ted cruz

GOP senators demand impeachment of 'rogue' judges who ruled against Trump

More Republicans in the U.S. Senate are now calling for the impeachment of federal judges who have issued rulings striking down President Donald Trump's policies.

NBC News reported Wednesday that U.S. District Judges James Boasberg (appointed by former President Barack Obama) and Deborah Boardman (appointed by former President Joe Biden) have now been targeted for impeachment by multiple pro-Trump lawmakers, including Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.). While a Republican member of the House of Representatives has issued articles of impeachment naming the two judges, there have not been any votes. Cruz is hoping that will change.

"Both of these judges, I believe, meet the standard for impeachment and for conviction and removal from office," Cruz said during a Wednesday hearing.

Sen. Schmitt called Boasberg — who ruled that Trump did not have the authority to deport Venezuelans to El Salvador last year under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 — "the embodiment of a rogue judge."

"[Boasberg has] made it clear time and time again in his rulings and his comments that he, instead of wearing that black robe, wears, in fact, a blue jersey," Schmitt said. "He has continually abused the power as chief judge."

Judge Boardman – who has jurisdiction in the District of Maryland — has been targeted for impeachment for sentencing someone who attempted to kill Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh to eight years in prison. Republicans like Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) insist Boardman gave the defendant too light of a sentence, and that she treated the sentencing like "an ordinary criminal case."

Despite the calls for impeachment, it's unlikely that either judge will be removed from their position. In addition to a majority of the House of Representatives to support impeachment, two-thirds of the U.S. Senate — 67 members — would have to vote for conviction. Republicans currently have just 53 seats, and would need 14 Democrats to join them.

Click here to read NBC's report in its entirety.

Ted Cruz subpoenas FCC head behind Kimmel suspension after calling him 'dangerous as hell'

Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Brendan Carr has agreed to appear before the Senate Commerce Committee — chaired by Sen. Ted Cruz (R‑Texas) — who earlier criticized him over his recent public comments aiming to influence broadcasters, Semafor reported Wednesday.

Cruz, who has oversight over the FCC through his committee role, sharply pushed back against Carr earlier this month for pressuring Disney and ABC over remarks by late-night host Jimmy Kimmel concerning the alleged killer of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

“I like Brendan Carr. He’s a good guy … but what he said there is dangerous as hell," Cruz said at the time.

According to Semafor, Carr and the other FCC commissioners will testify sometime in November, though no firm date has been set. The scheduling remains in flux and could be delayed further.

Carr’s critics argue his remarks threaten free speech by suggesting regulatory consequences for broadcasters airing content unfavorable to government views. Supporters counter that Carr’s statements have been misinterpreted and do not amount to actual threats against ABC affiliates or pending corporate transactions.

The report noted that Senate Commerce Committee Democrats, led by Ranking Member Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), formally requested Carr testify and answer questions.

Some Republicans have also voiced unease with Carr’s approach, warning of the risks of pursuing aggressive enforcement of speech standards.

The upcoming hearing comes amid broader tensions over how far the federal government can use regulatory power to address content on broadcast media.

Last month, President Donald Trump intensified his threats, telling reporters aboard Air Force One last month that broadcasters who provide him with “bad press” might lose their federal licenses.

The comments came just a day after Carr, under Trump’s administration, forced ABC to pull Kimmel’s show by threatening the broadcast licenses of its affiliate stations over a remark the comedian made about the assassination of Kirk. The show has since returned to the air.

“They give me only bad publicity, press. I mean, they’re getting a license. I would think maybe their license should be taken away,” Trump said at the time.

'I'm the one asking the questions': CNN host cuts off Ted Cruz after he shouts over her

An exchange between CNN host Kaitlan Collins and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) about political violence grew heated after Cruz repeatedly attempted to shout over Collins.

