
Michigan Dem Elissa Slotkin says she was ‘going to punch someone' over party's ‘annoying' economic gaslighting
Though she defended voting in favor of many of former President Joe Biden's economic policies as a congresswoman, Slotkin told the New York Times' 'The Opinions' podcast that Democrats largely fumbled by ignoring people's struggles.
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'So we did pass a bunch of things, but we also spent a good year plus after the pandemic explaining to people that the economy was not as bad as they thought,' Slotkin said. 'Saying things like: This Harvard economist says that G.D.P. is the highest, bah, bah, bah.'
She remarked, 'I was going to punch someone if they quoted me one more Harvard economist when I could tell you with certainty that in my part of the world, people's wages were not keeping pace with inflation. Period.'
Slotkin went on to say that the Democratic Party made voters feel 'stupid' by ignoring their issues because the economy looked good 'on a piece of paper in a spreadsheet in Boston.'
Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., rehearses the Democratic response to President Donald Trump's address to a joint session of Congress, March 4, 2025, in Wyandotte, Mich.
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'That was annoying and was our fault,' she said.
Slotkin, who was elected to the Senate last year, rose to national prominence after giving the Democratic response to President Donald Trump's congressional address in March. Since then, she has been equally critical of her own party for its focus on identity politics.
In April, Politico previewed a speech she gave in Lansing where she called on the Democratic Party to 'f—ing retake the flag' and stop being 'weak and woke.'
President Joe Biden pauses as he speaks to reporters in Nantucket, Mass., Sunday, Nov. 26, 2023, about hostages freed by Hamas in a third set of releases under a four-day cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas.
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Though that report got attention, Slotkin clarified to the New York Times that the words 'weak' and 'woke' were not from her but from focus groups describing the Democratic Party.
'Just to correct the record, the 'weak' and 'woke' were the two words when there were focus groups done in Michigan in February. The two most common words to describe the Democratic Party in Michigan were 'weak' and 'woke.' So just to be accurate, that wasn't me who said those two words. It was me repeating what the perception is of the party,' Slotkin said.
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The Hill
23 minutes ago
- The Hill
Epstein firestorm consumes House
Morning Report is The Hill's a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here or using the box below: In today's issue: ▪ Battle over interim US Attorney in NJ ▪ GOP eyes renaming opera house for Melania Trump ▪ Trump unveils Japan, Philippines trade deals House Republicans find themselves cornered by President Trump 's MAGA base, their own pledges of 'transparency' and by Democrats intent on making the most of the Jeffrey Epstein firestorm. The result: The House, embroiled in a rebellion, will flee Washington today and won't return until September. The majority on Tuesday was unable to push past the simmering controversy to take up a pending immigration bill or a rollback of Biden-era regulations because a key House panel customarily loyal to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) was closing in on a vote on an Epstein-related measure. Johnson hopes that the upcoming August recess will provide time and 'space' for some kind of resolution. 'We're done being lectured on transparency,' the Speaker told reporters Tuesday, hitting what he called Democratic 'side shows.' Epstein, the disgraced New York financier and convicted sex offender who died in a jail cell while awaiting trial in 2019, remains in the headlines more than two weeks after the Justice Department (DOJ) rocked MAGA World with a memo saying it had no additional Epstein files to share. The administration is still laboring to tamp down the controversy. The DOJ and Attorney General Pam Bondi, urged by Trump to release 'credible' investigatory information, asked courts to unseal grand jury transcripts in the case. Two federal judges on Tuesday told the DOJ they need more information. 'The court intends to resolve this motion expeditiously,' they wrote. Still, the administration's actions have also kept the story front and center. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche on Tuesday said he is seeking a meeting with Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell, 63, who is serving a 20-year sentence following her 2021 conviction for sex trafficking and other crimes. Blanche said he planned to ask: 'What do you know?' Trump told reporters on Tuesday that the request to interview Maxwell 'sounds appropriate.' There was no indication the DOJ sought to speak with Maxwell, who is appealing her sentence to the Supreme Court, before issuing its July 7 memo saying an Epstein 'client list' was nonexistent and reaffirming he died by suicide. The DOJ last week urged the court to reject the appeal. Meanwhile, the White House has for days lashed out at a Wall Street Journal report that said Trump had contributed a 'bawdy' letter with his signature for Epstein's 50th birthday in 2003, at the request of Maxwell, for inclusion with notes from other Epstein associates. 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Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Japanese PM Shigeru Ishiba denies reports of resignation amid pressure
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has denied reports he plans to announce his resignation over a historic defeat of his ruling party in a weekend election, saying instead he wanted to make sure a new tariff agreement with the United States is appropriately implemented. Mr Ishiba has been under growing pressure to step down as his ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its junior coalition partner, Komeito, lost their majority in the 248-member upper house, the smaller and less powerful of Japan's two-chamber parliament on Sunday, shaking his grip on power and Japan's political stability. The loss means Mr Ishiba's ruling coalition, which also lost a majority in the more powerful lower house in October, now lacks a majority in both houses of parliament, making it even more difficult for his government to achieve any policy goals and worsening Japan's political instability. Mr Ishiba had announced his intention to stay on to tackle pressing challenges, including tariff talks with the US, without creating a political vacuum, sparking calls from inside and outside his own party for a quick resignation to respond to the election results. With the tariff deal with the US paving the way for his possible departure, Japanese media said he is expected to soon announce plans to step down in August. The Yomiuri newspaper, in an extra edition on Wednesday, said Mr Ishiba had decided to announce his resignation by the end of July after receiving a detailed report from his chief trade negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, paving the way for a party leadership vote to choose his successor. Mr Ishiba denied the report and said he wants to focus on the US trade deal, which covers more than 4,000 goods affecting many Japanese producers and industries. The Prime Minister, who met party heavyweights and former prime ministers Taro Aso, Fumio Kishida and Yoshihide Suga on Wednesday at party headquarters, told reporters afterwards that they did not discuss his resignation or a new party leadership contest. They only discussed the election results, shared the sense of crisis and confirmed the need to avoid party discord, he said. Mr Ishiba welcomed the trade agreement on Wednesday, which places a 15% tax on Japanese cars and other goods imported into the US from Japan, down from the initial 25%. He said it was a product of tough negotiations to protect the national interest and that it would help benefit both sides as they work together to create more jobs and investment. But Mr Ishiba declined to comment on his possible move and only told reporters that he has to closely examine the trade deal first. In Sunday's election, voters frustrated with price increases exceeding the pace of wage hikes, especially younger people who have long felt ignored by the ruling government's focus on senior voters, rapidly turned to emerging conservative and right-wing populist parties, like the Democratic Party for the People and Sanseito. None of the opposition parties have shown interest in forming a full-fledged alliance with the governing coalition but they have said they are open to cooperating on policy.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Eric Adams slams socialist Zohran Mamdani's ‘false promises' as sure to harm lower-income New Yorkers
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