'Unhinged': Democrats are furious Sen. Alex Padilla was hauled out of Noem briefing
WASHINGTON – The fury radiating off of Congressional Democrats is palpable.
Hours after Alex Padilla, the senior U.S. senator in California, was forcibly removed from a press briefing with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, House Democrats roamed the Capitol seeking an audience with GOP leadership. Meanwhile, their Senate counterparts gave floor speech after floor speech, condemning the action as an "abuse of power" and "assault."
House Speaker Mike Johnson called Padilla's actions "wildly inappropriate" and alleged he rushed at the secretary. House Democrats shouted over him, saying "that's a lie!"
Padilla interrupted a press briefing Noem held in Los Angeles on June 12, amid days of protests against President Donald Trump's immigration raids in the city. Some of those protests have turned violent, with demonstrators burning cars and hurling objects at law enforcement. Trump sent in National Guard troops without Gov. Gavin Newsom's consent, spurring additional outrage from Democrats.
'We are not going away. We are staying here to liberate this city from the socialist and the burdensome leadership that this governor and mayor have placed on this country,' Noem said as Padilla started asking: 'Madam Secretary I want to know why you insist on –' before he was grabbed and hauled out of the room by security guards.
Padilla was pushed to the ground and handcuffed outside the room.
"Anybody that looks at that video will understand that this amounts to an assault, a felony," said Rep. Adriano Espaillat, D-New York, chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. "The White House is unhinged and out of control."
Espaillat and more than a dozen other Democratic lawmakers attempted to enter Thune's office, who was meeting with the White House, and were turned away from Johnson's office.
"They said he was busy, that he couldn't come out to meet with dozens of members of the U.S. House of Representatives, hiding behind the doors there," said Rep. Nanette Barragán, D-California. "It's a disgrace."
On the other side of the Capitol, a string of Democratic senators delivered floor speeches hammering the indignity of the episode.
'I saw this happen to my colleague, and I am shocked by how far we have descended in the first 140 days of this administration . . . What is the becoming of our democracy? Are there no limits to what this administration will do?' said New Jersey Democrat Sen. Andy Kim on the Senate floor.
Washington Sen. Patty Murray said on the Senate floor she 'cannot believe' lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are not calling the situation 'outrageous.'
Republicans largely defended the actions taken by federal law enforcement agents.
'What were they supposed to do? They have to restrain someone who is engaged in that kind of behavior . . . A sitting member of Congress should not act like that,' House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters at the Capitol. 'It is beneath a member of Congress. It is beneath a senator. They're supposed to lead by example, and that is not a good example."
White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said Padilla 'embarrassed himself and his constituents with this immature, theater-kid stunt.'
'It's telling that Democrats are more riled up about Padilla than they are about the violent riots and assaults on law enforcement in LA,' she added.
Trump dispatched 4,000 members of the National Guard and 700 Marines to Los Angeles to quell the protests.
Padilla said in a press conference after the incident that he wanted more information from Noem on the Trump administration's "increasingly extreme immigration enforcement actions." Noem met with Padilla for 15 minutes afterward, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
He added he was not arrested or detained. But, he said, "if this is how the Department of Homeland Security responds to a senator with a question, you can only imagine what they're doing to farm workers, to cooks, to day laborers out in the Los Angeles community and throughout California and throughout the country. We will hold this administration accountable.'
Tricia McLaughlin, spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security, wrote on X that Padilla was 'told repeatedly to back away and did not comply with officers' repeated commands.'
Contributing: Joey Garrison and Deborah Berry, USA TODAY
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 'Unhinged': Democrats furious Padilla hauled out of Noem briefing
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

USA Today
10 minutes ago
- USA Today
Primary lessons: Trump rules, Dems are revved. NYC's melee is next.
