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Home Front: Politix
Harry Reid rips James Comey for doing 'nothing' about Russian election meddling
2019-03-25
[Washington Examiner] Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid condemned former FBI Director James Comey in a weekend interview, saying he didn’t do enough to curtail Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

Reid, a Democrat from Nevada, told radio host John Catsimatidis of 970 AM in New York that he sent a letter to Comey before the election urging him to look into Russia and reports that it was meddling in the election.

"I wrote a letter in August [2016] to the Director of the FBI Comey and said Russia is messing with our elections and you need to do something about that. And by October he had done nothing," Reid said. "We now know he should have done something."

Reid said Comey didn’t get involved because he thought President Trump’s Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, was going to win. Reid has been a sharp critic of Comey since before the 2016 election and blamed the former FBI director for Clinton’s defeat. Comey was fired by Trump in 2017.

"Now the hindsight from his troops are that he didn’t do it because he thought Hillary would win the election. He therefore thought it would be too political for him to get involved," Reid said.

Special counsel Robert Mueller submitted his final report on election meddling to Attorney General William Barr on Friday. Mueller was appointed within days of Comey’s firing, and Comey later told Congress he leaked memos between he and Trump to try to spur the creation a special counsel investigation.
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Home Front: Politix
Senate Dems Plan to Rush Bills Through Before GOP Takeover
2014-11-07
Senate Democrats are planning to rush masses of bills to the president's desk before January, when they will be forced to cede control of the upper chamber to Republicans following the GOP's midterm victories.

According to The Washington Post, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid plans to advance a range of measures, including legislation to fund the government until September 2015 so as to avoid a government shutdown that would otherwise be triggered on Dec. 11 when the current funding arrangement expires.

He also plans to push through a raft of pending presidential nominations, including federal judicial posts, though it will not be possible to process the hundreds of appointments awaiting approval, the Post reported

There is also expected to be a push to renew a range of tax breaks that expired at the end of 2013, extending them through 2015.

One such measure is the credit for research-and-development expenses for businesses, something the House has already voted to reinstitute and make a part of the permanent tax code. Bipartisan support is expected, even though in the past, conservative lawmakers have opposed a piecemeal approach in favor of comprehensive tax reform.

A debate about the annual defense policy bill will likely also be on the agenda, but a bipartisan proposal to stiffen sanctions against Iran could hit a roadblock when it reaches the Oval Office.

The Obama administration is concerned that new restrictions on Iran's fuel purchases and other areas of the country's economy could damage international negotiations with the country to prevent the development of its nuclear capabilities, the Post said.
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Government
Appeals court voids big Obamacare ruling, will rehear case
2014-09-05
the effect of Dingy Harry and Bumble stacking the courts thru the nuclear option
[CNBC] Obamacare advocates caught a potentially big victory Thursday in an ongoing legal battle to protect billions of dollars worth of subsidies for nearly 5 million people who bought insurance on HealthCare.gov.

A leading federal appeals court Thursday vacated a bombshell decision by a three-judge panel that had threatened to yank those subsidies, and invalidate another major part of Obamacare in 36 states.

That court in Washington, D.C., said its full judicial line-up will rehear arguments on Dec. 17 in that case known as Halbig v. Burwell, where plaintiffs claim the financial aid given customers on the federal insurance exchange HealthCare.gov are illegal under the Affordable Care Act.

The move by the D.C. appeals court, which was requested by the Obama administration, also may well prompt the U.S. Supreme Court to hold off, for now, on considering an appeal of a second, virtually identical case. That could protect the subsidies for at least a year or more.

Legal experts anticipate that December's rehearing by the full court, a so-called en-banc review, will lead to a victory for Obamacare advocates who want to maintain those subsidies.

That's because a majority of judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit are appointees of Democratic presidents. In contrast, the two appeals judges on the court who voted in late July to invalidate the subsidies were both appointed by Republican presidents, while the one judge who voted to uphold them was a Democratic appointee.

Democratic appointees would hold a three-vote margin in an en-banc review of Halbig. That margin came into effect last winter, when President Barack Obama finally got Senate approval for three of his nominees to that bench over Republican opposition.

