logo
Texas Democrat Rep. Jolanda Jones apologizes for comparing redistricting to the Holocaust

Texas Democrat Rep. Jolanda Jones apologizes for comparing redistricting to the Holocaust

New York Post18 hours ago
Texas Democratic state Rep. Jolanda Jones apologized Tuesday for comparing Republican efforts to redraw the Lone Star State's congressional maps to the slaughter of more than 6 million Jewish people during the Holocaust.
Jones, 59, is one of more than 50 Texas House Democrats who fled the state capital in order to stall a special legislative session to consider the redistricting proposal – which could net Republicans as many as five additional seats in the US House of Representatives ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
3 Jones is one of dozens of Texas Democrats who have boycotted a special legislative session over opposition to a GOP-led redistricting effort.
Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
Advertisement
'They don't accept us. They are showing us who they are, and we should believe them. And we better have the courage to stand up, otherwise we will fall for anything,' Jones said Tuesday during an appearance on 'The Don Lemon Show,' discussing the redistricting push.
'And in this country, we will be defeated, deported. I mean, we will lose all of our rights. And if you think it can't happen, it can,' the Houston-area representative continued, just before making the outlandish comparison.
'And I will liken this to the Holocaust,' Jones added. 'People are like, 'Well, how did the Holocaust happen? How was somebody in a position to kill all them people?' Well, good people remain silent, or good people didn't realize that what happens to them can very soon happen to me or somebody I love.'
Advertisement
Jones quickly retracted her comparison, apologized and claimed that she got 'emotional' her interview with the former CNN host.
'I made a statement on 'The Don Lemon Show' comparing Trump's attempt to disenfranchise Black and Brown people to the Holocaust. That was a mistake, and I apologize for it,' Jones said in a statement to Fox News Digital.
'Trump is coming for my community, and I get emotional about it and make strong statements. But that was going too far, and I retract that comparison,' she added.
3 Jones later retracted her comparison of the redistricting to the Holocaust, admitted she crossed a line.
Getty Images
Advertisement
A spokesman for Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott criticized Jones' remarks on Lemon's show.
'Fleeing Texas House Democrats continue to beclown themselves through this desperate, anti-democratic stunt,' Andrew Mahaleris told Fox News Digital. 'Unlike these radicals, Governor Abbott refuses to abandon Texans.'
'If the House Democrats who deserted Texans were serious about delivering results, they would come back to the Texas Capitol and do the job voters elected them to do.'
3 The Texas governor has threatened Jones and the other missing Dems with arrest and removal from office over their absences.
AP
Advertisement
Jones and the rest of the absentee Democrats – many of whom appear to be holed in Illinois and New York – have prevented the state House of Representatives from reaching the quorum necessary to continue with legislative business.
State House lawmakers on Monday passed a motion to issue arrest warrants for the missing lawmakers.
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) on Tuesday asked the FBI for help tracking down the Democrats who crossed state lines to avoid a vote on redistricting.
Meanwhile, Abbott has moved to remove the Democrats from office and has directed state law enforcement to arrest them and investigate potential legal violations related to their refusal to participate in the special session.
Jones did not immediately respond to The Post's request for comment.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nvidia, chip stocks jump after Trump says some chipmakers exempt from 100% semiconductor tariff
Nvidia, chip stocks jump after Trump says some chipmakers exempt from 100% semiconductor tariff

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Nvidia, chip stocks jump after Trump says some chipmakers exempt from 100% semiconductor tariff

