Support Us
 
Amount
Details
Payment
Choose Your Donation Amount To Support VoteDown
Your support will help VoteDown in its non-profit mission to make American Democracy responsive to the will of the voters.
$10
$25
$50
$100
$250
$500
Make it monthly!
 
Yes, count me in!
 
No, donate once
Pay With Credit Card

Jim Jordan

 
Jim Jordan Image
Title
Representative
Ohio's 4th District
Party Affiliation
Republican
2025
2026
Social Media Accounts
Twitter
: @
Jim_Jordan
Facebook
: @
repjimjordan
Youtube
: @
RepJimJordan
Donate Against (Primary Election)
Donate Against (General Election)
Top Contributors
(2022 - current)
15,500
Roppe Corp
Roppe Corp
$15,500
House Freedom Fund
$15,000
Cooper Farms
$14,000
Nucor Corp
$12,220
San Francisco Giants
$11,200
Top Industries
(2022 - current)
1,826,447
Retired
Retired
$1,826,447
Republican/Conservative
$1,404,359
Real Estate
$151,848
Securities & Investment
$103,021
Health Professionals
$93,486
VoteDown vs Influence Donors
Data supplied by OpenSecrets.org
Representative Offices
Address
500 S. Sandusky Ave.
City/State/Zip
Bucyrus OH, 44820
Phone
419-663-1426
Hours
Tu/Th - 8am to 4:30pm
Address
3121 W. Elm Plz.
City/State/Zip
Lima OH, 45805
Phone
419-999-6455
Fax
419-999-4238
Hours
M-F 8:30AM-5PM
Address
28 Park Avenue West
Suite
100A
City/State/Zip
Mansfield OH, 44902
Phone
419-982-8045
Fax
419-668-3015
Address
13 B E. Main St.
City/State/Zip
Norwalk OH, 44857
Phone
419-663-1426
Fax
419-668-3015
Hours
M-F 8:30AM-5PM
News
03/11/2025 --theepochtimes
The documents include information about the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol breach, the FBI's communications with social media firms, and school threat investigations.
03/10/2025 --foxnews
EXCLUSIVE: FBI Director Kash Patel is working aggressively to comply with congressional document requests in order follow through on his commitment to transparency, Fox News Digital has learned.
03/07/2025 --rollcall
Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-Ga., has led House GOP efforts to reexamine the 2021 attack on the Capitol.
03/06/2025 --theepochtimes
Discussions at a committee hearing became heated over immigration issues and solutions.
02/22/2025 --whig
New FBI Director Kash Patel has told senior officials that he plans to relocate 1,000 employees from Washington to field offices around the country and move an additional 500 to a bureau facility in Huntsville, Alabama. That's according to a...
02/22/2025 --abcnews
New FBI Director Kash Patel has told senior officials that he plans to relocate 1,000 employees at FBI headquarters to field offices around the country and move an additional 500 to a bureau facility in Huntsville, Alabama
02/21/2025 --kgw
Patel said Friday that the FBI's “national security mission” was equally as important as its efforts to fight violent crime and drug overdoses.
02/21/2025 --dailypress
Bannon is not the only person in Trump’s orbit whose gestures have come under scrutiny.
02/21/2025 --rawstory
A brewing battle pitting MAGA loyalists against traditional Republican defense hawks is brewing on Capitol Hill – and President Donald Trump’s foreign policy vision is at the center of the drama.That’s according to a Friday report in Politico, which detailed the effort inside MAGA world to cast aside individuals whose foreign policy views are more aligned with traditional approaches championed by conservatives. That mission was stepped up over the last week, according to the report. The “escalating clash” comes as Trump’s top allies see the “once-powerful defense hawks” as “key obstacles standing in the way of a thorough remaking of U.S. foreign policy that would realign the world order with Trump’s America First vision,” Politico reported.High-profile targets the president’s loyalists have aimed at include Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) and Trump's special envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, who the publication notes has been "undermined in Washington as he meets this week with top Ukrainian officials in Kyiv."ALSO READ: 'Gotta be kidding': Jim Jordan scrambles as he's confronted over Musk 'double standard'Secretary of State Marco Rubio and national security adviser Michael Waltz “are under intense internal scrutiny,” given their “past lives as Russia hawks,” according to the report. It added that White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller and Sergio Gor, who oversees decisions involving personnel, “have shown little tolerance for anyone who diverges from the MAGA mindset.”The early infighting among the MAGAfied Republican Party underscores the new foreign policy mindset Trump ushered in “that elevates his personal relationships with leaders of rival superpowers, and the use of American threats to push allies and adversaries to buckle to American power, over the traditional alliances based on long-term cooperation and democratic governance,” Politico said.The divide has already been put on display on the world stage over the last week. But, as the publication noted, Vice President J.D. Vance and other administration officials have been emboldened by Trump’s bullish foreign policy approach to send a clear message to the global community “that Republican foreign policy as they have known it is dead — and they’re not sorry about it.”
