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Comer: Hunter Biden Revelations ‘Just the Beginning’

March 20, 2023 by www.breitbart.com Leave a Comment

During an appearance on Fox News Channel on Sunday, House Oversight Committee chairman Rep. James Comer (R-KY) said recent findings by the House Republican investigation into the Biden family’s business dealings were “just the beginning.”

“There was something on the laptop that was also informative, where Hunter Biden is talking to a colleague, somebody who was representing the China partnership, right?” FNC host Maria Bartiromo asked.

“Yes, there was a message that Hunter was very frustrated with one of these business partners in China, that he had done every blanking thing they had ever asked of him,” Comer replied. “And, of course, this would have been when Joe Biden was vice president. And he reminded them that they had never done anything in return for him. And then, a few weeks later, this $3 million wire appears in the Robinson Walker account. And the very next day, they distributed money to Hunter Biden, and then at least two other family members and possibly three family members.”

“So there’s evidence in the laptop that shows that Hunter Biden was communicating with them and had had interactions and done things for them while his father was vice president. So this is very concerning. Again, the White House hasn’t been truthful about this from day one. I don’t think the White House ever dreamed we would get bank records. I have got bad news for the White House. This is just the beginning. We’re going to get a lot more bank records, and they’re going to have to continue to backpedal and come up with some type of reason why the Biden family has received millions and millions of dollars from our adversaries.”

Follow Jeff Poor on Twitter @jeff_poor

Filed Under: Clips Fox News Channel, James Comer, Maria Bartiromo, Clips, investigations hunter biden, whose investigating hunter biden, who's investigating hunter biden, hunter biden arrested, hunter biden receives $3.5 million, paintings hunter biden, hunter biden received $3.5 million, hunter biden grandchild, catherine herridge hunter biden, newsnation hunter biden

Why Joe Biden’s Honeymoon With Progressives Is Coming to an End

March 20, 2023 by nymag.com Leave a Comment

One of the most historically unusual aspects of the Biden administration has been the harmonious relations between the president and progressive activists. Historically , progressives generally spend most of their time complaining about Democratic presidents, both because they are temperamentally prone to negativity and because they believe in the tactical value of holding presidents’ feet to the fire. President Biden has enjoyed unusually warm support from the left. But that may be coming to an end.

Reporters have detected a pattern in three of the administration’s recent moves. Biden is declining to block a bill in Congress overriding a liberalization of the D.C. criminal code, angering both advocates of D.C. sovereignty and anti-police activists. He approved a plan to allow ConocoPhillips to drill oil in Alaska. And he is signaling an intent to reinstate family detention along the southern border in order to deter migrants.

Another perhaps even more significant sign comes from Biden’s budget proposal, which lacks a health-care public option and lower eligibility for Medicare. Of course, with a Republican House, Biden’s budget is merely a messaging vehicle, but the absence of these items signals a retreat in even his idealized ambitions.

It’s possible these assorted facts have occurred due to a series of independent events, with no connection to each other. But what I think is happening is part of a broader pattern that we will recognize as an ideological turning point of sorts.

Beginning in the second term of the Obama administration, the progressive movement — which barely existed in unified form before Barack Obama took office — gained coherence and influence within the party. Its overriding political strategy was that Democrats could and should adopt more forcefully progressive ideas, and that doing so would have no political cost. Indeed, many progressives believed these positions would help the party by mobilizing turnout among non-white voters.

Obama’s reelection created a buoyant belief among progressives (which I then shared) that a new majority coalition of minorities and college-educated whites had finally emerged. In 2016, Hillary Clinton ran on a platform that was, both in rhetoric and in substance, considerably to the left of what President Obama had run on four years earlier. That fact was largely obscured both during and after the election, in part because her main challenger had run even farther left.

And so the party continued moving left during the Trump era. Even though the 2018 midterm elections saw the party’s House caucus move right — because its new members were largely moderates from battleground districts — both the mainstream media and the conservative media decided, for different reasons, to focus on the small number of left-wing Democrats who had won in deep-blue districts. Figures like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who briefly occupied an outsize role in political coverage, were presumed to embody the party’s future.