During a Tuesday segment on CNN, Cruz repeatedly asserted without evidence that 22 year-old Tyler Robinson — who has been charged with murdering far-right activist Charlie Kirk on a Utah college campus last week — was a left-wing radical driven to kill Kirk for ideological reasons. This is despite Robinson being raised in a Republican family, not affiliating with any political party on his voter registration form and his friends saying he never discussed politics with them. Collins pushed back, reminding Cruz that authorities have not yet identified a political motive for the shooting, which promoted Cruz to start talking over her.

"Hold on a second, Kaitlin," Cruz said. "There's a reference to ... an online meme for transgenderism. And [FBI] Director [Kash] Patel testified that that the murderer here was living with his romantic partner, who was a transgender man, transitioning to being a woman."

READ MORE: 'Didn't work for you': CNN analyst confronts Trump's favorite pundit on political violence

"I mean, that really shows the media not doing the job they should be doing," Cruz continued.

Collins repeated that no motive had been officially established and that the investigation is ongoing, after which Cruz again interjected, saying: "That's CNN's position. He just happened to fire the gun in celebration?"

Cruz continued to talk over Collins after she insisted she was simply stating the current facts of the case, and when she refused to let him talk over her, the Texas senator said: "Okay. Go ahead. Give your speech." He then attempted to turn the tables back on Collins by asking her if she had seen polling showing that Democrats think Robinson was a Republican and a Trump supporter, and pressed the issue by yelling: "You're not going to answer that question!"

"I'm the one asking the questions here," Collins responded.

READ MORE: 'Take your dementia meds grandpa': Newsom scorches Trump in brutal fact-check

Watch the full exchange below:

- YouTube www.youtube.com

Not 'exactly skinny': Critics punch up on Ted Cruz’ backfiring body-shaming rant

The New Republic reports a fat joke from Sen. Ted Cruz’ (R-Texas) to Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) went bad after Pritzker and social media posters turned on him.

During an interview on right-wing entertainment channel Newsmax, Cruz called Pritzker a “bigot” for objecting to President Donald Trump’s threats to deploy the National Guard in Chicago.

“What a disgusting, racist bigot JB Pritzker is,” Cruz said, implying that the governor’s disagreement with Trump were a slight against Latinos. “And listen, I don’t want to get between JB Pritzker and the Domino’s pizza line, but I’ll tell you what I am willing to get between: It is him and his open doors for every human trafficker, every drug trafficker, every MS-13 and Tren de Aragua gang member.”

READ MORE: 'They're going to eat you alive': Mom describes her painful escape from MAGA

Pritzker did not let Cruz’ lob go unchallenged, however, and invoked the infamous image of Cruz fleeing Texas — and his constituents — after a statewide electrical failure left "2 to 3 million Texans" without power, by Cruz’ own claim.

“And I would never want to get between Ted and a trip to Cancun when there’s an emergency in Texas,” Pritzker responded on X to wide acclaim.

“Touché,” posted one critic, one of many slamming Cruz or cheering the Illinois governor.

“This petty s—— is why I voted for Pritzker … Twice,” said another commenter on X.

READ MORE: Trump just accidentally revealed a dirty secret — and it has America's CEOs panicking

“I love my governor so much,” chimed a third.

Other critics complained that Cruz was not a lightweight himself, with one commenter joking “Ted is his own worst enemy” and another posting “It's not like Teddy Bear is exactly skinny.”

Read the New Republic report at this link.

Brutal supercut exposes Republicans who once blasted key Trump policy

Nearly all Republicans are lining up in support of President Donald Trump's newly announced tariffs on essentially all imported goods, despite the sharp downturn in financial markets. But journalists at the Washington Post have discovered that some of those same Republicans cheerleading the president's new import taxes were huge critics of the approach just a few years ago.

On Thursday, JM Rieger, who is a video journalist for the Post, tweeted a supercut of several high-profile Republicans in Congress that showed them criticizing tariffs as economic policy in years past, followed immediately by them heaping praise on Trump in the wake of Wednesday's sweeping new trade duties. Post journalists included quotes from Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and James Lankford (R-Ark.) along with House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) and Rep. Roger Williams (R-Texas).