02/21/2025 --rawstory
Seven federal and state GOP lawmakers from western Wisconsin were no-shows at an event packed with farmers concerned about the Trump administration's impact on their communities and jobs, the Wisconsin Examiner reported on Friday."Madison-area U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Black Earth), state Sen. Jeff Smith (D-Eau Claire) and state Reps. Jodi Emerson (D-Eau Claire) and Christian Phelps (D-Eau Claire) were in attendance," reported Henry Redman. However, "U.S. Reps. Tom Tiffany and Derrick Van Orden, state Reps. Rob Sommerfeld (R-Bloomer), Treig Pronschinske (R-Mondovi) and Clint Moses (R-Mondovi) and state Sens. Jesse James (R-Thorp) and Rob Stafsholt (R-New Richmond) were all invited but did not attend or send a staff member," according to the report.The Democrats in attendance seized on their GOP colleagues' absence, with Phelps telling the crowd at Chippewa Falls hosted by the Wisconsin Farmers Union, “All four of us want you to know that there are people in elected office who want to fight for you. Because I think there’s a lot of fear that comes from the fact that we’re seeing a lot of noise and action from the people who aren’t and some of the people that didn’t show up to this. So I hope that you will also ask questions of them when you get a chance.” ALSO READ: 'Gotta be kidding': Jim Jordan scrambles as he's confronted over Musk 'double standard'Pocan took an even more direct approach, repeatedly joking that Van Orden must be "on vacation."Trump rattled global markets as he entered office by vowing massive new tariffs on China, Canada, and Mexico, proclaiming it was in retaliation for trade deficits and for drug and migration problems at the border. Ultimately, he blinked on the Canadian and Mexican tariffs at the very last minute, agreeing to a one-month delay in exchange for some border security measures Canada and Mexico previously agreed to enact. Economists have broadly warned that if fully enacted, Trump's tariff plans could lead to a surge in prices for energy and retail goods. Farmers at that event, who frequently sell to international markets and simultaneously face threats to their labor markets from Trump's mass deportation plans, emphasized how bad the tariffs could be for them.“How do you offer a price to a farmer? Is it gonna be $400 a ton, or is it gonna be $500 a ton?” said Les Danielson, a farmer from Cadott. “I’m not even thinking about the fall. I’m just thinking about the spring and the uncertainty. This isn’t cuts to the federal budget, this is just plain chaos and uncertainty that really benefits no one. And I know it’s kind of cool to think we’re just playing this big game of chicken. Everybody’s gonna blink. But when you’re a co-op, or when you’re a farmer trying to figure out how much you can buy, it’s not fine.”
02/21/2025 --nbcphiladelphia
New FBI Director Kash Patel has told senior officials that he plans to relocate 1,000 employees at FBI headquarters to field offices around the country and move an additional 500 to a bureau facility in Huntsville, Alabama, according to a person with knowledge of the discussions.The plans were communicated Friday, the same day Patel was sworn in at the White House. They reflect his long-stated determination to reduce the FBI’s footprint in Washington and have more of a presence in offices in other cities.The person who discussed Patel’s vision did so on condition of anonymity to describe plans that have not been made public.At his swearing-in ceremony, Patel called the opportunity to lead the nation’s premier federal law enforcement agency the “greatest honor” of his life.Patel was confirmed by the Senate on Thursday by a 51-49 margin, with two Republican lawmakers, Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, breaking party ranks and voting against him.“I think he’ll go down as the best ever at that position,” President Donald Trump told reporters Friday ahead of the White House swearing-in, which was conducted by Attorney General Pam Bondi and attended by Republican supporters in Congress, including Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio. Trump added that the ”agents love this guy.”Patel will inherit an FBI gripped by turmoil as the Justice Department over the past month has forced out a group of senior bureau officials and made a highly unusual demand for the names of thousands of agents who participated in investigations related to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.FBIFeb 11Democrat accuses Trump FBI pick Kash Patel of secretly ordering firingsTrump administrationJan 31Trump administration forces out multiple senior FBI officialsTrump administrationJan 30Trump's FBI chief pick, Kash Patel, insists he has no ‘enemies list'Democrats had sounded the alarm about the appointment, saying they fear Patel will operate as a loyalist for Trump and abuse the FBI’s law enforcement powers to go after the president’s adversaries. They’ve cited past comments such as his suggestion before he was nominated that he would “come after” anti-Trump “conspirators” in the government and media.Patel sought to assuage those concerns at his confirmation hearing last month, saying he intended to follow the Constitution and had no interest in pursuing retribution, though he also said at his swearing-in Friday that reporters had written “fake, malicious, slanderous and defamatory” stories about him.Republicans angry over what they see as law enforcement bias against conservatives during the Democratic Biden administration, as well as criminal investigations into Trump, have rallied behind Patel as the right person for the job.Patel has spoken of his desire to implement major changes at the FBI, including a reduced footprint in Washington and a renewed emphasis on the bureau’s traditional crime-fighting duties rather than the intelligence-gathering work that has come to define its mandate over the past two decades as national security threats have proliferated.He said Friday that the FBI’s “national security mission” was equally as important as its efforts to fight violent crime and drug overdoses.“Anyone that wishes to do harm to our way of life and our citizens, here and abroad, will face the full wrath of the DOJ and FBI,” Patel said. “If you seek to hide in any corner of this country or planet, we will put on the world’s largest manhunt and we will find you and we will decide your end-state.”A former Justice Department counterterrorism prosecutor, Patel was selected in November to replace Christopher Wray, who was picked by Trump in 2017 and who resigned at the conclusion of the Biden administration to make way for his chosen successor. Wray infuriated Trump throughout his tenure, including after FBI agents searched his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida in August 2022 for classified documents in one of two federal investigations that resulted in indictments against Trump that were dismissed after his election win.FBI directors are given 10-year terms as a way to insulate them from political influence and keep them from becoming beholden to a particular president or administration. But Trump fired the FBI director he inherited, James Comey, after Comey had spent over three years on the job and replaced Wray after more than seven years in the position.