That assumption drove media coverage of the Democratic presidential primary. Reporters and candidates alike treated attention and praise from progressive activists as a key metric of success. Analysts praised the “policy arms race” in which Democrats kept racing to outflank each other with bigger and bolder plans.

In reality, the party’s voters had not moved as far left as either the press or most of the candidates assumed. This disconnect led to dynamics like Elizabeth Warren scooping up media coverage and endorsements from progressive activists without gaining any headway among the voters those activists purported to represent.

Joe Biden won the primary in large part because he had opted out of the race to the left. And yet the assumption of progressive ascendancy remained so deeply ingrained that most Democrats assumed he had won despite, rather than because of, his moderation. After winning the nomination, Biden confounded the normal practice of moving to the center and instead adopted a “unity platform” in conjunction with the candidates he defeated, taking positions to the left of those he had campaigned and won on.

This was the pre-condition for the alliance between Biden and the progressive movement. Both believed Biden was putting himself in position to enact historic change on the scale of the New Deal . And polls, which showed him poised to win by close to double digits, indicated Biden stood to benefit from and exploit his bold platform.

The basic assumption survived Biden’s surprisingly narrow victory. Yes, Democrats had fared worse than they expected, but Biden did not abandon the platform he had run on. He still confronted a deep economic crisis and pressed his domestic reforms as far as he could, until the party’s fiscally conservative wing forced him to settle for a rump version of Build Back Better.

The alliance between Biden and the progressives still held firm during this period of retrenchment. Biden was pushing to the left on economic policy and making clear the limits to his ambitions lay elsewhere (mostly figures like Joe Biden and Kyrsten Sinema). Progressives believed Biden was an effective messenger for their movement because he was old, white, male, and nonthreatening — and that his persona freed them from having to make substantive policy concessions.

The mutual assumption that Biden would support the progressive policy agenda, and that progressives would in turn withhold criticism from him, appears to be coming apart. The dissolution of this alliance, if it is indeed happening, is in its early stages. Possibly this will come to be seen as just a brief period of turbulence in the middle of a smooth ride.

The reason I believe recent events portend a change is that a series of underlying conditions that permitted the alliance between progressives and Biden is changing. Here are the four I have in mind.

Personnel . Biden’s departed chief of staff, Ron Klain, attended fastidiously to progressive groups, making them not only feel valued but possess real influence. His successor, Jeffrey Zients, keeps much more distant relations with the professional left, which greeted his elevation by calling him a “ corporate stooge .”

Progressives have treated the transition from Klain to Zients as the main cause of Biden’s moderate turn. And while it probably had a role, I believe underlying conditions played a more important role — it’s less that Biden is moving to the center because he replaced Klain with Zients, than he replaced Klain with Zients because he had to move to the center.

Political conditions . The 2022 midterm elections gave more support to the value of winning the political center than it did to the strategy of base mobilization. The Democrats who overperformed most dramatically tended to be ones like Elissa Slotkin and Abigail Spanberger, who emphasized messages of bipartisanship and distanced themselves from their party’s left wing. Even Democrats who had somewhat more congenial ties with the left, like John Fetterman and Raphael Warnock, made cultural appeals to the center and renounced unpopular progressive ideas like defunding the police.

The winning formula involved persuading small numbers of cross-pressured voters, rather than mobilizing turnout among the base. Indeed, in Georgia, a state that progressives had once held up as a laboratory of base-driven victory, Democrats prevailed by flipping Republican voters, not by winning the turnout war.

More broadly, the political landscape during Biden’s first two years has been dominated by the concerns of voters over crime and gasoline prices. Attending to those concerns has forced Democrats to take positions at odds with the goals of their own base.

Policy needs . The deepest substantive break between Biden and progressives is likely to center on climate policy. In part, this is because the biggest area of overlap between Biden’s goals and those of the left — increasing subsidies for green energy — has been accomplished. With that off the table, what remains to be settled are matters that divide the administration from the progressive movement.

One of those is gasoline prices. This is a change that began under Klain, who recognized the outsize role voters place on the cost of filling up their tanks. The progressive climate agenda of keeping fossil fuels in the ground is a plan that requires putting upward pressure on gasoline prices — that is the mechanism through which blocking fossil-fuel infrastructure advances the goal of decarbonization. Biden initially supported that strategy, but he has come around to believing that he can’t keep gas prices low and still block drilling.

