McConnell inhaled the Kool-Aid strait out of Schumer’s mouth, But that is not all, at the same time he became what they call in the dark web, an initiated member of the LBGTQ community. Take our word for this, there is nothing wrong about coming out, but please Mitch, admit it that swallowing the democrat’s offering did turn you on, didn’t it?
With yet another disappointing, yet unsurprising betrayal from our “Republican” “Leaders” in Washington DC, Chuck Schumer delivers a massive win to Nancy Pelosi, Joe Biden, and the entire regime with a two month lifeline on debt ceiling negotiations. Charlie walks through the battle of political will being waged every day in Washington and begs the question: why does our side continue to lose every single time? He goes through and names names and calls for all 11 GOP Senators who sided with Schumer to be held accountable by We The People. And as all of that unfolds stateside, Charlie turns his attention to the unfolding situation in Taiwan and offers an update on the Regime-Sponsored crisis in Afghanistan before tying it all together with Joe Biden’s incredible weakness in enacting effective, America-First policy at home and abroad. Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/support See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
I was watching Rachel’s taped interview with Chuck Schumer, and she asked him what he would do if McConnell refused to yield on the filibuster. Schumer just smiled and he said was prepared to deal with that, and that his caucus was united in its anger at McConnell, but he wouldn’t say what he had in mind.
Whatever it was, it worked. At the break, Rachel announced that McConnell had yielded and Schumer had won.
Details to follow.
More details coming in.
McConnell: Power-sharing deal can proceed after Manchin, Sinema back filibuster
“Today two Democratic Senators publicly confirmed they will not vote to end the legislative filibuster. They agree with President Biden’s and my view that no Senate majority should destroy the right of future minorities of both parties to help shape legislation,” McConnell said in a statement.
“The legislative filibuster was a key part of the foundation beneath the Senate’s last 50-50 power-sharing agreement in 2001. With these assurances, I look forward to moving ahead with a power-sharing agreement modeled on that precedent,” McConnell added.
This reads like a face-saving move. Schumer’s offer hadn’t changed — we do it the way we did it in 2001. Manchin and Sinema hadn’t changed their positions either. Something else happened.