02/21/2025 --rawstory
Reacting to Elon Musk being the focus of voter anger at a Georgia town hall that had Rep. Rich McCormick (R-GA) being shouted down by voters from his district, longtime political observer Elisabeth Bumiller claimed the billionaire made matters worse for Donald Trump and Republicans with his appearance at CPAC on Thursday night.During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," Bumiller followed MSNBC's Ali Vitali noting that a McCormick constituent accused Musk of using a "chainsaw" to destroy government services which was followed on Thursday night with the unelected billionaire brandishing one when he took the stage at the far-right conservative conference. According to the journalist, that image will be used by Democrats to bedevil Republicans already on their heels defending the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) cuts.ALSO READ: 'Gotta be kidding': Jim Jordan scrambles as he's confronted over Musk 'double standard'Co-host Joe Scarborough promoted his guest by noting that "you can talk generally about balancing the budget, you can talk generally about reducing the workforce and, again we're talking about what amounts to about 9 to 10 percent of the budget.""But when those cuts, that general idea turns into specific cuts that impact working Americans and middle class Americans? Boy, you have scenes like the congressman had last night and I suspect we'll start seeing much like we did in 2009 when Barack Obama started to roll out the possibility that Americans may not be able to visit their own doctor anymore if the ACA passed," he added."Yes," Bumiller agreed. "And actually, that photograph of Elon Musk with the chainsaw and the hat and the sunglasses –– that's political. That's a political problem for the administration."You can watch below or at this link.- YouTubeyoutu.be
02/21/2025 --rawstory
A new presidential order that takes aim at a San Francisco achievement Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) was instrumental in seeing through opened up a fresh clash between President Donald Trump and the former House speaker.A new Trump executive order takes aim at a 1,500-acre national park set on a former military base that boasts sprawling views of the Golden Gate Bridge, according to Politico. The order calls for funding to be ripped from the Presidio Trust, the agency that oversees the historic landmark's scenic grounds.The move is widely seen as “an act of political retribution,” though Pelosi characterized it Thursday as “a distraction” to draw attention away from Republican plans to cut Medicaid, which she said is unpopular.“We’re here to talk about Medicaid, Mr. President,” Pelosi said, according to Politico. “We will not be distracted with other things. He called himself a king the other day. Really? King of what? Anyway, the emperor has no clothes as far as I’m concerned.”ALSO READ: 'Gotta be kidding': Jim Jordan scrambles as he's confronted over Musk 'double standard'Pelosi said the agency, created in the 1990s, was protected under an act of Congress.“I don’t take it personally if he wants to insult something as innovative and wonderful as the Presidio,” the former House speaker told the New York Times. “There are some people who don’t believe in urban parks. We believe in urban parks, and that’s why we have the Presidio.”A former Presidio Trust member echoed Pelosi’s position. “It’s not going away, it cannot be eliminated by one person,” Marie Hurabiell told Politico.Other San Francisco residents were equally roiled by the president’s escalation of the notoriously fraught relationship between him and Pelosi. “He’s not just targeting the trust,” city Supervisor Stephen Sherrill is quoted as saying. “He’s not just targeting Speaker Pelosi. He’s targeting all San Franciscans.”
02/10/2025 --abcnews
Top Trump administration officials are openly questioning the judiciary’s authority to serve as a check on executive power as the new president’s sweeping agenda faces growing pushback from the courts
02/09/2025 --nypost
It was the Cardinal’s birthday. The thing is, what do you tell a Cardinal? I know it’s not mazel tov.
