‘You’re saying we’re all liars!’ Rand Paul melts down on ABC when confronted with election ‘lies’

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Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) became annoyed with an ABC host on Sunday over the suggestion that former President Donald Trump’s defenders are all “liars” about the results of the 2020 election.

“This election was not stolen,” ABC host Georgia Stephanopoulos began his interview with Paul by noting. “Do you accept that fact?”

Paul, however, refused to respond with a straight answer.

“The debate over whether or not there’s fraud should occur,” Paul opined. “But, yes, were there people who voted twice? Were there dead people, illegal aliens who voted? Yes. And we should get to the bottom of it.” Continue reading.

Trump made 30,573 false or misleading claims as president. Nearly half came in his final year.

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He overstated the “carnage” he was inheriting, then later exaggeratedhis “massive” crowd and claimed, despite clear evidence to the contrary, that it had not rained during his address. He repeated the rain claim the next day, along with the fabricated notion that he held the “all-time record” for appearing on the cover of Time magazine.

And so it went, day after day, week after week, claim after claim, from the most mundane of topics to the most pressing issues.

Over time, Trump unleashed his falsehoods with increasing frequency and ferocity, often by the scores in a single campaign speech or tweetstorm. What began as a relative trickle of misrepresentations, including 10 on his first day and five on the second, built into a torrent through Trump’s final days as he frenetically spread wild theories that the coronavirus pandemic would disappear “like a miracle” and that the presidential election had been stolen — the claim that inspired Trump supporters to attack Congress on Jan. 6 and prompted his second impeachment. Continue reading.

Josh Hawley slammed for railing against ‘the muzzling of America’ — on the front page of the New York Post

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In an op-ed published by the New York Post on Sunday, January 24, Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri complains bitterly about what he claims is “the latest form of cancel culture” in the United States: being lambasted for his unwavering support of President Donald Trump following the 2020 presidential election. But Hawley’s op-ed wasn’t buried deep inside the pages of the Post, which ran it as a cover story. And the far-right Republican and Trump loyalist is drawing a great deal of criticism for claiming that he exemplifies “the muzzling of America” in light of the fact that a major newspaper in the largest city in the U.S. gave him the front cover to make his bogus claims.

In his op-ed, Hawley writes, “On behalf of the voters of my state, I raised a challenge to the presidential electors from Pennsylvania after that state conducted the election in violation of the state constitution. Maybe you agree with me. Maybe you don’t. But whatever your view, Corporate America’s rush to cancel those it dislikes should trouble you.”

Hawley makes it sound like he is being persecuted for standing up for democracy. In fact, he’s being criticized for pandering to extremists who were making false claims of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election. Hawley cynically announced that on January 6, he would contest Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory. And a now-infamous photo shows Hawley waving in solidarity with violent far-right insurrectionists who later stormed the U.S. Capitol Building in the hope of preventing the certification of democratic election results. Continue reading.

QAnon enters new period of danger, opportunity

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Former President Trump’s exit from office marks a new period for QAnon, and a new opportunity for those interested in stifling it.

Many of the conspiracy theory’s followers were disillusioned Wednesday when President Biden was sworn in without incident.

QAnon forums, chat rooms and message boards briefly went into disarray, as influential figures within the community had been pushing the story that Trump would interrupt the inauguration to imprison and execute his political opponents in the “Great Awakening.” Continue reading.

GOP congressman deletes tweet saying he met with ‘Stop the Steal’ and told them to ‘keep fighting’

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Rep. Pete Sessions (R-TX) quietly deleted a tweet he posted saying that he met with the “Stop the Steal” rioters ahead of their armed insurrection on the U.S. Capitol. He told them at the time to “keep fighting.”

Sessions was caught deleting the tweet by Inside Elections reporter Jacob Rubashkin, who was combing through a series of deleted tweets by elected officials.

“Had a great meeting today with folks from “Stop the Steal” at our nation’s Capitol. I encouraged them to keep fighting and assured them I look forward to doing MY duty on January 6,” he said, including hashtags #StopTheSteal and #legalvotescount. Continue reading.

Republicans Insist On Preserving Filibuster (Except When They Don’t)

Senate Republicans are mounting an aggressive campaign to keep their power to block nearly all of the new Democratic majority’s legislative proposals.