The confirmations came only after a dramatic political move by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who forced through a series of rule changes that allowed confirmation of most federal judges to be approved by a simple majority of senators, instead of the former 60-vote rule that Republicans were using to block the nominees.
Elections have consequences. And it is expected that the Republicans will take majorities in both Houses of Congress in November, which will impact future judge confirmations. Separately, there are upward of fifty cases against Obamacare wending their way through the courts. If this one doesn't emasculate it at this stage of the proceedings, that merely postpones things.
The en-banc review panel will include not only the 11 active judges on the circuit, but also the two senior judges who were on the panel that issued the now-vacated decision in July. One of the senior judges, Raymond Randolph, was part of the majority opinion written by active Judge Thomas Griffith that found the subsidies were illegal. The other senior judge on the panel, Harry Edwards, strongly dissented.

Obamacare expert Timothy Jost said it is "quite unusual" for the D.C. Circuit to grant an en-banc review, and suggests that a majority of the judges will reject the challenge to the subsidies.

"They wouldn't have taken a review unless they thought there was something questionable about the opinion" by the three-judge panel, said Jost, a law professor at Washington and Lee University who has repeatedly jousted with advocates of the subsidy challenge.
"And anyone who thinks so is a stoopid poopyhead," he added.
That decision, which came as a stunning blow to the Obama administration, was based on arguments that the Affordable Care Act explicitly authorizes federal subsidies only for people who buy health plans on exchanges set up by individual states.

Because the ACA is silent on any subsidies being issued to enrollees on a federally run exchange, such as HealthCare.gov, such financial aid is not legal, according to a theory advanced by Michael Cannon of the libertarian Cato Institute and Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law. Just 14 states and the District of Columbia set up Obamacare exchanges--the rest of the country is served by HealthCare.gov.

Obamacare proponents scoff at the plaintiffs' argument, saying that it ignores the overall intent of the ACA, which is to provide affordable health coverage to millions of Americans. They also note that the creation of a federal exchange was contemplated in that law, and that the drafters of the law have said they never intended to deprive enrollees on that exchange of the financial assistance available to state-run exchange customers.

Despite their differences of opinion, both sides of the argument agree that the stakes are immense.

HealthCare.gov sells insurance in the 36 states that did not operate their own exchanges this year, And 4.7 million enrollees on that marketplace--nearly 90 percent of all sign-ups--received financial assistance in the form of subsidies, which often greatly reduced their premiums, as well as their out-of-pocket health costs.

If the original ruling Halbig were to be upheld, it would have several dramatic effects.

First, those people would lose their subsidies. Second, many of those people would then become exempt from Obamacare's mandate that they obtain health insurance as of this year or pay a penalty, because the ACA exempts people whose insurance options cost more than a certain percentage of their incomes.

On the other hand, some people who didn't qualify for that exemption would be faced with significantly higher premiums, which they would have to pay or be liable for a tax penalty equal to 2 percent of their income. The consultancy Avalere Health in July, before the Halbig decision came down, estimated that subsidized HealthCare.gov customers would face premium hikes of a whopping 76 percent on average if they lost their subsidies.

Lastly, a decision finding HealthCare.gov subsidies illegal would destroy, in the affected states, Obamacare's so-called employer mandate, which beginning next year will require medium- and large-sized employers to offer workers affordable health plans or pay a fine. That mandate only kicks in if a worker of those employers buys subsidized coverage from an exchange.

On the same day Halbig was decided in July by the D.C. Circuit, another case challenging the subsidies was rejected by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Virginia, in a 3-0 decision that found the aid is legal.

Plaintiffs in that case had recently asked the Supreme Court to hear an appeal of that ruling. At the time, there was still a split between the D.C. Circuit and the Fourth Circuit on the legality of the subsidies.

But without any such split--as is the case now with the D.C. court's move--the Supreme Court is considered much less likely to take an appeal, particularly if an en-banc review is still pending, like it is in D.C.

A senior Obama administration official called Thursday's decision by the D.C. Circuit to rehear Halbig "an important and welcome next step in the process of the Halbig case."

"The 2-1 decision of the panel was wrong, and we are confident that the full court will recognize that the text of the statute, the clear intent of Congress and common sense all demonstrate that premium tax credits are available to Americans in every state--as a unanimous panel of the Fourth Circuit has already concluded," the official said.