02/05/2025 --politico
Elon Musk has a White House office and growing pull across federal agencies. Now he's burrowed into the House Judiciary Committee.
01/31/2025 --reformer
In 1835 Jim Fisk was born in Pownal, Vermont. His father was a peddler. When Jim was eight years old his family moved to Brattleboro. His father sold household goods on the road, specializing in silk dresses and other products...
01/27/2025 --rawstory
Donald Trump tried to claim some of the glory after the Kansas City Chiefs punched their ticket to another Super Bowl.The Chiefs won the AFC Championship for the fifth time in six seasons by hanging on for a 32-29 win over the Buffalo Bills and will play for a record third straight Super Bowl win against the Philadelphia Eagles, and the president tried to share some of the spotlight in a social media post."Congratulations to the Kansas City Chiefs," Trump posted on Truth Social. "What a GREAT Team, Coach, Quarterback, and virtually everything else, including those fantastic FANS, that voted for me (MAGA!) in record numbers. Likewise, congratulations to the Buffalo Bills on a tremendous season. They will do a lot of winning long into the future!!!"Trump defeated former vice president Kamala Harris 59.5 percent to 40.1 percent in Missouri and by 57.2 percent to 40.1 percent in Kansas, but the Democratic nominee won in the Kansas City area.The president admitted that he didn't watch the Sunday night game, however, because he made three posts directing his followers to watch Mark Levin's Fox News program that aired at the same time as the AFC championship."Katie Pavlich, of wonderful Town Hall, was fantastic on the Mark Levin show tonight," Trump posted. "Likewise Congressman Jim Jordan. What a show!!! I never even got a chance to see much of the football game. Classic journalism, plus!"
01/24/2025 --salon
The president, who fomented conspiracy theories and threats against the former top doc, axed his security this week
01/24/2025 --foxnews
Louisiana State Treasurer John Fleming, who is seeking to oust Sen. Bill Cassidy in 2026, is calling the senator a "RINO," or "Republican in name only."
01/23/2025 --theadvocate
By the time Super Bowl VI arrived in New Orleans, the event was gaining prestige as an event of national importance.
01/20/2025 --kron4
Congressional Republicans are looking to press on in scrutinizing some of those who got pardons from former President Biden in the last hours of his presidency. “Implication is that they needed the pardons... So, let’s call them all before Congress and demand the truth,” Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) posted on the social platform X, in response [...]
01/20/2025 --rollcall
President Donald Trump speaks to supporters Monday at the Capitol after his inauguration as Vice President JD Vance looks on.
01/20/2025 --npr
Rep. Raskin is one of the people Biden pardoned before he left office. Raskin says it's strange to be pardoned for doing his job.
01/19/2025 --axios
On Sunday, millions of U.S. TikTok users were sent a message less than 24 hours after the app went dark: "As a result of President Trump's efforts, TikTok is back in the U.S.!"Yes, but: While Trump's vow to delay the app's divestment deadline might earn him some likes online, key GOP lawmakers who pushed for a ban over national security concerns could be a bit ticked off. And despite Trump's vow to issue an executive order on day one to delay the enforcement of a bipartisan law, TikTok still might be racing against the clock to strike a deal.Here's what you may have missed when newsmakers hit the airwaves this Sunday, Jan. 19.1. MAGA's TikTok turnaround Rep. Mike Waltz speaks about the law banning TikTok in the U.S. on CNN's "State of the Union" on Jan. 19.Rep. Mike Waltz (R-Fla.), a prominent congressional China hawk, said last year President Biden's presidential campaign should be "ashamed" for joining TikTok when federal agencies had to remove the app from their devices."We know the Chinese Communist Party are using this as a data collection bonanza," he said, contending the campaign's presence on the platform as "a superhighway" for election interference. "I've called for a full-on ban," Waltz said at the time, calling action on TikTok "long overdue."Trump, who once spearheaded the effort to ban the app, eventually joined TikTok as well.The latest: But on Sunday, Waltz, now the incoming national security adviser, said he's confident the Trump administration can "save TikTok" while protecting U.S. user data.That could mean "an outright sale," as is stipulated in the bipartisan law that set the stage for the app's ban, or "some mechanism of firewalls to make sure that the data is protected here on U.S. soil," Waltz said on CNN's "State of the Union.""So it's possible China will still own [TikTok]?" host Dana Bash asked, adding, "Isn't that totally capitulating to China?"Waltz replied that it's "not capitulating at all." He continued, "TikTok can continue to exist ... whether that's in American hands, owned by an American company, or whether the data and the algorithms are fully protected from Chinese interference."Zoom out: But House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) told NBC's "Meet the Press" that "we will