But while they now defend the Senate’s filibuster rule as vital for “bipartisanship,” they unanimously voted to eliminate it for Supreme Court nominations less than four years ago.

While it only takes a simple majority in the 100-member U.S. Senate to pass legislation, with few exceptions it takes a three-fifths supermajority — 60 votes — to end debate and actually hold a vote. Segregationists long used those cloture rules to block civil rights legislation and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell used them a record-breaking number of times to obstruct President Barack Obama’s agenda.

Senate rules would allow just 51 senators to change that 60-vote threshold. After Democrats retook a narrow majority in the chamber on Wednesday, McConnell (R-KY) and his colleagues began demandingDemocrats agree in advance not to do so. Continue reading.

Rep. Steve Elkins (HD49B) Update: January 25, 2021


Dear Neighbors,

President Biden is receiving accolades from across the political spectrum for the call to unity expressed in his inaugural address. Now, the challenge falls to us to put these sentiments into action. As was the case last session, most of the bills I have introduced, so far, have Republican authors in the Senate and that will continue to be the case for the remainder of this session. With the only divided legislature in the country, working across the aisle is the only way that we’re going to accomplish anything this session. I will once again be a member of the Legislature’s bi-partisan “Civility Caucus”, which brings Democrats and Republicans together to find common ground and forge constructive working relationships. Republican Senators such as Sen. John Jasinski, who I met through the Civility Caucus, and Sen Rich Draheim, who I work with on healthcare pricing transparency and housing affordability legislation have become regular partners in my work. 


Virtual Town Hall

Join Rep. Edelson, Sen. Franzen and I for our first town hall of the 2021 Legislative Session Tuesday, February 9 at 7-8:30pm. Please RSVP, and submit a question to be asked during the event. We will send out the Zoom link the day before. You can join on Zoom or watch it on Facebook live. We look forward to your engagement.

Vaccine Pilot Program Launches

Last week, Minnesota rolled out a pilot program which established new vaccination sites at nine locations around the state. Individuals who are 65 years of age or older, as well as school staff and child care workers (who have been notified by their employer if they’re eligible), can now make appointments to receive the vaccine at one of these sites. Additional sites will be established as more vaccines become available and, at some point, we can expect that there will be a community vaccination center in southern Hennepin County. 

Setting the age limit at 65, instead of 75, was in response to a new CDC guideline which created a broad expectation that the vaccine should be made available to anyone 65 or older. However, the federal government has nowhere near enough vaccines to cover everyone in that expanded age group, plus teachers, who are in the same priority group. Predictably, when the appointment line for this program opened up last Tuesday, it was, in the Governor’s words, “like trying to get tickets to a Springsteen concert on Ticketmaster the instant that they go on sale”. I understand that this process was frustrating, with some people spending hours on the phone or internet trying to get through. But as a test rollout, this program is meant to show the state what works and what doesn’t so they can create a better system when we receive more vaccines.

If you fall into one of these groups, the next round of appointments will open up at noon, tomorrow, Tuesday, January 26 and, this week, the process is being significantly improved: Everyone who is eligible will have 24 hours to register for a vaccine lottery and the “winners” will be notified the next day. No need to frantically dial in. You can book appointments online here, or by phone at 612-426-7230 or toll free at 833-431-2053. 

When vaccines become more widely available, most of us will eventually be vaccinated at our regular doctor’s offices or pharmacies, the way that we would receive any other vaccine. 

Vaccination Dashboard

I’m hearing much consternation about the fact that Minnesota’s rate of vaccine administration stats appear to be middling, at best. We always expect to be “above average”. Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) officials attribute this to several factors:

  • The count of doses “allocated” to each state doesn’t reflect the actual number of doses that have been received by each State, which is quite a bit lower.
  • There is up to a 72 hour lag between the time of the vaccination and its reporting to MDH.
  • The national pharmacies that have been contracted to administer the vaccine at nursing homes and assisted living facilities have been slow to ramp up.
  • At some health care facilities and senior housing locations, from 15-25% of the staff have refused to be vaccinated, which is alarming.
  • The state has been holding enough doses in reserve to be able to administer the necessary second dose to front line health care workers and senior care residents and workers. The Federal government told states to go ahead and administer these doses to additional seniors and teachers and promised to backfill these doses out of a federal reserve — which turned out to be non-existent. As a result, the State has had to maintain its own reserve of second doses. 