"These lawsuits won't stand in the way of the Affordable Care Act and the millions of Americans who can now afford health insurance because of it. In the meantime, to be clear, people getting premium tax credits should know that nothing has changed as this case makes its way through the courts; tax credits remain available."

The Competitive Enterprise Institute, the group that is coordinating and funding the legal challenges to the subsidies, said that the Supreme Court should ultimately decide the issue.

"We believe we are correct on the merits in this case," said CEI general counsel Sam Kazman. "As even the Fourth Circuit noted when it ruled against us in the King v. Burwell case, our position is supported by the text of the Affordable Care Act, and we intend to present our arguments forcefully before the full D.C. Circuit."

"Meanwhile, in the King case, our petition for review is before the Supreme Court, and we continue to believe that it is the only court that can resolve this issue in the quick and final manner that the country deserves," Kazman said.

Cannon, one of the intellectual godfathers of the challenges to the subsidies, quickly posted a reaction to the court's move on his Forbes.com blog.

"Today's decision by the D.C. Circuit to grant en-banc review of Halbig v. Burwell is unwise and unfortunate," Cannon wrote. "It has the appearance of a political decision, and will likely only delay Supreme Court review. It does not necessarily presage the outcome of these cases, and I predict that even if the administration wins, it will lose ground before the full D.C. Circuit."

"It is more likely that en-banc review of Halbig will delay Supreme Court review of this issue than obviate it. The same factor that made Halbig a candidate for en-banc rehearing--its 'exceptional importance'--makes it an equally likely candidate for Supreme Court review," Cannon wrote.

Earlier this week, the Supreme Court gave the Obama administration another month, until the beginning of October, to respond to the request by the plaintiffs in the King case that the high court hear their appeal.

There is no legal right for a losing party to be heard by the Supreme Court. The high court decides which appeals to hear.

Even if the Supreme Court ends up punting on the issue for now, the matter could eventually land before the high court via another avenue. Two other federal district court challenges to the subsidies have been filed, one in Indiana and the other in Oklahoma. Neither has been decided at the district level as of yet.

The side that loses those cases would have the right to appeal any ruling to the appellate court level. And then the loser on the appellate level could, as the subsidy challengers in the King case did, ask the Supreme Court to review any adverse decision.
Link


Home Front: Politix
VA scandal prompts Senate action
2014-06-04
[CBS News] In the wake of the VA hospital scandal, several reform proposals are taking shape in the Senate this week with a focus on allowing veterans to seek medical care outside the Veterans Affairs medical system.

Three Republican senators, John McCain of Arizona, Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, Jeff Flake of Arizona and Richard Burr of North Carolina, the ranking member on the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, announced a proposal on Tuesday, which they say will give veterans greater flexibility and choice in health care providers and increase accountability and transparency at the VA.

The legislation, "would empower veterans who can't schedule an appointment within a reasonable time or live too far away from the VA medical facility to exercise the choice - I emphasize the choice - of getting medical care from any doctor in a Medicare or Tricare program. I've always believed that veterans could choose and should choose," McCain said at a press conference announcing the bill. It would also prohibit the use of metrics like wait times from being used to award bonuses, penalize employees for falsifying data, and give the VA secretary the power to remove any top executive if they determine that his or her performance warrants removal.

On CBS' "Face the Nation" Sunday, McCain argued that the VA should aim to provide care in the military-specific areas where it excels, such as traumatic brain injuries, post-traumatic stress disorder, prosthesis and other war wounds.

"Why should a veteran have to get into a van and ride three hours to get to Phoenix in order to have routine medical care taken care of? Why doesn't that veteran have a card and go to the caregiver that he or she needs and wants?" McCain said. "That's the solution to this problem, this flexibility to the veteran to choose their healthcare, just like other people under other healthcare plans are able to do."

Burr noted that the bill does not encompass every reform Congress would like to put in place, but rather addresses the most urgent things needed at the moment.

The chairman of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., introduced his own bill that allows any veteran who can't get a timely appointment the option to seek treatment at a community health center, military hospital or private doctors.

The bill will also would give the VA authority to immediately remove senior executives based on poor job performance while preventing wholesale political firings, authorize the agency to lease 27 new health facilities in 18 states, and use emergency funding to hire new doctors, nurses and other providers. That, Sanders believes, is the root of the problem.