Primary lessons: Trump rules, Dems are revved. NYC's melee is next. Off-year elections are the tea leaves of U.S. politics, and just as reliable. Still, here are clues from 2025 contests in Virginia and New Jersey. Show Caption Hide Caption Justice Department orders dismissal of New York mayor Adams case Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove sent a memo telling the U.S. Attorney's office in Manhattan to dismiss the case against Adams. It's a long stretch to Election Days that matter more, but the season's handful of race offer some political clues. Trump commands the GOP while Democrats are still debating the party's direction. The mayor's race in New York shows how it's easier these days to stage a comeback after scandal. Off-year elections are the tea leaves of American politics, and just as reliable. With votes being counted in Virginia's June 17 primary, the competitors are set for the commonwealth's gubernatorial race: Former Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger will face Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears. A week earlier, in New Jersey, Democratic Rep. Mikie Sherrill and Republican Jack Ciattarelli won their parties' nominations for the only other governorship on the ballot in November. It's a long stretch to Election Days that matter more − including next year's midterms when control of the House and the Senate at stake, not to mention the presidential race in 2028. But this season's handful of contests do provide early clues about the mood of the voters and the direction of the nation's politics. Some primary lessons learned so far: 1. Democrats are revved up. In Virginia, Democratic turnout was rising even without much of a reason to vote. That was true earlier this spring, when Democrats turned out in two special House elections in Florida, slashing in half the GOP's margin in solidly red districts. Spanberger was unopposed for the nomination in the marquee gubernatorial race, yet in the run up to the primary more than 196,500 people had cast early ballots as of June 16. That's nearly 60% more than those who voted during the comparable period four years ago, when the race was fierce. (The Democratic nominations for lieutenant governor and attorney general were contested this year.) No state has been more affected by President Donald Trump's efforts to cut the federal government than Virginia, home to more federal workers than any state except California. The firestorm over those firings creates a hurdle for Republicans. So does history. In 11 of the last 12 elections, the candidate who won the Virginia governorship was from the opposition party of the president who had been elected to the White House a year earlier. The purple-state contest is often seen as a way to send a message to the new president about how he's doing. In New York, turnout has also surged in the city's mayoral primary. More than 30,000 voters cast ballots on the first day of voting June 14, nearly double the number who went to the polls on the first day they could four years ago. The overwhelmingly Democratic city holds its primary on June 24. 2. Trump's hold on the GOP is unshaken. In New Jersey's primary on June 10, President Trump wasn't on the ballot, but he was on the minds of GOP voters. That posed a problem for Ciattarelli, viewed as a moderate Republican when he served in the state Assembly. Before his first bid for the gubernatorial nomination in 2017, he called Trump a "charlatan" who was unfit to be president. In his second bid in 2021, he kept his distance. Not this time. Ciattarelli went to Trump's golf course in Bedminster, New Jersey, to woo him, then bragged about it. "Tonight, my great honor and pleasure to share time with @POTUS," he posted on social media. with a photo. His courtship worked. "Jack, who after getting to know and understand MAGA, has gone ALL IN, and is now 100% (PLUS!), Trump said in his endorsement on Truth Social. "HE WILL NOT LET YOU DOWN." That embrace sealed his landslide in the state's GOP primary over conservative radio host Bill Spadea, who had earned Trump's ire by backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in last year's Republican presidential primary. Ciattarelli sailed to victory, winning 68% of the Republican vote. Spadea got 22%. State Senator Jon Bramnick, a moderate who had criticized Trump, claimed just 6%. Today's asset could be tomorrow's problem, of course. Trump lost the Democratic-leaning state to Kamala Harris in 2024 by 6 points, though that was considerably closer than his 16-point loss to Joe Biden in 2020. The morning after this month's primary, Ciattarelli was ready to pivot to appeal to independents and Democrats. "This race is all about New Jersey," he told NBC, though he acknowledged, "My opponent is going to want to talk about Donald Trump every day of the week." 3. Nobody has a hold on the Democratic Party. Don't look for that kind of coherence among Democrats. In New Jersey, the primary results showed a fractured party. Sherrill prevailed with 34% of the vote after a campaign that promised competence and spotlighted her resume as a Navy veteran and former federal prosecutor. But the two most progressive candidates in the primary, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka and Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop, got a combined total of more votes, at 37%. And the two most moderate contenders, Rep. Josh Gottheimer and former state Senate president Stephen Sweeney, got a fair share, too, at a combined 19%. None of them were touting their ties to Harris or Biden or, for that matter, the national party in general. The debate nationwide over how to rebound from last year's electoral thumping isn't close to being settled yet. New York's mayor's race also illustrates the Democrats' divide, with a centrist frontrunner trying to fight back a leftist challenger. 4. NY, NY? It's a hell of a town. Start with this: New York's Democratic mayor is running for a second term, but not as a Democrat. Eric Adams is running as an independent after convincing the Trump Justice Department to drop federal charges of corruption. Now leading in the Democratic contest is Andrew Cuomo, who resigned as governor in 2021 amid allegations of sexual harassment. He denies the accusations and now says he shouldn't have left office. His top challenger is Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old democratic socialist, who if elected would be the first Muslim to serve as mayor of America's biggest city. He's been endorsed by two progressive icons, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The messy melee that is New York politics − including an 11-candidate race and a ranked-choice voting system − may be so specific to the city that it provides few lessons for the rest of the country's politics. Except, perhaps, that during the Trump era it may be more possible to stage a comeback in politics after scandal, as evidenced by the campaigns of Cuomo and Adams. The definition of who can hold electoral office may also be expanding. Mamdani's election would break new ground. So will the race in Virginia, now poised to elect its first woman as governor.