Chip stocks climbed on Thursday after President Trump said he'll exempt companies from his planned semiconductor tariffs if they have committed to making their chips in the US. 'We'll be putting a tariff of approximately 100% on chips and semiconductors,' Trump said during a press conference at the Oval Office Wednesday afternoon. 'But if you're building in the United States of America, there's no charge.' 'If you've made a commitment to build or if you're in the process of building, as many are, there is no tariff.' Leading AI chipmaker Nvidia (NVDA) stock rose as much as 2.5% Thursday to a fresh intraday high of $183.88 before paring gains midday. Shares of rival Advanced Micro Devices rose more than 6%, while Broadcom (AVGO) and Micron (MU) stocks rose 1% and 2%, respectively. Most of the world's advanced chips are produced by leading contract chip manufacturer TSMC (TSM) in Taiwan, but the company has been building out its capacity in Arizona with a $165 billion investment, exempting it from Trump's tariffs. The company's US-listed shares jumped more than 4% Thursday. Tech companies have rushed to announce investments in their US manufacturing footprint in the hopes of avoiding Trump's trade war wrath. So far, Nvidia has committed to producing $500 billion of AI infrastructure in the US. Micron made a similar $200 billion commitment. Texas Instruments (TXN) has said it's spending $60 billion to bolster its manufacturing capacity in the US. Citi (C) analyst Christopher Danley said the exemptions mean the semiconductor tariff will have 'minimal impact…as US-based semiconductor companies with in-house fabs have operations in the US and fabless companies can commit to using TSMC, Samsung ( GFS (GFS) which have operations in the US.' 'Fabs' refer to factories where chips are produced, and 'fabless' companies outsource production of their chips to contract manufacturers such as TSMC, Samsung, and GFS. Companies with 'in-house fabs' include Intel (INTC), Micron, and Texas Instruments. Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom, and Qualcomm (QCOM) are 'fabless.' Morgan Stanley (MS) analyst Joseph Moore echoed Danley's sentiment, writing in a note to clients Thursday, 'To some degree this outcome would be something of a relief.' 'Yes, 100% tariffs are unpalatable but if companies are given time to restore them, the real tax is just the higher cost of building chips in the United States," he wrote. "The biggest fear was that such a tariff would be implemented immediately.' Still, Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon noted that there are questions surrounding how the tariffs would be applied, making it hard to determine its impact. He explained that most semiconductors are imported once they're already inside other products, and the US 'does not import a ton of raw chips" — $45 billion in 2024 — and it's unclear whether duties would just apply to raw semiconductors or also to products containing them. The US Department of Commerce did not immediately respond to Yahoo Finance's request for comment. Further details about the tariffs will be revealed when the agency publishes its findings from an investigation into US semiconductor imports it launched in April under Section 232 of The Trade Expansion Act, which empowers the president to restrict imports of products related to national security. "Trump's public statements often lack detail and nuance, so at this point we do not know exactly how the new rules will be implemented once they go into effect," Rasgon wrote. "We should know more once the actual 232 investigation results are published." Laura Bratton is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Bluesky @ Email her at Sign in to access your portfolio

Rep. Jasmine Crockett is a no-show boss from hell who terrorizes staffers, aides say: 'All diva, no wow'
Rep. Jasmine Crockett is a no-show boss from hell who terrorizes staffers, aides say: 'All diva, no wow'

New York Post

time9 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Rep. Jasmine Crockett is a no-show boss from hell who terrorizes staffers, aides say: 'All diva, no wow'

