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Tag: lawandorder
Trump’s Jan. 6 pardons don’t mesh with GOP law-and-order image
Politics often entails angles and illusion, dodges and diversions. Navigating the space between hope and reality is one of its requisite skills. But sometimes events demand a straightforward response.
To wit:
Do you think it’s OK to attack a police officer by plunging a stun gun multiple times into his neck?
How about using a riot shield to smash a police officer into a metal door frame, leaving him bruised and bloodied?
Any problem with someone who spends more than an hour assaulting law enforcement officers with pepper spray, a metal crutch and wooden and metal poles?
President Trump seems just fine with the above, a tiny fraction of the crime spree committed when a swarm of rioters overran the Capitol in a violent bid to overturn the 2020 presidential election. The above-mentioned perpetrators — and many more like them — were among the roughly 1,500 criminal defendants whom Trump pardoned just hours after taking office.
How’s that for Making America Safe Again, as was promised throughout his White House bid?
Going forth, any candidate who campaigns under the banner of Trump’s Republican Party — which has long styled itself as the party of law and order and “backing the blue” — should be made to reconcile that asserted stance with the president’s unholy act.
And, please, none of this yeah-but-what-about in regard to President Biden’s misguided use of his pardoning powers before he exited the Oval Office. None of the pardoned Biden family members were, to give but one example, caught stealing pepper spray from police, distributing it to assailants and attacking officers as part of a “war” on the government.
If you don’t see a difference, you need more help than your friendly political columnist can provide.
Trump’s fun-house version of justice may not matter a whit to voters, or alter even slightly their perceptions of the two major parties.
“If American campaigns were logical, this would be a huge problem for Republicans,” said Jack Pitney, a politics professor at Claremont McKenna College, who worked for the national GOP during the George H.W. Bush administration.
“But campaigns aren’t logical,” he said. “When Republican candidates talk about law and order, they’re talking about street crime, the things that people encounter every day. They simply put things such as the attack on the Capitol in a separate box.”
A lot of people voted for Trump’s return to the White House “knowing it was going to be messy,” as Rob Stutzman, a GOP strategist and no fan of the president, put it. That recognition came baked into their decision, Stutzman said, and “they’re going to tolerate some of the nutball stuff” if the president delivers on promises such as securing America’s borders.
In fairness, it should be noted there were some post-pardon voices of Republican dissent, including GOP senators who criticized the extent of Trump’s action. Nothing, however, that amounted to a major outcry or serious Republican backlash.
House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters it was time to move forward and not look back, a mantra widely echoed in party ranks — except, of course, over those pardons that Biden issued.
Surveys, including one conducted right after Trump’s amnesty order, showed roughly 60% of those polled were opposed to pardoning Jan. 6 offenders. Which means a not-unsubstantial number of Americans have no problem turning loose cop-beaters and insurrectionists, presumably so long as Trump manages to bring down the price of eggs, bacon and gasoline.
Let’s wait and see. We’re not even two weeks into the Trump administration and there are nearly 650 days to the 2026 midterm election, the next chance voters nationwide will have to weigh in on the direction of the country and the president’s performance.
When it comes to those sprung Jan. 6 jailbirds, “we know what’s going to happen,” said Bill Carrick, a Democratic campaign strategist. “Bad actors got out and they’re going to do something bad.”
In fact, just last weekend a Capitol rioter pardoned by Trump was killed by an Indiana sheriff’s deputy during a traffic stop after he ended up in an altercation with an officer.
Democrats will be poised “to highlight” those sorts of cases, Carrick said, imagining the script for a campaign ad that practically writes itself: “He was sentenced to X number of years. Trump let him out of jail, and look what he did.”
The country crossed a dubious threshold on Nov. 5 when, as Pitney observed, “A convicted felon who incited a violent insurrection against the government of the United States [was] elected president.”
And here we are.
But that insult to our ideals is no reason to try to stuff the criminality of Jan. 6 down a memory hole, or “get over it,” as some Trump backers sneeringly suggest.
We can’t put those lawbreakers back behind bars. But their apologists and political patrons can be held to account when it comes time to vote again. They should be. It’s necessary to help preserve and protect our country.
And make America safe again.
On January 6, former President Donald Trump made the controversial decision to grant pardons to several individuals involved in the Capitol riots, a move that has sparked backlash and raised questions about the GOP’s commitment to law and order.The pardons, which included individuals convicted of crimes such as assault on law enforcement officers and destruction of government property, have been criticized as undermining the Republican Party’s traditional stance on law enforcement and upholding the rule of law.
Many within the GOP have expressed concern that Trump’s pardons send the wrong message, undermining the party’s credibility on issues of law and order. Some have even called on party leaders to denounce the pardons and distance themselves from Trump’s actions.
Overall, Trump’s decision to pardon individuals involved in the January 6 riots has highlighted a growing divide within the GOP on issues of law enforcement and accountability, and raised questions about the party’s commitment to upholding the rule of law.
Tags:
- Trump pardons
- Jan. 6 pardons
- GOP law-and-order
- Trump administration
- Presidential pardons
- Republican party
- Political controversy
- Capitol riot
- Legal implications
- Trump’s legacy
#Trumps #Jan #pardons #dont #mesh #GOP #lawandorder #image
Gov. Kristi Noem nomination as DHS boss invites law-and-order praise
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem’s nomination to head the Department of Homeland Security is being welcomed by law-and-order advocates and southern border stakeholders as she prepares to meet with the Senate on Friday for a confirmation hearing.
President-elect Trump announced her as his choice on Nov. 12, just days after beating Vice President Harris in the election, who was widely condemned as ineffective on border security under President Biden.