enforce the law," and Trump's vows to "save TikTok" mean the president-elect wants to see "a true divestiture.""It's the Chinese Communist Party and their manipulation of the algorithms," Johnson said. "They have been flooding the minds of American children with terrible messages, glorifying violence and antisemitism and even suicide and eating disorders."The only way to extend the deadline, Johnson said, is if there's an "actual deal" in the works. But he noted, "We don't have any confidence in ByteDance," TikTok's parent company.House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) noted on CNN that presenting a remedy other "than someone else purchasing TikTok who's not affiliated with the Chinese communist party" would mean there would have to be "some kind of change in the law."Yes, but: Trump's vision may look a little different."[My]y initial thought is a joint venture between the current owners and/or new owners whereby the U.S. gets a 50% ownership in a joint venture set up between the U.S. and whichever purchase we so choose," Trump wrote in his social media statement expressing his intent to issue an executive order pushing back the apps' lights-out date.It's clear that ByteDance does not want to sell its famous algorithm. And there is no evidence of an in-progress deal, though investor Kevin O'Leary said he's made a $20 billion offer.What we're watching: Trump 2.0 — and perhaps, the path to TikTok 2.0 — start Monday.And as White House deputy national security adviser Jon Finer made clear Sunday on ABC's "This Week," the ball is in Trump's court.2. Israel-Hamas ceasefire commences Brett McGurk speaks during a Jan. 19 interview on CBS News' "Face the Nation."The early hours of the Gaza ceasefire saw three female Israeli hostages released from Hamas captivity after more than 470 days.The latest: Some 800 aid trucks are set to enter Gaza today, said Brett McGurk, the lead U.S. negotiator on the hostage deal — a dramatic increase from daily averages.As of Friday reporting from Reuters, UNRWA data showed 523 aid trucks had entered Gaza in January. Janti Soeripto, the president and CEO of Save the Children, said on CBS News' "Face the Nation" that there are some 300,000 children in Gaza who are in "real acute need of malnutrition treatment." Her organization is also trying to reconnect more than 17,000 children separated from their families during a war that has seen more than 45,000 Palestinians killed.What they're saying: "This was not put together in the last week," McGurk said. "This was put together really since May when President Biden laid out this framework."McGurk said the Biden administration has been working "seamlessly" with the incoming Trump team."This is a testament to President Biden and to President Trump allowing us to work together," he said, characterizing his partnership with Trump Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff as "historic."Waltz characterized the hostage return as a "Reagan moment" for Trump, referencing the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis.The terms of the deal were "inherited" from the Biden administration, Waltz said, but he contended "this deal would have never happened had President Trump not been elected."The bottom line: Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said on NBC's "Meet the Press" that the question over whether Trump deserves some credit for the deal is one "historians will have to answer moving forward." 3. Johnson: Trump isn't behind Turner's ousting House Speaker Mike Johnson speaks on NBC News' "Meet the Press" during a Jan. 19 interview.House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) denied Sunday that his decision to oust Rep. Mike Turner (R-Ohio) as the House Intelligence Committee chair was prompted by President-elect Trump.The intrigue: Turner's ousting has generated frustration and disbelief from Republicans who fear their razor-thin majority would shrink further if the Ohio congressman decides to vote against the GOP agenda in retaliation for Johnson's actions.What they're saying: Johnson told NBC News' Kristen Welker that "the notion that this was directed by the incumbent administration is just simply false."Yes, but: Turner told CBS News that Johnson said "concerns from Mar-a-Lago" were among the reasons for his removal.State of play: Johnson said he feels he can still count on Turner's vote as he's a "team player."The speaker added that he and Turner are "good friends, trusted friends and colleagues. He will still be one of the top leaders in the House. In fact, I reappointed him and asked him to serve again, and he graciously agreed."Turner will be the chairman of the U.S. delegation for NATO's Parliamentary Assembly, a position he previously held in 2011. He was president of the assembly from 2014 to 2016. He also serves on the Armed Service and Oversight and Government Reform committees.More from Axios' Sunday coverage:Bannon: Billionaire CEOs have surrendered to TrumpArctic blast, tied to the polar vortex, spreads all the way to SoutheastTrump's 2.0 inauguration draws more celebrities
01/16/2025 --huffpost
Some conservatives have claimed that alleged mismanagement of the wildfires shows Los Angeles couldn't handle the sporting event.