Biden still supports a rapid transition to green energy, even as he tries to keep energy prices low in the short term. But that transition plan, too, puts him at odds with the left. Centrist and liberal analysts have formed a new consensus that the biggest impediment to the green-energy transition is not a lack of funding, as many previously believed, but the regulatory barriers to building new infrastructure.

A great many Democrats now believe the only way to actually deploy the green- energy funds that Biden wrung out of Congress is to overhaul the permitting process — even if that means allowing fossil-fuel infrastructure to be built as well. But the climate movement remains largely attached to a keep-it-in-the-ground strategy that directly opposes any permitting reforms. Indeed, climate-justice activists want to give local groups even more tools to block new infrastructure development .

Progressives joined with conservatives to block permitting reform in the last Congress. (Progressives want to make permitting even harder; conservatives believed they would have more leverage after the elections.) Now, Biden may have the chance to strike a deal with Republicans to reform the permitting process. Doing so will open a breach with the movement.

Economic conditions . A key foundation to Biden’s expansive domestic agenda was a long period of low inflation and interest rates and economic slack. Deficit hawks had lost the argument within the party because there was no cost to red ink. The government could simply borrow as much money as it wanted, and investors would lend it to them for very little cost.

Meanwhile, the great recession had left a legacy of chronically slack labor markets and stagnant wages. The economy had just begun to approach full employment when the pandemic struck in 2020. The overriding economic imperative was to get back to full employment as fast as possible, even if it meant running high deficits.

The stubborn return of inflation has flipped this dynamic. Whereas before almost any new spending could be seen as a good thing — more demand would coax more people back into the workforce and lift their pay — those effects are now harmful. Democrats are suddenly faced with an imperative to cool off economic demand rather than fuel it. That means they now need to consider trade-offs that, until recently, they could ignore.

Biden’s budget is one indication of this fiscal retreat. He is still proposing new taxes on the wealthy, as before. But now he is framing those levies as a way to maintain existing Medicare benefits, rather than finding a stream to create new benefits. This still gives him a politically advantageous message, but he has retreated to a less ambitious posture.

In the short run, relations between Biden and the progressives remain placid. His only primary opponent, Marianne Williamson, is a kook no one takes seriously. Progressive reservations remain subdued. But if I am right about this, the long honeymoon between Biden and the progressive movement has already ended, and days of angry infighting lay ahead.

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Biden Has a Peloton Bike. That Raises Issues at the White House.

January 19, 2021 by www.nytimes.com Leave a Comment

WASHINGTON — President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. moves into the White House on Wednesday facing many weighty issues: a global pandemic. A crushing recession. Racial injustice. Right-wing extremism.

But Mr. Biden’s personal weight-control and exercise regimen will face a different kind of burning question: Can he bring his Peloton bike with him?

The answer, cybersecurity experts say, is yes. Sort of. But more on that later.

A Peloton , for the uninitiated, is part indoor stationary bike, part social media network. The bikes are expensive — upward of $2,500 apiece — and have tablets attached, enabling riders to livestream or take on-demand classes and communicate with one another. Each rider has a “leader board name,” a unique identifier posted on the screen alongside “output,” a measure of how hard the rider is working.

When Mr. Biden was cloistered during the coronavirus surge this spring, The New York Times reported that he began each day “with a workout in an upstairs gym that contains a Peloton bike, weights and a treadmill.” The Biden team did not respond to requests for comment, but a person close to the president-elect said that Mr. Biden and his wife, Jill Biden , engage in regular morning negotiations over who gets to ride first.

But the Peloton tablets have built-in cameras and microphones that allow users to see and hear one another if they choose, and for Mr. Biden, therein lies the rub. The last thing the C.I.A. wants is the Russians and the Chinese peering or listening into the White House gymnasium. Last week, Popular Mechanics warned about the security risk under the headline “Why Joe Biden Can’t Bring His Peloton to the White House.”

