logo
House Democrats resume infighting after Trump speech humiliation

House Democrats resume infighting after Trump speech humiliation

Yahoo06-03-2025

One full day of embarrassment over the party's response to Donald Trump's speech to Congress was insufficient for Democrats, who delivered a second helping on Thursday.
Despite House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries declaring a censure of Rep. Al Green not worth the paper on which it was printed, nearly a dozen members of his party broke ranks to vote for it.
Green, who was escorted out of Trump's speech Tuesday evening by the sergeant-at-arms, is not exactly worse off. He'll likely receive a fundraising boost resulting from the rebuke.
'I would do it again,' he told reporters on Thursday.
Whether the same can be said for his 10 colleagues who flirted with what Jeffries called a 'political and partisan game' is less obvious, as is the actual strategy that Democratic leadership is pursuing. The group included New York swing-district Democrat Tom Suozzi, who said on Thursday that he believed Democrats should show 'deference' to the same president who'd a day earlier attacked a member of the Senate from the floor of the House, dubbing her 'Pocahontas' — a racist dig at her claims of Native American ancestry.
Jeffries, at a caucus meeting before the president spoke to Congress, had urged his members not to become the center of a media story by causing disruptions.
Their Republican colleagues spent Wednesday and Thursday concocting a scandal around Green's conduct. Despite the recent historical examples of Republican members like Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene heckling Joe Biden (and going wholly unpunished) during his addresses to Congress, Speaker Mike Johnson seized upon Green's shouted remarks during Trump's speech to play an old trick: dividing Democrats with a censure resolution.
Now with Green in the crosshairs of the Republican majority after the fact, the minority leader and his colleagues remain at odds over a path forward. Thursday's vote to censure Green, joined by a number of centrist Democrats closer to the minority leader than many on the progressive left, shows a total absence of a prevailing voice of leadership among the House Democratic caucus.
On social media, the minority leader continually faces accusations of failing to meet the moment.
'Hakeem Jeffries didn't even attempt to fight for one of his own from a censure. Why should we expect him to fight for us?' wrote the progressive-aligned 'Dear White Staffers' account, through which left-leaning congressional staff often vent their disgust.
Many more have echoed this sentiment, frustrated with a caucus leader who as of Thursday afternoon had not issued a statement about the official campaign arm of the GOP House caucus, the NRCC, falsely labeling a member of Jeffries's leadership team (Adriano Espaillat) with the 'illegal immigrant' slur — he was beaten to the punch by the new chair of the DNC, Ken Martin, who said that the NRCC's tweet was racist.
'With Speaker Mike Johnson leading the charge, they wear their bigotry like a badge of honor—absolutely despicable!', said the DNC chair.
There's no sign that Jeffries has any control over the true renegades in his caucus — the conservative members of his caucus who threaten to erase his leverage on key votes and frequently side with Republicans to hand the president's party messaging victories. As a result, the opposition party appears weaker than ever in a moment when Democratic voters are increasingly demanding the emergence of a vocal leader.
One senior House Democrat on Thursday summed up the situation succinctly to Axios: 'Everyone is mad at everyone."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elon Musk's favorability among Republicans dropped 16 points since March, Quinnipiac says
Elon Musk's favorability among Republicans dropped 16 points since March, Quinnipiac says

CNBC

time26 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Elon Musk's favorability among Republicans dropped 16 points since March, Quinnipiac says

Elon Musk's official role in the Trump administration recently came to an end. Many Republicans won't be sad to see less of him, according to the results of Quinnipiac University's latest public opinion survey. While a majority of Republicans still hold a favorable view of Musk, the number fell to 62% in the poll out Wednesday, down from 78% in March, Quinnipiac said. Overall, the Quinnipiac poll found that 30% of self-identified voters surveyed in the U.S. hold a favorable opinion of Musk, according to polling from June 5 to June 9. Republican and Democratic voters remain deeply divided in their views of the world's richest man, who contributed nearly $300 million to propel President Donald Trump back to the White House. Only 3% of Democrats surveyed said they held a favorable of view of the Tesla CEO, who was once seen as an environmental leader appealing to liberal values. Musk didn't respond to a request for comment. Musk and Trump had a very public falling out last week that started with Musk's disapproval of the president's spending bill and escalated into an all-out war of words that played out on social media. Musk said on Wednesday that he regretted some of the posts he made about Trump last week, adding that "they went too far." Even with a slide in his favorability, Musk is still popular among Republicans after his time running the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), an effort to dramatically slash the size of the federal government. Among the Republican respondents to the early June poll, 80% rated Musk and DOGE's work as either excellent or good, while 13% said it was either not so good or poor. In the March poll, 82% of Republicans surveyed said they thought Musk and DOGE were helping the country. Read the full survey results here.