The State has established a vaccination dashboard where you can track our progress, which you can find, here: https://mn.gov/covid19/vaccine/data/index.jsp

Legislative Priorities for the House DFL

Last week, we rolled out the House DFL’s initial legislative priorities for this year’s session, with a focus on getting Minnesota through this pandemic and ensuring that we have the resources necessary to bounce back. While protecting and investing in economic security, worker protections, education, child care, and health and human services are crucial components for Minnesotans, we’re diligently working within all policy areas to build a better state.


Keep in Touch 

Now more than ever, please contact me anytime with questions, input, or ideas. Don’t hesitate to reach out if I can provide any assistance. Please follow me on my Facebook page for further updates and invite your friends and family to do so as well.  

Thanks for the honor of representing you at the Capitol. 

Sincerely, 

Steve Elkins 
Representative, District 49B 
Minnesota House of Representatives 
515 State Office Building 
100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. 
St. Paul, MN 55155 
(651) 296-7803

Texas Republican Will Hurd gives GOP a brutal lesson on civics and political reality

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Texas Republican Will Hurd drew upon his six years in Congress and nine years as a clandestine CIA officer in a hard-hitting new op-ed published by The Washington Post.

Hurd, who did not seek re-election in 2020, warned that the 2022 midterms will be consumed by ads highlighting the connections between the GOP and the deadly insurrection by Trump supporters at the U.S. Capitol on January 6th.

“Republicans have lost seven of the last eight national popular votes, and it only took four years for us to lose the House, Senate and the White House. Republicans aren’t going to achieve electoral success by being seen as the party that defends QAnon extremists who advocate the murder of the former vice president. Nor will we see success by supporting white supremacists who call a Black police officer the n-word while that police officer puts his life on the line to protect democracy. Every Republican on the ballot in 2022 will face campaign attack ads that affiliate them with the domestic terrorists who charged the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6,” he warned. Continue reading.

CNN Host Destroys Rep. Cawthorn With Simple Question About Election ‘Fraud’

The freshman had riled up Trump supporters ahead of the Jan. 6 riot, but now admits “the election was not fraudulent” after being challenged to back up his claims.

Two weeks after riling up a crowd of Trump supporters with claims of election fraud ahead of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, GOP Rep. Madison Cawthorn tried to rehabilitate his stance on the presidential election on Saturday night—only to have his entire argument fall apart in spectacular fashion.

Pressed by CNN’s Pamela Brown to explain what evidence had motivated him to contest the election results in the first place, Cawthorn visibly struggled to string together a coherent argument.

“The things that I was not objecting to the election on behalf of was things like Dominion voting machines changing ballots, or these U-Haul trucks pulling up filled with ballots for Joe Biden as president. The thing I was objecting for is things like, like I said in the state of Wisconsin, particularly in the town of Madison … there was an appointed official in that town who actually went against the will of the state legislature and created ballot drop boxes, which is basically ballot harvesting that was happening in the parks,” he said. Continue reading.

Rep. Cedrick Frazier (HD45A) Update: January 26, 2021

Dear Neighbors

Last week was a historical week for our nation with the inauguration of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, the first woman, and woman of color, to take high office in the history of the United States. While we celebrate, it is important that we remind ourselves of the work yet to be done about racial justice, COVID-19 response, and economic recovery. 

This week, I want to inform you about some of the steps being taken to better Minnesota by protecting our workers, strengthening democracy, addressing criminal justice and supporting our students. Mark your calendars to join me in the conversation!


Democracy in Crisis: Sunday, January 31, 2021

Join me and Vice Chair of the Public Safety and Criminal Justice Reform Committee, award-winning political scientist and author Dr. Lee Drutman, and U.S. Representative Angie Craig, a leading advocate of government reform and cosponsor of H.R. 1, for a conversation about how we can reform and strengthen our democracy, hosted by FairVote Minnesota. 

Continue reading “Rep. Cedrick Frazier (HD45A) Update: January 26, 2021”