12/30/2025 --dailykos
In an attempt to salvage House Speaker Mike Johnson's career, Donald Trump took to Truth Social to endorse the Louisiana Republican in a rambling post days before the new Congress is set to hold its leadership vote.After slamming Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign’s spending and bragging about his presidential victory, Trump said that Johnson should be reelected speaker to help him pass his agenda."Speaker Mike Johnson is a good, hard working, religious man. He will do the right thing, and we will continue to WIN. Mike has my Complete & Total Endorsement. MAGA!!!" Trump wrote.But it's unclear whether Trump's last-minute foray into the speaker race will get Johnson over the finish line.Republicans are angry at Johnson for negotiating with Democrats to keep the government funded, with 38 Republicans defying both Johnson and Trump—who helped negotiate the ultimate funding agreement—and voting against the bill.Republicans also defied Trump by not including a debt ceiling increase in the funding deal that passed on Dec. 20, revealing that a sizable faction of the House GOP is willing to buck Trump.So far, Rep. Thomas Massie, Republican of Kentucky, said on X that he will vote against Johnson. Similarly, Rep. Victoria Spartz, Republican of Indiana, signaled on Monday that Johnson has a lot of work to do to win her vote. Spartz, who was elected as a Republican, said she will not participate in the Republican conference.xI will vote for someone other than Mike Johnson. I’m not persuaded by the “hurry up and elect him so we can certify the election on J6” argument. A weak legislative branch, beholden to the swamp, will not be able to achieve the mandate voters gave Trump and Congress in November. pic.twitter.com/vrD3l45XDX— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) December 27, 2024“Our next speaker must show courageous leadership to get our country back on track before this ‘Titanic’ strikes an iceberg at any moment,” Spartz wrote in a rambling statement.Roughly a dozen other Republicans are on the fence.Rep. Chip Roy, Republican of Texas, who feuded with Trump during the government funding mess, is gauging whether Rep. Jim Jordan, Republican of Ohio, should get in the race. Other Republicans have floated Trump’s co-president Elon Musk as a possible speaker candidate.Ultimately, with Republicans' extremely narrow House majority, Johnson can't afford to lose votes from his caucus if he wants the gavel. Republicans will have just 219 seats when the new Congress is sworn in on Jan. 3, as former Rep. Matt Gaetz won’t be taking the seat he won in November. Even if Trump’s endorsement gets some of the fence sitters back in Johnson’s camp, just two defections could derail Johnson’s bid. If Johnson cannot garner a majority on Friday, Congress will be thrown into a state of chaos—again.Without a speaker in place, Congress cannot hold a joint session on Jan. 6 to certify Trump’s 2024 presidential victory. As Politico reported, “Congress is legally required to convene on Jan. 6 to certify the election results. But without a speaker, the House won’t be able to establish rules governing how it operates. And members who would need to vote on any successful objection can’t be sworn in until after those rules are adopted.”Republicans have proven that they are willing to go without a speaker. In January 2023, it took 15 rounds of voting for the GOP conference to coalesce around Kevin McCarthy. A few months later, in October, the House was without a speaker for 22 days after Gaetz ousted McCarthy without any replacement in mind. That chaotic mess is what led to Johnson’s speakership.It already looks like the start of the 119th Congress is going to be a disaster of Republicans’ own making. Get your popcorn ready.Right now, Daily Kos is falling short of our 2024 goal. Your donations are how we make ends meet. Can you please donate $5 right now so we can close the books on 2024?
12/30/2025 --rollcall
Speaker Mike Johnson, her at the Republican convention in Milwaukee in July, received President-elect Donald Trump's endorsement Monday.
12/26/2024 --foxnews
On the first day of the new Congress, representatives will vote for the speaker of the House as Mike Johnson fights to keep the job.
12/20/2024 --foxnews
FIRST ON FOX: The House Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government released a more than 17,000-page report detailing its work this Congress.
12/19/2024 --benzinga
Billionaire Elon Musk wears many hats as the leader of companies like Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA), SpaceX, The Boring Company, Neuralink and X. Could the title of Speaker of the House get added on top of his Department of Government Efficiency role soon?What Happened: The influence Musk has on President-elect Donald Trump and members of Congress may have been on full display Wednesday with his criticism of a spending bill playing a role in House Republicans rejecting the bill.The spending bill would have extended federal funding until March and averted a government shutdown. Without the passing of a new spending bill, the government faces a deadline of Saturday, Dec. 21 at 12:01 a.m. ET to avoid a government shutdown, which could impact travel during the Christmas week.Members of Congress and Musk are now questioning the leadership of current Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-La.), who took on the role in a long process back in October that saw multiple voting rounds to replace ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy.Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) floated the idea of selecting Musk to be the next Speaker of the House, a vote that will take place for the new Congress in January."The Speaker of the House need not be a member of Congress ... Nothing would disrupt the swamp more than electing Elon Musk ... think about it ... nothing's impossible," Paul tweeted.Paul added there would be "joy" seeing the "collective establishment," which he called the "uniparty," "lose their ever-lovin' minds."Musk is ...Full story available on Benzinga.com
12/16/2024 --rawstory