Bloomberg
19 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Stocks Fall as Israel-Iran Jitters Spur Oil Rally
Bloomberg Television brings you the latest news and analysis leading up to the final minutes and seconds before and after the closing bell on Wall Street. Today's guests are Wesley Clark, Former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe, Tracie McMillion, Wells Fargo, Maheep Mandloi, Mizuho, Mark Kimmitt, US Army Retired General, James Seyffart, Bloomberg Intelligence, Ellen Lee, Causeway Capital Management, Jonathan Panikoff, Atlantic Council, Jon Maier, JPMorgan Asset Management, Josh Wingrove, Bloomberg News, David Gura, Bloomberg News, Emily Stromquist, Teneo, Glenn Hubbard, Council of Economic Advisers. (Source: Bloomberg)
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
NAACP breaks 116-year tradition, won't invite president to annual convention
June 17 (UPI) -- The NAACP says it will not invite U.S. President Donald Trump to offer remarks at its annual convention next month in North Carolina in a break with longstanding tradition for the first time in its 116 year history. The group said the sitting president is "attacking" democracy, civil rights and "believes more in the fascist playbook than in the U.S. Constitution." The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, one of the nation's leading and foremost civil rights groups, is slated to see its 116th annual national convention July 12-16 in Charlotte. "For 116 years, the NAACP has invited the sitting president of the United States to address the NAACP National Convention -- regardless of their political party," NAACP President and CEO Derrick Johnson said Monday in a release. The NAACP, according to Johnson, is a nonpartisan organization that "always welcome those who believe in democracy and the Constitution." In a statement, the civil rights chief said right now "it's clear" that Trump is "attacking" both civl rights and democracy. He pointed out there's a "rich history" of both Republican and Democratic presidents addressing the NAACP convention from Harry S. Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower to Ronald Reagan, Barack Obama "and beyond." Last July, then-President Joe Biden made his first public appearance right after Trump's first attempted shooting in Butler, Penn., at the NAACP's 115th convention in Las Vegas. Biden told the NAACP's 2024 convention Nevada how the unemployment rate among Black Americans at that time was lower than ever, that the poverty rate among Black children was half of what it was when he entered office in 2021 and that Black-owned small businesses under the Biden administration experienced record growth. On Monday, Johnson cited in his statement the flurry of "unconstitutional executive orders" that flew out of the White House in the weeks after Trump's January 20 inaugural as part reason why he failed the invite test, scores of orders which are currently tied up under judicial review. Some, he said, "oppress voters and undo federal civil rights protections." Trump, Johnson went on to write, believes more in "the fascist playbook" than America's Constitution. "This playbook is radical and un-American." He stated that the president "illegally turned the military on our communities," and he "continually undermines every pillar of our democracy to make himself more powerful and to personally benefit from the U.S. government." However, the convention's intended to be a "safe space for all people regardless of political ideology -- who believe in multiracial democracy and the ideal of building a more perfect union," Johnson continued. "To that end, the NAACP has made the decision to break with tradition and not invite Donald Trump or J.D. Vance this year," Johnson concluded, adding his belief that the Trump administration "does not respect the Constitution or the rule of law." The NAACP's annual convention, Johnson says, has always been a place where people across the United States unite to "map out our advocacy" and mobilization strategies in order to advance an agenda "for all" based on ideals of civil rights and democracy. "It would be a waste of our time and energy to give a platform to fascism, which would be unacceptable," the NAACP head wrote.