"For years, Republicans in Congress warned against tariffs," Rieger tweeted. "Now, those same Republicans are downplaying massive tariff increases from President Donald Trump."

READ MORE: 'Spit in this judge's face': Former US attorney predicts Trump DHS will lose big in court

The clips of Cruz included one from a Republican presidential debate in 2016, in which the Texas senator said: "If we just impose a tariff, they'll put reciprocal tariffs, which will hurt ... 20% of the American jobs that depend on exports." Though earlier this week on Bloomberg Cruz said he just wanted to "focus on reciprocity." And Scalise spoke in 2015 about the need "to be able to open up more free trade agreements and export our products to foreign markets," before pivoting to justifying tariffs in a March CNBC interview by saying there were "a lot of countries that take advantage of the United States."

"So far, Americans have paid $12 billion in tariffs. It's not punishing the Chinese, it's punishing us," Sen. Lankford said in a 2019 Senate floor speech. However, he said in a late March CNN interview that Trump's approach to taxing imported goods was akin to "a kitchen remodel" where things may be "noisy" but "everybody has a long-term look of where we're headed."

This week's new import taxes have caused significant consternation in financial markets, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average closing more than 1,600 points lower than Wednesday. The Nasdaq Composite closed roughly six percentage points lower compared to yesterday, and the S&P 500 Index was down nearly five percentage points.

Watch the supercut below, or by clicking this link.

READ MORE: 'Bananas': Trump blasted as he heads to golf tournament after 'blowing up' world trade


Ted Cruz attempts 'major break in precedent' as chair of powerful Senate committee: report

Ever since Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) became chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee in January, he's been fighting to get unilateral subpoena powers.

Politico reported Wednesday that he may soon get those expanded powers on a party-line vote this evening. Ranking member Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) reminded her colleagues that this would be a significant expansion of the chair's role, as subpoenas have previously been issued with bipartisan cooperation. Politico reporter Ben Leonard noted that this would be a "major break in precedent" in how the committee has previously handled the process of compelling testimony and obtaining documents.

"Going back at least 20 years, the chair and ranking member of this committee typically work together and reach consensus on subpoenas being issued because there is no question the matter being investigated is improper or the party being investigated was not being cooperative," Cantwell said.

READ MORE: 'Delusional' or 'crazy reckless' Trump 'sleepwalking toward political loss': ex-Bush speechwriter

Cruz's gambit stems from an ongoing feud with the Massachusetts Port Authority (Massport), in which immigrants were allowed to sleep at Boston's Logan Airport up until last July due to a shortage of beds at designated immigrant shelters. Democratic Governor Maura Healey officially banned the airport from sheltering immigrants, though the Boston Globe has reported that immigrant families have still been spotted sleeping at the airport since Healey's ban.

The Texas Republican wants to subpoena Massport to get to the bottom of whether it's still allowing the practice. However, Massport spokesperson Jennifer Mehigan said "no families have stayed at the airport" since last July and that it is "working closely with the [Commerce] Committee and appreciate their patience as we gather the documents to voluntarily comply fully with their request." Cruz has pushed back and argues that Massport is violating federal grant rules.

“In recent years, the Senate has allowed our oversight muscles to atrophy. Oversight rarely occurs in our standing committees, and I believe our country is worse off for it. … It’s a front where I will continue to lead as chairman,” Cruz said. “Massport apparently believes that the Senate has no jurisdiction in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.”

While Republicans have a majority on the Commerce committee, it's still an open question whether Cruz will get his wish of expanded subpoena powers. Some in Trumpworld reportedly have reservations about his promise to subpoena Big Tech executives who became some of President Donald Trump's biggest donors in the 2024 cycle.

READ MORE: 'Single greatest threat': Ted Cruz defiant after Trump attempts to curb his subpoena power

Click here to read Politico's report in full.