The Biden Presidency

  • A Test for the President: Key industries — including some that the White House is backing through other policies — are lobbying to water down new rules on chemicals that pose risks to humans.
  • St. Patrick’s Day: President Biden welcomed Ireland’s prime minister for the traditional holiday celebrations and confirmed that he would visit the country next month to mark the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement.
  • Presidential Immunity: The president pledged on the campaign trail that he would direct the Justice Department to reconsider its view that sitting presidents cannot be indicted. He never followed through .
  • Recapturing a Centrist Identity: As he unveiled his latest budget proposal , Biden made deficit reduction one of his centerpiece promises. The move is part of a wider shift that sees the president speaking more to the concerns of the political middle .

The article prompted an explosion of chatter in Peloton world, but really, cybersecurity experts say, if Mr. Biden wants his bike, he can surely have it, though it might bear little resemblance to the off-the-assembly-line version after the Secret Service and the National Security Agency are finished with it. (There have been news reports that Michelle Obama has a modified Peloton, but her spokeswoman would not confirm them.)

Mr. Biden would not be the first occupant of the White House whose desire for electronics clashed with the cybersecurity needs of being president. President Trump flouted White House security protocols by calling old friends on his iPhone. President Barack Obama insisted on bringing his BlackBerry (remember BlackBerrys?) to the White House, and later wanted to use an iPad , to much opprobrium at the time. Security experts found a way to make it happen.

“Presidential security is always about balancing presidential needs and desires and the relative security risk of any single thing,” said Garrett Graff, the director of the cybersecurity initiative at the Aspen Institute, a research organization. “The threat is real, but it is presumably a manageable risk given enough thought and preparation.”

When Mr. Obama insisted on his iPad, it set a trend.

“All of a sudden I would go into Roosevelt Room meetings and people were taking notes on their iPads,” said Jamie Smith, who was Mr. Obama’s deputy press secretary from 2011 to 2014 and previously ran communications for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. “Slowly but surely, they were getting clearance.”

Peloton was popular before the pandemic with a wealthy subset of home exercisers, but with the quarantine, it has become something of a phenomenon in a certain socioeconomic bracket. There are Peloton message boards (“Joe Biden has a Peloton,” Peloton Forum reported this week ), and the company’s celebrity instructors have huge followings on Facebook and Instagram.


How Times reporters cover politics. We rely on our journalists to be independent observers. So while Times staff members may vote, they are not allowed to endorse or campaign for candidates or political causes. This includes participating in marches or rallies in support of a movement or giving money to, or raising money for, any political candidate or election cause.

Learn more about our process.

But Peloton does not exactly comport with Mr. Biden’s “regular guy from Scranton” political persona. The company was widely mocked before the pandemic for an advertisement in which an already trim young woman went into a panic about not fulfilling her husband’s body expectations after he gave her a Peloton for Christmas. Its ads featuring stationary bikes in lavish settings are the butt of class-conscious social media jokes .

The company, which did not respond to a request for comment, has also been accused of catering too much to white people. In an opinion piece for NBC News in May, the writer David Kaufman , who is Black, said Peloton needs “a racial rethink,” adding, “My most segregated hours feel like the hours I spend each week on my Peloton.”

Peloton lovers are undeterred and convinced that Mr. Biden would never part with his bike.

“Nobody who’s committed to Peloton would move and not take their Peloton with them,” said Larry Appel, a retired executive in Greensboro, N.C.

To make the bike White House friendly, the camera and the microphone in the tablet would have to be removed, said Richard H. Ledgett Jr., a former deputy director of the National Security Agency. He would advise Mr. Biden to pick a nondescript user name and change it every month, and keep the bike far from any place where there might be sensitive conversations.

“If he’s the kind of guy who pedals and talks to people, that could be problematic,” said Mr. Ledgett, who confesses to being “a Peloton user myself.”

Being president is stressful, and most in recent years have had exercise routines. Bill Clinton jogged. George W. Bush ran until his knees gave out , and then turned to other forms of exercise, including mountain-biking at his ranch in Crawford, Texas. Mr. Obama played basketball. Mr. Trump sticks to golf.