I was dying...It was just a matter of time. Lying behind the wheel of the airplane, bleeding out of the right side of my devastated body, I waited for the rapid shooting to stop.—Former Representative Jackie Speier in her memoir Undaunted: Surviving Jonestown, Summoning Courage, and Fighting Back recounting her experience after being shot five times during an ambush during her fact-finding visit to Jonestown, Guyana where Jim Jones and his cult, Peoples Temple, had built a compound.It, combined with everything else that was going on, made it difficult to breathe...Being crushed by the shield and the people behind it ... leaving me defenseless, injured.—Metropolitan police officer, Daniel Hodges, describing being crushed in a doorway during the January 6, 2021, attack by Trump supporters on the U.S. CapitolIn both of the examples above, the individual speaking was the victim of extreme violence perpetrated by followers of a single person whose influence had spread to hundreds of people (in the January 6th case, thousands of people). In fact, Speier’s experience with the Jim Jones followers was part of the single greatest loss of American life (918 people) prior to 9/11/2001. These followings have been given an umbrella name, cult, and have involved what has been traditionally called “brainwashing.” The cult leader receives seemingly undying support as the Dear Leader or Savior. However, the term brainwashing suggests that indoctrinated members are robots without free will – behavioral scientists argue that this is not the case. It’s an oversimplification.Rather than being seen as passive victims to an irresistible force, psychiatrist Robert Lifton argues that there is “voluntary self-surrender” in one’s entrance into a cult. Further, the decision to give up control as part of the cult process may actually be part of the reason why people join. Research and experience tell us that those who are “cult vulnerable” may have a sense of confusion or separation from society or seek the same sort of highly controlled environment that was part of their childhood. It has also been suggested that those who are at risk for cult membership feel an enormous lack of control in the face of uncertainty (i.e., economic, occupational, academic, social, familial) and will gravitate more towards a cult as their distress increases. I would argue that many of these factors are at play when we see the ongoing support of Trumpism and MAGA “theology.”Psychologist Leon Festinger described the phenomenon of cognitive dissonance in which there is a disconnect between one’s feelings, beliefs, and convictions and their observable actions. This dissonance is distressing and, in order to relieve the anxiety, people may become more invested in the cult or belief system that goes against who they are individually. As such, cult members become more “dug-in” and will cling to thoughts and beliefs that contradict available evidence. In other words, they are no longer able to find a middle ground or compromise.How does this apply to today’s politics?There was a time when the two major political parties in America could exhibit bipartisanship by moving across the aisle to compromise on the issues on which they were legislating. Tried and true Republicans who favored small government, lower taxes, and national security could find a middle ground with Democrats who pushed for things like universal healthcare, higher minimum wages, and progressive tax reform. The abortion issue in America has been an area of debate between the parties as they debated elements like when life begins, is a heartbeat a heartbeat, and what to do about post-birth abortions (which is murder and not actually a thing). There were largely two sides of the issue and some areas for compromise.This is no longer possible in today’s sociopolitical climate. Although members of the GOP still refer to themselves as a political party with principled stances, the reality is they have now morphed into a domestic terror organization and to use the umbrella term, a cult – the largest and most dangerous cult in American history.RELATED: Neuroscientist sounds the alarm on the GOP’s 'contagious sociopaths' who live among usCult thinking includes ardent adherence to group thinking such as – clinically speaking, in the face of distorted thinking we ask about one’s strength of conviction by querying, ”Can you think of other ways of seeing this?” Sadly, what we are seeing publicly is ‘No’ from those who still subscribe to Trumpism/MAGA.Here are a few examples in today’s socio-political environment in which cultism has contributed to a lack of middle ground.There is no middle ground on treasonous, conspiratorial, fraudulent behavior – these are crimes and, arguably, the worst crimes one could commit against their own country.There is no middle ground on slavery.There is no middle ground on allowing Americans to die through inaction in response to natural disasters and global health crises.There is no middle ground on gunning down school children or wearing an AR-15 rifle pin and throwing away a pin to remember a Uvalde victim.There is no middle ground on jeopardizing national security and retaining and sharing classified documents.There is no middle ground on breaking campaign finance (i.e., hush money schemes) laws.There should be no middle ground on tolerance of crime, period.And so many know this. Tim Scott, Jim Jordan, and Marco Rubio (the last two having gone to law school), all know this and are smarter than they are acting – which takes us back to cult dynamics – if you are a dyed-in-the-wool cultist or pretending to be a cultist – but the outcome is the same – harm to the Country and its people – there is no difference. Whether you actually have a personality disorder or are pretending to be a sociopathically or psychopathically disordered person – if the result is the same – harm to your constituents and your country – what’s the difference? As noted in the opening paragraphs, there is a voluntary submission to cultism – Rubio, for example, identified all of the reasons why the 45th President was not qualified when he himself was running for President in 2016. However, perhaps due to his own intolerance of uncertainties in his life, volunteered for Trumpism.What can be done?There are exit strategies for people ensnared in a cult. One factor is accountability or repeatedly seeing the adverse consequences of the group’s behavior (e.g., indictment, incarceration, job loss) which we started to see even more of this week.But until one party and its ardent followers can admit they are in a domestic terrorist cult and as Rep. Eric Swalwell said are “unserious” people, there is no hope of unification on the horizon. The first step is getting through to people who can’t or won’t see the truth.ALSO IN THE NEWS: Cognitive neuroscientist explains why stupidity is an existential threat to AmericaAbout the Author:Seth D. Norrholm, PhD (Threads: neuropsychophd; X, artist formerly known as Twitter: @SethN12) is a neuropsychologist and independent socio political columnist. Dr. Norrholm has spent 20 years studying trauma-, stressor-, anxiety-, depressive-, and substance use-related disorders and has published over 135 peer-reviewed research articles and book chapters. The primary objective of his work is to develop “bench-to-bedside” clinical research methods to inform therapeutic interventions for fear and anxiety-related disorders and how they relate to human factors such as personality, genetics, and environmental influences. Dr. Norrholm has been featured on NBC, ABC, PBS, CNN, MSNBC’s Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell, Politico.com, The New York Times, The New York Daily News, USA Today, WebMD, The Atlantic, The History Channel, Scientific American, Salon.com, The Huffington Post, and Yahoo.com.