"What is very clear to everybody right now is that in many parts of the country, the VA simply did not have the doctors and the staff to make sure the veterans got timely care," Sanders said on "Face the Nation."

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., praised Sanders' "really good" bill, which will "improve the manner in which the United States of America cares for its veterans."

"I'm hopeful that all members will support this," DickheadReid said on the Senate floor Monday.

But the Republicans believe their bill fixes issues that Sanders' does not.

"Unlike Sen. Sanders' bill this legislation addresses the root causes of current VA scandal and empower veterans with greater flexibility to get the quality medical care that he or she deserves," McCain said. Coburn also disagreed with the premise that the agency needs more doctors, citing an Annals of Family Medicine study that said the average practitioner in the VA hospital sees just half the number of patients that the average practitioner outside the VA hospital system does.

That study, however, also concludes that "the average primary care physician's panel size is too large for delivering consistently high quality care under the traditional practice model."

Senate Republicans have also pushed for a VA reform bill passed overwhelmingly by the House last month, which would give the VA secretary increased power to fire or demote senior VA officials in an attempt to reduce red tape that can stretch out the process of removing an ineffective staffer from their position.
Nothing will be fixed until this happens.
Criticism of the House-passed bill has come chiefly from the Senior Executives Association, a selfserving professional association that represents career federal executives in the Senior Executive Service (SES). They have warned members of Congress that the bill demonizes VA executives without actually fixing problems facing veterans' access to care.

Soon to be ExWhite House Press Secretary Jay Carney said last month that the White House "share[s] the goals" of the House bill, but had other Union unnamed concerns about the legislation. He has not indicated whether the president will sign it if it passes the Senate.
This is the one chance Congress has to fix the VA if they can get this to the champ's desk before the November elections.
Meanwhile, Sens. Mary Landrieu, D-La., and Jerry Moran, R-Kansas, have inserted the language of the House bill into the VA's 2015 spending bill in the Senate Appropriations Committee.

The pressure for a quick solution came to a head last week when an interim report from the VA's inspector general found "systemic" problems at a VA hospital in Phoenix, Ariz., confirming the mounting reports of misconduct and lengthy wait times that had been circulating for several weeks. Two days after the report was issued, VA Secretary Eric Shinseki stepped down amid growing calls for his resignation.
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-Land of the Free
'Trespass Cattle': One of the Latest Theories on the Bundy Ranch and the Feds
2014-04-23
[The Blaze] Allegations that the so-called "land grab" showdown between the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and Nevada rancher terrorist Cliven Bundy was influenced by a deal involving Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and a Chinese-backed company failed to hold up to closer scrutiny last week.
Not nearly close enough in my view.
The Bureau of Land Management has begun to round up what they call "trespass cattle" that rancher Cliven Bundy has been grazing in the Gold Butte area 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas.

But now, a new claim regarding what may have led to the tense standoff is starting to gain traction.

The latest theory on what may have provoked the armed showdown between Bundy and federal agents involves the Bureau of Land Management at one point referring on its website to "trespass cattle" in the Gold Butte area, the same area that the federal government and the 67-year-old rancher have battled over for more than 20 years.

The document, titled "Cattle Trespass Impacts," which was removed from the Bureau of Land Management's website in the midst of the standoff, discusses the Dry Lake Solar Energy Zone project and its effect on the local wildlife.
Yes, an inconvenient fact removed from the BLM website, but archived at above link.
"Non-Governmental Organizations have expressed concern that the regional mitigation strategy for the Dry Lake Solar Energy Zone utilizes Gold Butte as the location for offsite mitigation for impacts from solar development, and that those restoration activities are not durable with the presence of trespass cattle [emphasis added]," the Bureau of Land Management said on its website.

But here's the thing: The passage referring to "trespass cattle" appears to indicate only that the federal agency has an interest in detailing which of its solar projects have negative impacts on the local wildlife and vice versa.
Link


Home Front: Politix
Champ Fundraising In Texas Same Day As Fort Hood memorial
2014-04-08
[Breitbart] "The president and first lady send their thoughts and prayers out to the victims and families and everyone on the base, and they're going to actually travel down on Wednesday to the memorial ceremony," White House Senior Adviser Dan Pfeiffer explained on CBS "Face the Nation" on Sunday.