WASHINGTON — Rep. Jasmine Crockett has positioned herself as an unfiltered critic of President Trump, earning regular TV appearances and an enthusiastic online following, but congressional aides tell The Post that the Dallas Democrat is just as 'rude' and mean to her own staff. The liberal loudmouth, 44, has rocketed to fame since taking office in January 2023 as a fiery assailant of the Republican president and his allies. But three sources who have worked with or for Crockett say she's rarely present when TV cameras aren't rolling — and terrorizes staff when she does appear. Crockett is not often found at her government-provided suite in the Longworth House Office Building, with one insider saying she prefers to work from her nearby luxury apartment building, sometimes for weeks on end. 3 Rep. Jasmine Crockett has been among the loudest Democrats in Congress since taking office in 2023. Houston Chronicle via Getty Images 'She is laying around her apartment, won't come into the office, and is really just indifferent to staff and will scream at them,' the former aide said. 'She is never in the office and is very disengaged. She does her bulls— that goes viral, and then freaks out over the most random things.' A second source close to Crockett's team added: 'It is widely known that she's not nice to staff and is just not a really dedicated member focused on constituents.' 'She is focused almost exclusively on being an influencer, not a member of Congress,' said a third source who has worked with Crockett, describing her as 'all diva, no wow.' 'You're stupid if you think so' When Crockett does show up for work on Capitol Hill — often to attend a committee hearing where she deploys a made-for-social media attack on Trump — she prefers to have a staff member drive her the short distance to her office in a rented car rather than the staffer's own, a cheaper option commonly used by lawmakers. The staffer is expected to stand outside the vehicle, which 'has to be an Escalade' or similar upscale make, and open the door for her. 3 Sources describe the Democrat as a disengaged public servant when the cameras aren't rolling. AP 'You're technically allowed to do this but it's wildly inefficient. Instead of using the scheduler's car, she rents a car every week in DC,' one source said. 'She expects her staff to drive her around while she's in the back seat,' they added, calling it a 'power play' akin to 'treating the staffer like an Uber driver.' Crockett, a former criminal defense attorney and Texas state legislator, burst into the national spotlight in May 2024 when she attacked Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) at a committee hearing for having a 'bleach blonde bad built butch body' after Greene ridiculed her 'fake eyelashes.' While Crockett tried to fundraise off the 'Real Housewives'-style viral clash, the congresswoman's staff — which includes multiple gay and lesbian members — were left with mixed feelings. Complaints poured in from lesbians who objected to Crockett's derogatory use of the term 'butch' to attack Greene, which even left some aides uneasy. 'She told her gay staff members, 'That's not offensive. You're stupid if you think so',' a former aide recounted to the Post. 'It was kind of like how Trump says, 'The gays love me'.' Three months later, Crockett was given a coveted speaking slot at the Democratic National Convention, where she ripped the former and future president as a 'vindictive vile villain.' 'Toxic staff environment' Crockett has burned through employees at such a pace that she's becoming known as a present-day version of the late Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas), long known as the Capitol's toughest boss. A number of staff have become fed up with their treatment, while others have either been fired or left on their own — a distinction often difficult to discern in Washington. Some former aides cited fear of retribution when declining to participate in this story. 'She thinks she's her own best adviser, she knows best, and has this toxic staff environment,' a source said. 'She gets rid of press people because she's like, 'I do all of the press stuff.'' On one occasion described to The Post, Crockett reduced a legislative aide to tears, bellowing: 'Do you really want to be here? And if not you can leave!' 3 'The only person that she thinks about and cares about is herself,' a former Democratic aide said of Crockett. REUTERS Another aide, a young black woman, was fired abruptly and confided to a colleague: 'I don't want to hear Jasmine Crockett talk about helping black women when she just fired one for no reason!' Capitol Hill jobs often are filled based on personal connections and openings are circulated among friend groups. A source told The Post that a job listing for Crockett's team recently was shared among a large group of black Democratic women — but nobody expressed interest in the gig. 'You would think working for a black woman, if you were a young black woman or a young person of color, you would feel empowered in that space,' said a former Democratic congressional aide. 'But truly, the only person that she thinks about and cares about is herself. 'The staff is really just an island unto itself, because she doesn't care about the local issues happening in her district,' this person added. 'She's more focused on, 'Get me on 'The View,' get me on this late night talk show. 'A lot of [congressional] hearings are on the most boring, basic s—. So how is it at every hearing, it's about Trump? It's about Trump again and again and again. And it's like, she's not actually doing any real work. She's at a hearing — we can be talking about the budget, they can be talking about appropriations — and she brings it back to Trump every time,' the source griped. 'She causes some kind of tension and issue, the hearing has to stop, the chairman has to bang the gavel. It's like a spectacle and a show … Not everything has to be clipped for MSNBC.' Crockett has also cycled through several chiefs of staff, with one observer saying it's 'because they want her to do her actual job, and the actual job of a member of Congress isn't fun and glamorous. So unless you are somebody willing to say yes to all of the outrageous things she would like to do, you're not gonna last long.' 'This looks like crap' Crockett hasn't been coy about her treatment of staff — recently offering two examples of rough treatment of subordinates in an interview with Atlantic magazine journalist Elaine Godfrey. 'Behind the scenes, the representative speaks casually,' Godfrey reported. 'She can also be brusque. During our interview at the Waldorf, she dialed up a staffer in DC in front of me and scolded him for an unclear note on her schedule. Another time, in the car, after an aide brought Crockett a paper bag full of food from a fundraiser, she peered inside, scrunched her nose, and said, 'This looks like crap.'' The Texas congresswoman, despite granting Godfrey access for the profile, attempted to retract her interview remarks when the journalist didn't ask her permission to request comment from other members of Congress, most of whom reportedly would not volunteer flattering words. The lawmaker claimed she was 'shutting down the profile and revoking all permissions.' It wasn't Crockett's first self-inflicted PR problem. In May, she allegedly boarded a commercial flight ahead of two handicapped people, according to Rep. Lisa McClain (R-Mich.). 'Her cutting in line in front of a handicapped person is really indicative of the type of person she is,' said a source who has worked with Crockett. 'She is interpersonally very rude and doesn't get along well with people.' The Post did not receive a reply after sending multiple detailed emails requesting comment to a press-request email advertised on Crockett's website. Nobody answered the phones at her DC or Dallas offices during the workday; both went straight to voicemail.