'Single greatest threat': Ted Cruz defiant after Trump attempts to curb his subpoena power

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) is now in a standoff with President Donald Trump, and it could be due to pressure from Trump's new friends in the tech sector.

Punchbowl News recently reported that Trump is working behind the scenes to prevent Cruz — who is now the chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation — from having expanded subpoena powers. Cruz is seeking to have the ability to unilaterally issue subpoenas as chairman, rather than to have to rely on consent from the committee's ranking member, Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) or a full committee vote.

The committee was scheduled to vote on the proposal during a markup session this week, though that meeting was delayed due to attendance issues, as Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) was sick. But now the White House is reportedly urging Republicans to vote against giving Cruz unilateral subpoena powers, which it believes he will use to bring tech executives before the committee who helped Trump win the 2024 election.

READ MORE: 'Musk lackeys' have seized control of key federal office: report

According to Punchbowl reporter Andrew Desiderio, one unnamed Commerce Committee aide pointed out that the Trump White House was notably silent when Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) — who chairs the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs — sought similar powers. And Desiderio noted that Cruz "wants to go after Big Tech in his new role as Commerce chair" while "Trump has embraced tech CEOs."

"I believe Big Tech censorship poses the single greatest threat to free speech in this country, and the committee will use every available tool to engage in that oversight," Cruz told Punchbowl.

Spectrum News reported Wednesday that Cruz acknowledged that many tech CEOs, including Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos were all at the inauguration, and that Trump has warmed to the tech sector.

“As chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, my approach is going to be Ronald Reagan’s old approach of trust, but verify. I’m going to hold them to account. We’re going to fight to defend Americans’ free speech rights,” the Texas Republican said. “I will welcome them doing the right thing. I will welcome them defending free speech. That’s what they need to do.”

READ MORE: 'Perfect bribery vehicle': Creator of major cryptocurrency rips Trump's 'meme coin'

Click here to read Punchbowl's full report (subscription required).

These 7 down-ballot races could determine control of Congress

All eyes are on the presidential election 10 days from now. But how effective either candidate will be will depend on whether they have the majorities in Congress necessary to pass their policies into law.

Both chambers of Congress are almost evenly divided, and a handful of results in favor of one party or another could give Democrats or Republicans a critical edge. NBC News recently identified several down-ballot races for both the House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate that could prove decisive in determining which party controls either chamber of Congress.

1. Texas' Senate race

READ MORE: Ted Cruz dodges key issue that's become major 'political liability' for GOP

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) is currently battling for his political life against Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas), who is raising large sums and polling within the margin of error according to FiveThirtyEight's aggregated polling data. Moreover, Texas has added roughly 2.5 million new voters to its rolls since 2018, when Cruz barely defeated then-Rep. Beto O'Rourke (D-Texas) by less than three percentage points statewide. Allred has seized on Texas' draconian abortion ban as a central campaign theme, pointing out that Cruz has voted multiple times to ban abortion — even without exceptions for rape and incest.

2. Nebraska's Senate race

One surprisingly close race is in the Cornhusker State, where Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Nebraska) is in a tight reelection contest against union organizer Dan Osborn, who is running as an independent rather than as a Democrat. Polls are neck-and-neck, showing either Osborn or Fischer ahead depending on which candidate sponsored the poll.

Republicans currently only need to flip two seats to win back the Senate majority. One of those flips is almost certainly to come from West Virginia, where the deep-red state's open Senate seat will likely go to Republican Governor Jim Justice. the other flip could come from red states like Montana and Ohio, where Democratic incumbents are running for reelection. But if Fischer loses, the GOP taking back control of the Senate could become much less likely.

READ MORE: 'They're terrified': TX Republicans fear Dem surge with 2.5M new voters added since 2018

3. Maryland's Senate race

Even though Maryland is considered a safe blue state, its open Senate seat is getting national attention due to Democrat Angela Alsobrooks facing off with popular two-term Republican governor Larry Hogan. The former governor has attempted to set himself apart from the rest of the GOP by being a vocal critic of former President Donald Trump. But the race is still considered to be less competitive than Texas and Nebraska, with Alsobrooks regularly posting double-digit leads over Hogan. Additionally, a recent report found that Hogan directed millions of dollars in state funds to his real estate clients while he was in office.