David Hogg won't try to keep his DNC role amid dispute over Democratic primaries
David Hogg won't try to keep his DNC role amid dispute over Democratic primaries

Boston Globe

time33 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

David Hogg won't try to keep his DNC role amid dispute over Democratic primaries

Related : Advertisement He says the party Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Hogg on Wednesday decried 'a serious lack of vision from Democratic leaders, too many of them asleep at the wheel,' noting three Democratic House members have died this year after being reelected in November, leaving the party shorthanded in Washington. The culture on Capitol Hill rewards seniority and protects complacency, he said in a statement announcing his decision to walk away from his DNC role. 'If there is anything activism or history teaches us it's that comfortable people, especially comfortable people with power, do not change,' Hogg said. 'In this moment of crisis, comfort is not an option.' Related : Advertisement In April, DNC Chair Ken Martin proposed bylaw changes to require party officers to remain neutral in all Democratic primaries. Party neutrality is crucial to maintaining the confidence of voters, he argued, pointing to the bitter feud that emerged after supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders' 2016 campaign believed he was stymied by party insiders putting their thumb on the scale in favor of Hillary Rodham Clinton, who won the nomination but went on to lose the general election to Donald Trump. Hogg rose to prominence as a gun-control advocate after surviving the 2018 school shooting in Parkland, Florida.

State leaders react to President Trump's Fort Novosel name change
State leaders react to President Trump's Fort Novosel name change

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

State leaders react to President Trump's Fort Novosel name change

DALE COUNTY, Ala. (WIAT) — President Joe Biden changed the name of Fort Rucker in southeast Alabama to Fort Novosel during his administration. That's because Gen. Edmund W. Rucker, for whom it was originally named, served as a Confederate Officer. Now, President Donald Trump is restoring that name in honor of a different veteran, also named Rucker. The name of Fort Novosel is changing back to Fort Rucker, now after Capt. Edward Rucker, a WWI pilot. Rep. Rick Rehm (R-Dothan) said the change is a good thing. 'That doesn't mean that we need to be erasing history or forgetting,' he said. 'We need more history in the schools. We need to talk about the past. How we came to today and keep working on all working together.' But Congressman Shomari Figures (D-AL) said in a statement, in part quote, 'This is really a middle finger to black people in Alabama, and the black soldiers who have to serve at this base.' Democratic leaders on the state level had similar convictions. 'People of color, such as myself, are reminded of what black people had to go through just to get to the freedoms that we have now,' said Rep. Juandalynn Givan (D-Birmingham). 'Wars that were fought to keep people like me enslaved.' Walker County Sheriff Nick Smith accuses district attorney of lying about severity of charges against him 'We should be past this,' said Rep. Kenyatte Hassell (D-Montgomery). 'I think this is undermining to the Biden Administration, which is the whole purpose of this.' 'Unless the Lord intervenes, we're gonna suffer,' said Rep. Thomas Jackson (D-Thomasville). 'Some difficult days, some very difficult days ahead for our nation,' he said of the current state of affairs. But, Rep. Rehm said this is not a step backward- it's a reset. 'For veterans, and army aviators, and the soldiers that serve today, it's always been known as Fort Rucker,' said Rehm. 'And so, I think it just kind of puts that controversy back, ends that controversy. It's no longer named after a Confederate general.' In a statement, the Army said they will 'take all necessary actions to change the names of seven Army installations in honor of heroic Soldiers who served.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store