“She was the first Governor to send National Guard Soldiers to help Texas fight the Biden Border Crisis, and they were sent a total of eight times,” the Trump transition team noted in a statement announcing her nomination. “She will work closely with ‘Border Czar’ Tom Homan to secure the Border, and will guarantee that our American Homeland is secure from our adversaries.”
Trump made combating migrant crime central to his campaign, an important issue for voters that went largely ignored by Democrats, who dismissed congressional hearings involving testimony from victims’ families as politically motivated.
TRUMP SELECTS SOUTH DAKOTA GOV KRISTI NOEM TO RUN DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem visits FOX Business Network’s “Varney & Co” at Fox Business Network Studios on May 7, 2024, in New York City. (John Lamparski/Getty Images)
“I think it’s a wonderful, wonderful nomination,” said Jim Chilton, an Arizona rancher whose property straddles the end of one section of border wall.
“Last year we had three people die on the ranch, two evidently with dehydration, one was evidently murdered by a cartel,” he told Fox News Digital over the phone. “One of my cowboys found his body and his head cut off.”
Five miles of his 50,000-acre property are protected by the wall, he said, but thousands of people have crossed his property on another half-mile that is left exposed by incomplete construction. In April alone, he said, more than 5,600 people crossed his property around the end of the barrier.
“The solution is to finish the wall, put the Border Patrol on the wall, arrest anybody trying to climb over or cut through the wall, and prevent anybody from coming into the United States without proper documentation,” he told Fox News Digital.
NOEM BOASTS OUTPOURING OF POLICE, BORDER UNION SUPPORT FOR DHS CHIEF
This photo shows migrants at the southern border encountered in Arizona. (U.S. Border Patrol)
Cartel scouts, he said, control the high ground, patrolling the mountains above his ranch and watching for Border Patrol agents, relaying information via satellite and radio to their smuggler counterparts.
Authorities have thwarted their efforts when possible, however.
RACHEL MORIN’S MOM CALLS OUT BIDEN-HARRIS FOR IGNORING FAMILY AFTER MIGRANT MURDER
Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., is pictured with his head down and his eyes closed during congressional testimony from the mothers of murder victims whose suspected killers were illegal immigrants on Sept. 10, 2024. (Cathie Groenewold)
“Last month, Border Patrol apprehended a group on my ranch, and they had an AK-47 and 100 pounds of cocaine,” Chilton said. “It’s just outrageous.”
As for the agents themselves, they are looking forward to getting back to work under a supportive White House, according to Hector Garza, a member of the force for more than 20 years and the president of the National Border Patrol Council Local 2455 in Laredo.
“We’re excited for the new Border Patrol leadership,” he told Fox News Digital. “For us as agents, it means border security – and it also means safety.”
Under the Biden-Harris administration, he said, agents have suffered from a lack of manpower and equipment.
BIDEN-HARRIS OPEN BORDER POLICY FREED ILLEGAL 3 WEEKS BEFORE JOCELYN NUNGARAY MURDER, MOTHER SAYS
Arizona rancher Jim Chilton speaks at the Republican National Convention on July 17, 2024. (REUTERS/Mike Segar)
“We had an open border, where our agents were so busy processing family units and unaccompanied children,” he added. “Meanwhile, all of these dangerous criminals were eluding law enforcement, and what that means is many criminals have entered the U.S. and are now living in our communities.”
Those threats include members of the violent, transnational gangs MS-13 and Tren de Aragua.
“They are terrorizing our fellow citizens in the U.S.,” Garza said. “Now we’re going to have a very difficult job to undo everything that the Biden administration has done.”
Hector Garza speaks during a news briefing alongside then-President Trump on Jan. 3, 2018. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
However, he said, he is confident they can get the job done with the backing of Trump, Noem, Homan, Customs and Border Protection commissioner nominee Rodney Scott and supportive members in Congress.
“President Trump can’t do it alone,” he said. “Congress is a very important piece of the puzzle.”
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South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (Brandon Bell/Getty Images/File)
Noem, who has advocated for stronger border measures for more than a decade, has vowed to both secure the border and “restore safety to American communities” – many of which have been plagued by migrant crime in recent years. Before she won election to the South Dakota governor’s office, she served in the House of Representatives and as a state lawmaker.
Shocking slayings have victimized women and girls around the country, in Texas, Maryland, Georgia, Massachusetts and elsewhere, repeatedly grabbing national attention during the Biden-Harris administration.
Trump has invited some of the victims’ families to attend his inauguration to a second term on Monday.
South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem’s nomination as the head of the Department of Homeland Security has been met with praise from those who value law and order in the United States. Noem’s strong stance on protecting her state’s citizens and upholding the rule of law has made her a popular figure among conservatives.Many believe that Noem’s experience in dealing with issues such as drug trafficking, human trafficking, and immigration in South Dakota make her well-suited to lead the DHS. Her commitment to enforcing immigration laws and securing the border has been a cornerstone of her political platform, and many see her as a strong advocate for maintaining national security.
Noem’s nomination has sparked excitement among those who believe that she will bring a no-nonsense approach to the DHS and prioritize the safety and security of the American people. Her reputation as a tough, no-nonsense leader has earned her respect from both sides of the political aisle, and many believe that she will bring a fresh perspective to the department.
Overall, Governor Kristi Noem’s nomination as DHS boss has been met with praise from those who value law and order in the United States. Her commitment to upholding the rule of law and protecting American citizens makes her a strong candidate for the position, and many are hopeful that she will bring a new level of leadership to the department.
Tags:
- Gov. Kristi Noem
- DHS boss
- law and order
- nomination
- praise
- government
- security
- Department of Homeland Security
- leadership
- political appointment
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