4. Florida's Senate race

In the Sunshine State, former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (D-Florida) has mounted a surprisingly competitive challenge to Sen. Rick Scott (R-Florida). FiveThirtyEight shows Scott leading Mucarsel-Powell by anywhere from two to eight percentage points in polls, and Florida has roughly one million more registered Republicans than Democrats. Still, the race is noteworthy given that Floridians are also voting on whether to enshrine abortion rights in their state constitution in November. Abortion-related ballot measures are undefeated in favor of preserving reproductive rights ever since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022 — even in deep-red states like Kansas, Kentucky and Montana.

READ MORE: 'Just thirsty for a change': This deep-red state is poised to oust its two-term GOP senator

5. Pennsylvania's 10th Congressional District race

Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pennsylvania), who is the former chairman of the far-right House Freedom Caucus, could be ousted next month given the latest polls. According to FiveThirtyEight, former TV news anchor Janelle Stelson is pulling ahead in the latest polls of 10th district voters. NBC News reported that the Cook Political Report has recently re-designated the district from "lean Republican" to "toss-up" amid Stelson's October momentum.

6. Virginia's 2nd Congressional District race

The House majority could also flip depending on how Rep. Jen Kiggans (R-Virginia) fares in her battle for a second term. Her Democratic opponent, Missy Cotter Smasal, is polling within the margin of error. But another reason to keep an eye on the Old Dominion State is that it will be among the first states to announce winners on November 5, and Kiggans' race could be a bellwether to predict how Republicans overall will fare in the election.

READ MORE: 'Serious conflict of interest': GOP Senate candidate funneled millions to his firm as governor

7. Wisconsin's 3rd Congressional District race

Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wisconsin), who is running for a second term, represents a rural district in the Badger State. Polls show that he's in a virtual tie with Democrat Rebecca Cooke, who is running as a moderate. Van Orden has attracted negative attention to himself for swearing at teenaged Senate pages and for reportedly holding drunken parties in his House office. Turnout in the district could be relatively higher than normal given Wisconsin's importance as one of the three critically important Blue Wall states, along with Michigan and Pennsylvania.

Currently, House Speaker Mike Johnson can only afford two defections from his conference in order to pass legislation through the House. His already tenuous majority has steadily weakened with multiple Republican incumbents — including those from safe Republican districts — announcing their retirements in 2024. Democrats could take back the majority by flipping five seats.

Click here to read NBC's report in its entirety.

READ MORE: Why this GOP congressman 'just might' lose his seat: report

Here’s 'the great irony' of Ted Cruz’s reelection bid: report

Longtime US Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) is struggling to stay ahead of his opponent, former NFL player and Democratic Senate candidate, Colin Allred. A new Emerson College Polling/The Hill survey showed that the Texas lawmaker is ahead of Allred now by just one point.

Cruz's campaign slogan "Keep Texas, Texas," reflects the GOP senator's priority of "securing the Texas-Mexico border," according to Austin, Texas' KVUE News. "Everyone that wants to turn Texas into California, look at this room and realize you cannot have the great state of Texas!" Cruz when he kicked off a campaign tour in August.

In a Wednesday, October 23 Mother Jones article, national correspondent Tim Murphy explains the "irony" of Cruz's slogan.

READ MORE: Bad news for Cruz as poll finds him in 'virtual dead heat' with Dem opponent: report

Noting that "at the end of every event on Ted Cruz’s 53-stop campaign swing through Texas, the state’s junior senator invites supporters to line up and sign his bus," Murphy emphasizes, "one simple message written in gold marker on the door captured the essence of his path to victory: 'CA Refugee 4 Ted!!'"