But President Champ was already scheduled to travel to Texas that day for a big Democratic fundraiser with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (R-CA).

According to a February report from the Associated Press, the event will take place at the home of John Eddie William in Houston, Texas. Tickets for the event cost as much as $64,800 per couple and proceeds from the event go to the Democratic House Senate Victory Fund

Champ is also scheduled to speak at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library in Austin on Thursday, at a summit marking the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act.
Keeping it classy, our Champ and FLOTUS.
Link


Government
Senator Reid: Americans Un-Educated on the Internet = Low Obamacare Enrollment
2014-03-27
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid tried to explain the Obama administration's latest decision to extend a key ObamaCare deadline by saying people just "are not educated on how to use the Internet."

The explanation, which glossed over the myriad technical problems HealthCare.gov had for weeks after its October launch, came as the administration faced Republican criticism for a late-breaking decision to extend a looming deadline for some. Open enrollment in the Affordable Care Act federal exchanges is set to end March 31, but the Department of Health and Human Services will let those who start the application process before that date have a bit more time to finish.

Reid, and the Obama administration, will not call the change a "delay."
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Government
Obama Regime Tells Party to Attack, Not Apologize
2014-02-28
Vice President Joe Biden’s message about ObamaCare to anxious Democrats gathered for the party’s winter meeting in Washington: “My central message to you is look: I think we should not apologize for a single thing.” Nothing? Not even a crashed Web site? Millions of cancelled policies? The “lie of the year” award? Skyrocketing premiums? Nope. On the contrary, Biden said Democrats should instead be heralding their accomplishments, chief among which is the health law that polls show dragging the party down in midterm elections and opening wide the door for Republicans to take over the Senate. “We are too shy,” Biden improbably said. “We are not talking about it enough, in my opinion.” This is part of a new motif from Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Whether they believe it themselves or not, the message is that problems with the law are not real. Biden, Reid, et al are telling Democrats to blow off deepening ObamaCare concerns, including the horror stories of actual Americans, and talk about the good things.
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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Clinton, Reid, DNC took campaign contributions from deathbed identity thief
2013-10-15
[DAILYCALLER] Republican National Committee (RNC) chairman Reince Preibus called for Hillary Clinton
... former Secretary of State, sometimes described as For a good time at 3 a.m. call Hillary and at other times as Mrs. Bill, never as Another Edmund Randolph ...
, Harry Reid
... the charismatic senator-for-life from Nevada, currently majority leader ...
, and the Democratic National Committee (DNC) to return campaign donations they received from a man who pled guilty to identity theft of the terminally ill.

Clinton, Reid, and the DNC all received donations from Joseph Caramadre. Democratic Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe invested $47,000 in an illegal business in which Caramadre applied for annuities and bonds with the stolen identities of dying people.

Caramadre donated $27,000 to McAuliffe's last gubernatorial campaign in 2009 and hosted a fundraiser for the former DNC chairman. McAuliffe and his campaign immediately vowed to make contributions to the American Cancer Society to atone for the investment and 2009 campaign contribution from Caramadre.

"The allegations are horrible and he never would have invested if he knew he was being deceived," said a McAuliffe front man.

But the RNC found that the scandal is wider than initially thought.

Caramadre and his wife Paula have donated $13,000 to Hillary Clinton since 2005, $9,200 to Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid since 2007, $5,000 to the DNC since 2007, and $28,250 and $25,250 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) respectively since 2006.
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Home Front: Politix
Harry Reid's Office Leaks Boehner Office Emails
2013-10-03
"A series of leaked emails authored by House Speaker John Boehner's chief of staff Mike Sommers shows Boehner may have coordinated with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to exempt Congress from Obamacare."
If true, this a$$hat (Boehner) has got...to... go....
How much would you bet that the leaked emails were a) illegally acquired, b) shaped, trimmed, fluffed, and teased to create a certain impression, and c) part of a horse trading deal that were supposed to have gotten the Republicans something equally valuable before the Senate Majority Leader, the honourable Harry Reid reneged?
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Tough Hill vote on Syria fades
2013-09-15
Congress can breathe a sigh of relief: Lawmakers likely won’t have to take a tough vote on authorizing the use of military force in Syria anytime soon.
They won't be asked to take a tough vote on anything...
The preliminary agreement between the United States and Russia on turning over Syria’s chemical weapons by mid-2014 sets a deadline of November of this year for international inspectors to enter the Middle Eastern country.

