRSC’s fundraising missive declared.

The group, whose purpose is electing Republicans to the Senate, isn’t known for having a staff of eminent historians. But that didn’t stop the NRSC from making the claim about Trump in an email urging people to sign an online birthday card for the former president and current putative Republican president nominee. Trump turns 78 on Friday.

The idea of Trump’s presidential preeminence runs counter to historians’ verdicts.

The C-SPAN Presidential Historians Survey of 2021 placed Trump at No. 41 out of 44, not including Biden.

The Presidential Greatness Project had Trump dead last this year.

The Siena College Research Institute put Trump 43rd out of 45 in 2022.

Raw Story asked Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT), chairman of the NRSC, if he ranks Trump, now a twice-impeached convicted felon who couldn’t win re-election and inspired an insurrection, as the greatest president in American history.

Rachel Dumke, press secretary for Daines, demurred: “This is the senator’s official office, and since this is an unofficial matter, you’ll need to reach out to the NRSC.”

Email from the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Raw Story asked the NRSC to explain its reasoning for ranking Trump ahead of all other presidents, including Republicans such as Ronald Reagan, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Teddy Roosevelt and Lincoln. The NRSC did not respond.

Even Trump himself — during the dawn of MAGA, at least — indicated Lincoln stands above all other presidents.

“You can’t out-top Abraham Lincoln,” Trump told the Washington Post in 2016.

“With the exception of the late, great Abraham Lincoln, I can be more presidential than any president that’s ever held this office,” Trump said in 2017.

C-SPAN’s presidential ranking survey has used the same criteria since 2000 for assessing presidencies: public persuasion, crisis leadership, economic management, moral authority, international relations, administrative skills, relations with Congress, vision and setting an agenda, pursued equal justice for all and performance within the context of times.

Said Don Levy, director of the Siena College Research Institute, when its rankings were announced: “The scholars that participate in this study have changed over 40 years but the top five — FDR, Abe, Washington, Teddy and Jefferson — remain carved in granite year after year.”

Trump frequently refers to President Joe Biden on the campaign trail as “the worst president in history.” House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) said the same thing recently.

The Presidential Greatness Project, which had Trump last, put Biden at No. 14, which project directors Justin Vaughn of Coastal Carolina University and Brandon Rottinghaus of the University of Houston attribute in part to the dim view academics take on Trump.

“Trump’s radical departure from political, institutional and legal norms has affected knowledgeable assessments not just of him but also of Biden and several other presidents,” Vaughn and Rottinghaus wrote.

Rottinghaus declined to tell Raw Story whether any plausible argument exists to place Trump at No. 1, as the NRSC did.

But he and Vaughn did note that Trump even ranked below presidents James Buchanan and Andrew Johnson, the mid-19th century flameouts who bookended Lincoln’s presidency.

Their assessment of Buchanan and Johnson: “Historically calamitous.”

GOPer scorches his own party in expletive-filled rampage

U.S. Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) has an angry message for fellow House Republicans: You had one job to do!

In an expletive-riddled rant Wednesday, as transcribed by C-Span, Roy criticized his party’s inability to, among other things, include spending cuts in stopgap legislation that prevented a government shutdown over Thanksgiving.

“I want my Republican colleagues to give me one thing,” Roy roared. “One that I can go campaign on and say we did.”

Roy’s rant covered a lot of complaints about House Republicans' inability to deliver on promises made to voters, but he was particularly outraged that his fellow party members worked alongside Democrats to prevent airport staff working without pay over a major travel holiday, major delays and an estimated economic loss of $140 million a day.

“Oh, we can’t have a shutdown? Okay,” said Roy. “Then why don’t you just take your voting card, walk over to the other side of the aisle and say, ‘Thank you, sir, may I have another?'”

Cinephiles might recall those are words issued by a young Kevin Bacon as his backside is paddled in the film “Animal House.”

Roy then bemoaned misguided priorities when it came to national defense, seeming to argue inclusion in the military detracted from its core purpose: “Killing people and blowing things up, which is what the military is supposed to be trained to do.”

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Roy noted the veterans who gave their lives to protect our nation's freedoms, then said succinctly, “We’re p---ing it away.”

And he swept away the excuse that House conservatives were “not as bad as the Democrats” by comparing it to a line he sourced to Gen. George Patton: “You won’t have to say, well, I was shoveling c--- in Louisiana ... no offense to my friends from Louisiana.”

Roy’s rhetorical rampage ended with a stern warning to his fellow Americans.

“This country is in trouble,” he said. "When are we going to act like a Republican majority and start fighting?"

This call to arms arrived one day after former Speaker Kevin McCarthy was accused of sucker punching one of his colleagues in the kidneys and U.S. Rep. James Comer referred to a congressional colleague as "a smurf."

Watch the video below or click here.

'No idea how evil': Tucker Carlson's counterpart recalls their forgotten C-SPAN segment

The young journalist looked a bit tired in his tan sport coat and striped bow tie.