For Mr. Biden, who at 78 will be the oldest person to be sworn in as president, riding a Peloton makes good political sense, even if it clashes with Working Class Joe. Mr. Trump spent much of last year’s campaign trying to persuade Americans that Mr. Biden is feeble — an argument Mr. Biden dispensed with when a Fox News clip of him riding his bike through the streets of Delaware went viral.

“I wasn’t really thinking of him as an energetic young guy, but the fact that he rides his Peloton for exercise means to me that he has more energy than I thought he did,” said Jennifer Loukissas, a federal employee who rides her Peloton at home in Kensington, Md.

Ms. Loukissas said she had spent some time trying to discern Mr. Biden’s Peloton leader board name. “I looked up all of the Joe Scrantons I could think of,” she said, in a reference to Mr. Biden’s birthplace. “None of them seemed to match up.”

Others, like Dr. Steven Braverman, who runs the Department of Veterans Affairs health care system in greater Los Angeles, entertain what they know will be unfulfilled fantasies about hopping on the bike one day and stumbling on the leader of the free world.

“It would be kind of cool,” he said, “to give the president a high five on the leader board.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized Shelter-in-Place (Lifestyle);Pandemic Life, Biking, US Politics, Exercise;Fitness, Cyberwarfare, Spying and Intelligence Agencies, Peloton, Joe Biden, White House, ..., blackmarket white house, black white house market, The White House in Washington, White House Historical Association, inside the white house, White House in Washington, The US White House, White House in Washington DC, White House Map Room, White House White House

Biden and Trump ‘must take mental competency test’ before 2024 election

March 20, 2023 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

Trump and Biden

Trump and Biden have been urged to take mental complacency tests (Image: Getty )

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Joe Biden and his predecessor Donald Trump should be made to take a mental complacency test due to their old age, according to republican presidential candidate Nikki R. Haley. The former governor of South Carolina said the mental capacity of all candidates in the presidential race over the age of 75 should be vetted.

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After dishing out the insults to her older competitors, the 51-year-old said she would be “fine” with the tests being extended to political candidates aged 50 and over.

Ms Haley told supporters in her home state over the weekend: “But when you’re talking about leaders who are deciding on national security, when you’re talking about leaders that are deciding our economy and the futures of our children, you need them to be at the top of our game.

“ Joe Biden got upset and said I was being ridiculous when I said that.

“I’m not being disrespectful when I said that. I don’t care if you do mental competency tests for everybody over 50.”

Nikki Haley

Nikki Haley is a republican presidential candidate (Image: Getty )

The current US President is already 80 years old, and with plans to contend for a second term, many have raised questions over whether Biden will still be up for the job.

But Haley also appeared to take a dig at Trump, who is now 76. He was also her boss when she served as a US ambassador under his leadership.

However, her attack on Trump was more subtle compared to the full-blown insults she threw at Biden.

She continued: “You can’t tell me Joe Biden was the same he was two years ago, he’s not.

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Jill Biden

Jill Biden said Ms Haley’s suggestion was ‘ridiculous’ (Image: Getty )

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“Look at everybody else in DC. They’re all old.”

Biden is already the oldest-ever president, and his desire to stand for a second term could put off voters.

If he won the presidential elections in 2024, he would be 86 by the time he left office.

The President previously told ABC News: “My intention is… has been from the beginning, to run.”

But even the man himself has acknowledged that his age raises questions.

He added: “It’s legitimate for people to raise issues about my age. It’s totally legitimate to do that.

“The only thing I can say is ‘watch me’.”

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US Presidents

Biden is the oldest US president in history (Image: Express)

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First lady Jill Biden told CNN it was “ridiculous” for Haley to suggest that older candidates need to take a complacency test.

When asked whether her husband would consider taking one, the First lady responded: ”We would never even discuss something like that.”

Instead, Mrs Biden pointed to his recent travel schedule to suggest he still has stamina as she pushed back on concerns over her husband’s age.

She said: “How many 30-year-olds could travel to Poland, get on the train? Go nine more hours, go to Ukraine , meet with President (Volodymyr) Zelensky?

“So, look at the man. Look what he’s doing. Look what he continues to do each and every day.”