12/15/2024 --natlawreview
Oliver Roberts is Editor-in-Chief of AI and the Law at The National Law Review, Co-Head of the AI Practice Group at Holtzman Vogel, and CEO/Founder of Wickard.aiAs 2024 comes to a close, it’s time to look ahead to how AI will shape the law and legal practice in 2025. Over the past year, we’ve witnessed growing adoption of AI across the legal sector, substantial investments in legal AI startups, and a rise in state-level AI regulations. While the future of 2025 remains uncertain, industry leaders are already sharing their insights. Along with 2025 predictions from The National Law Review’s Editor-in-Chief Oliver Roberts, this article presents 68 expert predictions on AI and the law in 2025 from federal judges, startup founders, CEOs, and leaders of AI practice groups at global law firms.Predictions from The National Law Review’s Editor-in-Chief Oliver RobertsOliver’s Predictions for AI Regulation: In 2025, I do not expect Congress to pass any comprehensive federal legislation that... Read the complete article here...© The National Law Forum. LLC
12/12/2024 --foxnews
DOJ Inspector General said there were more than two dozen confidential human sources in the crowd on Jan. 6, but only three were assigned by the FBI to be present for the event, Fox News has learned.
12/12/2024 --westernjournal
Stories like this raise questions of forgiveness and trust. According to The Wall Street Journal, Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta Platforms, which owns Facebook and other social media entities, has [...]The post Trump Gets Official Backing from Zuckerberg's Meta - They Didn't Even Do This for Biden appeared first on The Western Journal.
12/12/2024 --globegazette
Biden said he would be taking more steps in the weeks ahead and would continue to review clemency petitions.
12/08/2024 --nbcnews
Trump spoke with NBC News for more than an hour in an interview that covered a range of topics.
12/08/2024 --sunjournal
The reasons the president cites for pardoning his son could have been made when he rejected a pardon.
12/07/2024 --columbian
WASHINGTON — Russell Vought is well-known on Capitol Hill and thus far at least looks like a shoo-in to be confirmed as President-elect Donald Trump’s budget director, as he was during Trump’s first term on a party-line vote in 2020.
12/04/2024 --dailycaller
'Another influential House Democrat is stepping down'
12/04/2024 --huffpost
Nadler's move clears the way for Raskin to be the influential committee's top Democrat.
12/04/2024 --kron4
Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) is ceding his position as top Democrat on the powerful Judiciary Committee amid a tough challenge from Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), — a stunning shift on a powerful committee that’s sure to play a considerable role in the oversight of the second Trump administration. In a letter to colleagues, Nadler said [...]
12/04/2024 --rollcall
Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., right, is shown with House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, at a committee hearing in March. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)
12/04/2024 --kron4
A Georgia judge ordered Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis to turn over to a conservative watchdog group any communications she may have with special counsel Jack Smith or the now-disbanded House Jan. 6 committee. Judicial Watch filed a suit in March after Willis said she does not have responsive records to the request – [...]
 
Amount
Details
Payment
Choose Your Donation Amount
Your contribution will benefit the leading opponent of Jim Jordan in the next Primary election
$10
$25
$50
$100
$250
$500
Issues You Are Upset About
We will communicate these issues to Jim Jordan
Pay With Credit Card
 
Amount
Details
Payment
Choose Your Donation Amount
Your contribution will benefit the leading opponent of Jim Jordan in the next General election
$10
$25
$50
$100
$250
$500
Issues You Are Upset About
We will communicate these issues to Jim Jordan
Pay With Credit Card