It was early on a Saturday, after all — the 8 a.m. hour on New Year's Eve eve of 1995 — and he spoke in soft, sometimes halting tones about trimming government and encouraging tax cuts. He praised the Washington Post's watchdog reporting. He waxed philosophical about legislative processes in a fashion fit for a history professor.

"The founders didn't want, and I don't think we want, any bill or law or idea to breeze through Congress without a vigorous, and for that reason, grubby, debate," then-Weekly Standard staff writer Tucker Carlson told C-SPAN's "Saturday Journal" host Lew Ketcham. "That is the way the system should, and does work."

So it went. No yelling or cursing. No demonizing or demagoguing. When a chipper caller from Salt Lake City mistakenly referred to liberal magazine "Mother Jones" as "Mother Goose" while asking a question about corporate welfare, the malapropism caused 26-year-old Carlson to visibly swallow a sheepish smile.

Observed through the lens of now, the long-forgotten interview and call-in segment — as of today, the online clip of Carlson's C-SPAN debut has just 624 views during the past 27 1/2 years — is preposterous.

The Carlson of 2023 ranks among the most polarizing men in America, perhaps second only to former President Donald Trump — lionized by millions of conservatives for his bombastic Fox News broadcasts that detractors describe as a cesspool of racism, sexism, homophobia and xenophobia. Carlson's anti-vaccine preaching, election conspiracy-promoting, Jan. 6 insurrection-denying shows were also huge business for Fox News — until the network fired him last month amid numerous controversies, including a discrimination lawsuit and revelations of racist text messages.

"I had no idea how evil he would turn out to be. No idea," author and journalist William Saletan, then a Mother Jones reporter who shared the C-SPAN studio with Carlson that morning, recalled to Raw Story. "And I don't think anything in that conversation prepared me for that."

William Saletan (l), Tucker Carlson (c) and C-SPAN host Lew Ketcham (r) appear on "Saturday Journal" the morning of Dec. 30, 1995.

Carlson's first C-SPAN interview "was notable for not being notable," Saletan said. "He didn't say anything that that was anything off the kind of standard path for what a mid-1990s conservative magazine writer might say about policy or politics."

So what happened to Carlson during the three ensuing decades, as he hopscotched his way from CNN to PBS to MSNBC to the Daily Caller to Fox News?

Saletan grew biblical.

"I'm kind of an Old Testament guy. I think that nobody makes you evil. You just are. And I'm sorry to say that," he said. "But ... I think somebody like him, he had to have had a core of vice, of viciousness, that he either disguised from others, from himself, from his audience. Maybe he suppressed it because you just couldn't say those kind of things out loud and have a career. But as soon as he could have a career and say those things, he started saying them."

Saletan continued: "Anyone watching him today, there's no way to describe that objectively other than mean, vicious, malignant, hateful. He just loves to humiliate people. He's like the kid in grade school who would find anything that he could pick on about you. And if it was your ethnicity, or your religion, that's what he would choose. That's the way he functions. He's a child. He's just absolutely a mean child with an adult job. He probably he had that in him all along."

Carlson could not be reached for comment. But in a video he posted on Twitter after his firing from Fox News, Carlson held court about the concept of truth.

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"When honest people say what's true, calmly and without embarrassment, they become powerful. At the same time, the liars, who have been trying to silence them, shrink and they become weaker. That's the iron law of the universe. True things prevail. Where can you still find Americans saying true things? There aren’t many places left, but there are some. And that’s enough. As long as you can hear the words, there is hope."

Carlson also bemoaned how "undeniably big topics" facing the nation — war, civil liberties, science, demographic changes, corporate power, natural resources — are no longer discussed.

"When was the last time you've heard a legitimate debate about any of those issues? It's been a long time," Carlson said. "Debates like that are not permitted in American media."

Carlson, who last appeared on a C-SPAN-produced program in 2018, must've not checked the network's policy- and issue-heavy schedule lately.

What does Saletan, now a writer with The Bulwark, believe Carlson will do next with himself?

"If he thinks it was all a game, he'll probably sit there and collect his severance or whatever he got from Fox," Saletan said. "On the other hand, if he's sincere about this stuff, he might start his own media operation and say, what the hell? I don't have to answer to Rupert Murdoch or corporate executives any more. So I'm going to talk all the time about how the Muslims and the Mexicans are taking over our country."

Watch: Raw Story Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal details investigative reporting plans on C-SPAN

Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal this week detailed Raw Story's plans for the newsroom's investigative reporting — and dug into a pair of new investigations already published.

"In 2023, we want to expand and we want to increasingly do incisive, enterprising, original investigative journalism," Levinthal told host Bill Scanlan on C-SPAN's "Washington Journal".

Such reporting "will not just be telling you about things that are in the news environment right now, but also, uncovering lots of news that you do not know and are not going to be finding in any other publication."

Levinthal, a Washington, D.C.-based investigative editor and reporter, joined Raw Story in January along with Executive Editor Adam Nichols, previously the managing editor of Patch.

Also joining the staff in recent days are Night Editor Mary Papenfuss and writer Gideon Rubin.

In recent weeks, Raw Story has broken stories that have made national news. They include:

Watch the C-SPAN interview below.


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