Follow our social media accounts here on facebook.com/ExpressUSNews and @expressusnews

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Joe Biden, Joe Biden Donald Trump, Joe Biden US elections, US, biden trump, joe biden trump, competency test, competency test questions, competency test online, competency test meaning, competency test epso, coaguchek xs competency test, biden trump poll, biden trump mueller

Scalise rails against Biden’s ‘war on American energy’ with new bill aimed at lowering costs for families

March 20, 2023 by www.foxnews.com Leave a Comment

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Kathleen Sgamma sounds alarm on green energy policies as power plants retire: 'Not a lot of reality' in this Video

Kathleen Sgamma sounds alarm on green energy policies as power plants retire: ‘Not a lot of reality’ in this

Western Energy Alliance President Kathleen Sgamma joins ‘Fox & Friends First’ to discuss power plants retiring at an alarming rate without adequate replacements.

FIRST ON FOX: House Majority Leader Steve Scalise’s new energy bill aims to help families struggling under President Biden’s “anti-American energy agenda.”

The Louisiana Republican caught up with Fox News Digital in a phone interview about his new bill, the Lower Energy Costs Act, that he introduced with his House GOP colleagues last week.

The Lower Energy Costs Act is denoted as H.R. 1 in the House, making it the top-line agenda item for Republicans this Congress.

SCALISE SAYS GOP WORKING ON RESOLUTION TO CONDEMN BIDEN’S HANDLING OF CHINA’S SURVEILLANCE FLIGHT

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise’s new energy bill aims to help families struggling under President Biden’s anti-American energy agenda."

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise’s new energy bill aims to help families struggling under President Biden’s anti-American energy agenda.” (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Scalise said the bill is “focused on making more energy in America so we don’t have to be dependent on foreign countries for our oil and natural gas.”

“And especially to lower costs for families who are struggling under the weight of President Biden’s radical, anti-American energy agenda,” Scalise continued.

Amid his party’s razor-thin majority in the House, the lower chamber majority leader told Fox News Digital that his fellow “Republican members have been very vocal for years now that we need to produce more energy here in America.”

“When Joe Biden became president, he declared war on American energy,” Scalise said. “Day one, killing the Keystone Pipeline, making it very difficult to get permits, canceling lease sales, and all of that drove up the cost of energy dramatically.”

Scalise said American “families are paying 40% more at the pump since the day Joe Biden took office” and are “paying 20 or 30% more for household electricity costs.”

“So our members have been very focused on moving a good energy package that will help us produce more energy in America and lower costs for families. So the Lower Energy Costs Act has strong support, not only amongst House Republicans, but across the country, especially by those low and middle-income families who are paying the most because they’re the ones that are hit the hardest when Joe Biden attacks American energy.”

The House majority leader told Fox News Digital the bill will lower costs by “streamlining the permit process” and creating a “one-stop shop for energy infrastructure like pipelines, which are very difficult to get approved right now, so that you can build more of the pipelines to move energy throughout America.”

"And so, this is the most perplexing thing that angers people as they see President Biden when he went to [global pariah and Russian President Vladimir] Putin and begged Putin for more Russian oil," Scalise said.

“And so, this is the most perplexing thing that angers people as they see President Biden when he went to [global pariah and Russian President Vladimir] Putin and begged Putin for more Russian oil,” Scalise said. (Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

Scalise said that building more pipelines will cut down on the U.S.’ reliance on foreign tanker transportation for oil and lower costs for American families.

“And so, this is the most perplexing thing that angers people as they see President Biden when he went to [global pariah and Russian President Vladimir] Putin and begged Putin for more Russian oil,” Scalise said.

“And then he flew Air Force One to Saudi Arabia to beg them to produce more oil, and they all said no because they want a higher price because they’re making billions of dollars off of selling their energy to America when we have more energy here in America to be energy independent.”

Scalise noted that America produces “cleaner” energy “at a much lower cost than anybody else in the world” and that domestic energy production “creates good jobs here in America.”

“So, from every standpoint, it makes all the sense in the world to make more energy in America, but the radical left has gotten ahold of Joe Biden’s energy agenda and they won’t let go,” Scalise warned.