The delay will allow Capitol Hill to do nothing as usual pivot from an unpopular decision on military strikes — which many members in both parties opposed — to instead confront a pair of looming fiscal crises, funding the government and raising the debt ceiling.

Senators said last week that the growing opposition to military strikes among members of Congress did not give either party the upper hand on economic issues, but admitted Syria threatened to become a major distraction on the Hill.

The pressure of a high-stakes vote had intensified as it became increasingly clear that President Barack Obama would lose in the House and faced an uphill battle in the Senate. The possibility of a diplomatic solution emerged after Kerry made what appeared to be an off-hand comment in Europe last week — suggesting Syria could avoid military strikes if the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad turned over its stockpiles of chemical weapons to the international community.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) temporarily pulled a limited, 90-day strike on Syria on Wednesday from the floor of the Senate. A GOP aide said Saturday that any renewed effort in the upper chamber would likely necessitate another direct ask from Obama, who has said that he told the Senate to temporarily shelve the measure.
At which point it will fail, since Obama isn't too good at asking for anything...
“We’re ready to bring it to the floor at a moment’s notice,” a Senate Democratic aide said. “But for the moment, we’re letting the diplomatic process play out.”
Brave words for a party that's running scared.
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Home Front: Politix
Official Arizona GOP Body Passes Formal Rebuke of John McCain
2013-09-13
The Legislative District 26 Republican Party in Arizona has passed a formal rebuke of Sen. John Maverick McCain
... the Senator-for-Life from Arizona, former presidential candidate and even more former foot soldier in the Reagan Revolution...
(R-AZ) for abdicating GOP principles in helping Senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) secure votes to approve several of President Barack Obama's controversial nominees.

"Senator John McCain unilaterally negotiated with the Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to secure Republican votes necessary to pass a number of controversial Presidential nominees," the resolution, which passed the official GOP body in the state by a 24-13 vote with four abstentions on Tuesday evening, reads.

The resolution notes that President Obama nominated "Gina McCarthy for head of the Environmental Protection Agency, an environmental bureaucrat who supports anti-job/consumer policies," "Richard Corday to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFRB), an unaccountable, unconstitutional agency created by the Dodd-Frank legislation," and "Thomas Perez as Labor Secretary who has a known record for abusing power as Maryland's Labor Secretary, handing political appointments to Big-Labor bedfellows."

It argues that McCain "provided the votes necessary for the confirmation of the above nominees," and his "'deal' was nothing more than capitulation to the Senate Majority Leader, giving him everything he asked for."

"Senator McCain claims in defense of his actions, that they were taken to prevent the Senate Majority Leader from 'going nuclear' and illegally breaking the Senate rules to pass these nominees," the GOP resolution states, adding that McCain's activity contradicted GOP principles and "the position of Legislative District 26 Republicans is that senators should call the Senate Majority Leader's bluff and force him to get the votes necessary from members of his own party."

The resolution says that given those facts, McCain must "cease deal-making and negotiations for Republican votes that undermine the Senate Republican Leader."

The resolution also argues that because of McCain's work to help Reid and Obama secure confirmation of those liberal nominees, "the conduct of Senator McCain, is unbecoming a Member of the United States Senate, weakened the Senate Republican Leader, and is hereby strongly rebuked and condemned."

Matt Papke, the third vice chair of the body, told Breitbart News that "McCain is the poster child for term limits."

"His back room dealings, insatiable war drum, and eroding base call to question why this man is our Senator," Papke, who is also a candidate for Tempe, AZ, City Council, said in an email. "It is my hope that Senators McCain and Flake work to reestablish their relationships with the boots on the ground members of Legislative District 26 Republicans."

This latest rebuke comes on the heels of the Maricopa County GOP blistering McCain in recent web literature, and his increased distance from Republicans in the state, including the House GOP delegation, as Breitbart News has reported.
Contentious town hall video at link.
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