FBI helping Texas law enforcement locate ‘rogue' Dems who fled state redistricting session
FBI helping Texas law enforcement locate ‘rogue' Dems who fled state redistricting session

New York Post

time9 minutes ago

  • New York Post

FBI helping Texas law enforcement locate ‘rogue' Dems who fled state redistricting session

WASHINGTON — The FBI is now assisting Texas authorities with finding 'rogue' Democrats who fled the state to stall a redistricting effort, according to a bureau spokesperson. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) had requested FBI involvement after the 57 legislators decamped to blue states — including Illinois, Massachusetts and New York — in the middle of a special session convened to redraw congressional maps. 'I am proud to announce that Director Kash Patel has approved my request for the FBI to assist state and local law enforcement in locating runaway Texas House Democrats,' Cornyn said in a statement after asking the feds to help round up the 'potential lawbreakers.' Advertisement 'I thank President Trump and Director Patel for supporting and swiftly acting on my call for the federal government to hold these supposed lawmakers accountable for fleeing Texas. We cannot allow these rogue legislators to avoid their constitutional responsibilities.' The Texas Dems' absence prevented the state legislature from establishing a quorum necessary to consider the redistricting and other bills, with several decrying the GOP's effort as an attempt to secure more seats in next year's midterms. 5 The FBI is now assisting Texas authorities in locating 'rogue' Democrats who fled the state to stall a redistricting effort, according to a bureau spokesperson. AP Advertisement 'I will liken this to the Holocaust,' Texas Democratic state Rep. Jolanda Jones said Tuesday, before issuing an apology for the unhinged comparison between partisan politicking and the slaughter of more than 6 million Jews by the Nazis. Republican Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows set a Friday deadline for the runaway Democrats to reappear before 'judicial orders' are sought declaring that they have 'vacated their office.' President Trump had indicated Tuesday that the FBI 'may have to' get involved to force the runaway legislators back to Austin. 5 State House Speaker Dustin Burrows set a Friday deadline for the runaway Democrats to reappear before 'judicial orders' are sought declaring that they have 'vacated their office.' Getty Images Advertisement Republican Gov. Greg Abbott ordered state authorities Monday to 'arrest' the 'delinquent Texas House Democrats' and bring them back for the special legislative session in the state's capital. 'As we're talking right now, Texas Department of Public Safety officers are on the streets looking for those Democrat House members to arrest them and to take them to the Texas capitol and hold them there until a quorum is reached,' Abbott told Fox News' 'The Will Cain Show' on Tuesday. Cornyn's Tuesday letter to Patel also expressed concerns 'that legislators who solicited or accepted funds to aid in their efforts to avoid their legislative duties may be guilty of bribery or other public corruption offenses.' 5 Republican Gov. Greg Abbott had previously ordered state authorities to 'arrest' the 'delinquent Texas House Democrats' and bring them back for the legislative session in the state's capital. AP Advertisement On Wednesday, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton launched a probe into any 'unlawful activity' by former Rep. Beto O'Rourke's political group that could have aided state Dems. O'Rourke's Powered by People PAC, founded in 2019 during his failed Democratic presidential bid, may have run afoul of state bribery laws by 'bankrolling' the trip by Texas House Democrats who flew to deep-blue Illinois to meet with Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker. 'Any Democrat coward breaking the law by taking a Beto Bribe will be held accountable,' Paxton said in a statement. 'Texas cannot be bought. I look forward to thoroughly reviewing all of the documents and communications obtained throughout this investigation.' 5 Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin held a press conference in Illinois with Gov. JB Pritzker and the Texas Democratic lawmakers after they left the state to deny Republicans a quorum. REUTERS Abbott indicated on 'The Will Cain Show' Tuesday that state Democrats who took financial assistance for their trip could be removed from office. Pritzker got a dose of his own medicine later Tuesday during an appearance on 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,' when the lame-duck late night host confronted the Illinois governor with a map of his state's own gerrymandered House districts. 'Take a look at this. Look at [District] 17 here. It does that, then it comes up here and it sneaks around there and goes all the way up here, and then goes right over there like that. And look at this one, kind of goes whoop up there,' Colbert noted, brandishing a map of Illinois' congressional boundaries. 5 Pritzker got a dose of his own medicine later Tuesday during an appearance on 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,' when the lame-duck late night host brandished a map of gerrymandered House districts in Illinois. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert Advertisement One looked like 'the stinger on a scorpion,' the recently canceled CBS host noted. 'As I've said, everything's on the table,' Pritzker told Colbert, suggesting Illinois Democrats could convene their own special session to mark up new district lines. Redistricting usually occurs through state legislatures or independent commissions every 10 years after a census is released. In recent years, Texas, Pennsylvania and North Carolina have convened special sessions before the decennial population count to make new boundaries, which drew legal challenges.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store