The House GOP leader said there “are Senate Democrats who expressed interest in some parts of this bill” and that the legislation “represents about 20 bills that have come out of the Natural Resources Committee,” as well as the House Energy and Commerce and Transportation Committees.

“So a lot of work has gone into this by a lot of members, and, ultimately, there’s bipartisan national support for this bill,” he said. “The question is going to be: where we get Democrats in Congress to vote for it and stand with their constituents who are hurting under the weight of these high energy costs.”

“Or are they going to continue to be beholden to the radical left that has Joe Biden’s ear?” Scalise asked.

The number two House Republican told Fox News Digital that Biden has “been shielded from having to answer” the question on vetoing legislation because former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., “would never bring a bill to the floor that would promote American energy.”

Scalise said that he and his fellow House Republicans “presented a lot of these bills over the last two years” to the Biden administration but “were turned down at every point,” and noted the bill comes as one of the “main planks of the Commitment to America.”

Explosion on pipeline in Leningrad, Russia outside of St. Petersburg.

Explosion on pipeline in Leningrad, Russia outside of St. Petersburg. (Reuters Photo)

“The president’s going to have to pick a side to side with: the radical left, who a lot of them are hypocritical elites who get on their private jets and fly all around the world telling Americans they’ve got to lower their standards of living and pay higher costs for energy.”

“It’s real convenient for a billionaire elitist to tell you to pay more for energy, but for families who are living paycheck to paycheck, this has made their lives a lot more difficult,” Scalise added.

Scalise said there have been “a lot of battles in the courts” over the administration skirting existing land leasing laws that conservatives have “won some of those battles,” but the important thing is “to have good laws on the books that stand up for families and then put pressure on the administration to follow the law and then hold them accountable.”

“We’re going to have hearings on this, as well,” Scalise continued, highlighting Republicans’ letter to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm calling on her to testify in the House “to explain” her “praising China” and saying America “can learn from China on carbon emissions.”

“For God’s sake, China is the largest emitter in the world, and the last thing we should be doing is trying to model our country [off of] what China is doing, because the administration shipped a lot of jobs to China,” Scalise said.

The Louisiana Republican said his bill would “repeal the natural gas tax that Biden put in place last Congress,” creating a “$6 billion benefit to families who are paying more on their household electricity bills.”

Scalise explained that his bill’s “one-stop shop” provision for energy infrastructure will help stop leftist environmental groups from abusing “the laws by gaming the system.”

“They’ll go to one federal agency and they’ll file a bunch of complaints,” Scalise said. “Adn then eventually, after months, those get discarded and then they’ll just turn around and go to another federal agency and file the same complaints.”

“And all they’re doing is trying to kill projects by dragging them out,” he continued. “Kind of a death by a thousand cuts approach just because they’re against American energy.”

The Louisiana Republican said his bill would "repeal the natural gas tax that Biden put in place last Congress," creating a "$6 billion benefit to families who are paying more on their household electricity bills."

The Louisiana Republican said his bill would “repeal the natural gas tax that Biden put in place last Congress,” creating a “$6 billion benefit to families who are paying more on their household electricity bills.” (Screenshot/Twitter)

“By adding a one-stop shop, you still have the same protections in place, but you don’t allow for abuses by allowing multiple agencies to go after and try to kill projects,” Scalise added.

Scalise said the “job of a regulator should be to follow the law and carry out the law, and not to carry out their personal political agenda.”

“And too often we’re seeing these radical leftist groups colluding with far-left bureaucrats to carry out their personal agenda against American energy,” the GOP leader said. “Which, by the way, ironically makes us more dependent on foreign countries who don’t have the strong environmental standards we have.”

“Because some of these people on the far left, they wake up every day wanting to attack and trash America, and they don’t ever acknowledge that America has the highest standards in the world when it comes to protecting our environment,” he continued.

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Scalise said he is a “conservationist” and he knows “that America makes energy cleaner than anybody else in the world” and blasted Biden’s “carbon footprint” for flying Air Force One to Saudi Arabia “just to be told ‘no’” when asked by the president to make more energy.

“I don’t hear the radical left going after him on that,” Scalise added.

Houston Keene is a politics writer for Fox News Digital.  Story tips can be sent to [email protected] and on Twitter: @HoustonKeene

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