The Mother Jones correspondent submits, "This is the great irony of the embattled Republican’s reelection bid: For a party that complains about Democrats 'importing' voters from across the border, it is Texas Republicans who are relying on migration to remain in power. The people he is seeking to protect Texas from, according to the data, are Texas-born residents (who backed his 2018 opponent, Beto O’Rourke)."

Furthermore, Murphy writes, "The people he is hoping will save him are, in no small part, transplants. The result is that the politics that Cruz pitches on the campaign trail is less about addressing the lived reality of Texas—a high-tax and low-services state with poor public health outcomes and a fragile power grid—than about preserving the image it projects to the world. It is a contest, in a sense, between Texas and Texas™."

READ MORE: The 'particularly nasty' tactic Trump is using to fish for votes: expert

Murphy's full article is available at this link. KVUE's report is here.

How a career-ending injury as an NFL linebacker paved the way for Colin Allred’s Senate bid


"How a career-ending injury as an NFL linebacker paved the way for Colin Allred’s underdog Senate bid" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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'They’re terrified': TX Republicans fear Dem surge with 2.5M new voters added since 2018

Texas is typically viewed as one of the safest states in the country for Republicans. But new voter data shows that Democrats may make the Lone Star State more competitive in 2024 than it's been in decades.

According to the San Antonio Express-News, Texas has seen a surge of both new residents and new voters since 2018, with the state adding more than 2.5 million new registered voters to its rolls in the past six years. The last time that Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) was up for reelection six years ago, he narrowly defeated then-Rep. Beto O'Rourke (D-Texas) by just roughly 215,000 votes statewide.

New voters don't necessarily mean more favorable territory for Democrats. Republicans prevailed in both the 2020 presidential and 2022 gubernatorial elections, for example. But the Express-News reported that many of the new voters added have been in some of Texas' bluest areas, including the I-35 corridor from Laredo to the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area, the Houston metro area and in Austin and the surrounding counties.

READ MORE: Republicans admit Texas is 'too close for comfort' as Ted Cruz's Senate race narrows

In Harris County alone (which houses Houston), more than 670,000 new voters have been added to the rolls. Harris County went from being one of the reddest metropolitan areas in the United States to eventually voting for Barack Obama by just a few thousand ballots in 2008. However, in 2020, President Joe Biden carried the county with 56% of the vote, earning 217,000 more votes than former President Donald Trump.

"They’re terrified," Harris County commissioner Rodney Ellis, who is a Democrat, said of Republicans in an interview with the Express-News.

Ellis pointed out that in response to the growing number of Democrats registering to vote in Harris County — where 16% of Texas' population lives — Texas' Republican-dominated legislature has taken several steps to weaken their opponents' influence in the Democratic stronghold. In 2021, this meant gerrymandering Harris County's three congressional districts in order to protect Republican members of the House of Representatives from losing their reelection bids.

Texas Republicans have also curbed Harris County's efforts to make voting easier and more accessible, ranging from decreasing the number of ballot drop boxes to just one per county in 2020 to restricting drive-by and all-night voting. The Lone Star State's largest county has also been subjected to numerous lawsuits from Republicans over how it conducted its 2022 election.

READ MORE: Ted Cruz dodges key issue that's become major 'political liability' for GOP

"They keep coming after us because we represent the future,” Ellis said. “They know as Harris County goes, eventually so will Texas.”

Current polls have Cruz and Allred effectively tied in the 2024 U.S. Senate race, with FiveThirtyEight's aggregated polling showing both candidates largely within the margin of error. Travis County, Texas Republican Party chairman Matt Mackowiak recently said in a memo that Texas was "too close for comfort" and that his party should treat Texas like a battleground state.

"We are in a competitive state and we are not going to win just sitting on our laurels," Texas Republican strategist Dave Carney, who has advised the campaigns of both Governors Greg Abbott and Rick Perry, told the Express-News.

Click here to read the Express-News' full report.

READ MORE: 'Ted Cruz isn't fooling anyone': Texas senator slammed over outreach to Democrats

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