Tag Archives: Congress

Former US Rep. Charles Rangel of New York dies at 94

By DEEPTI HAJELA and CEDAR ATTANASIO

NEW YORK (AP) — Former U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel of New York, an outspoken, gravel-voiced Harlem Democrat who spent nearly five decades on Capitol Hill and was a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus, died Monday at age 94.

His family confirmed the death in a statement provided by City College of New York spokesperson Michelle Stent. He died at a hospital in New York, Stent said.

A veteran of the Korean War, he defeated legendary Harlem politician Adam Clayton Powell in 1970 to start his congressional career. During the next 40-plus years, he became a legend himself — a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus, dean of the New York congressional delegation, and in 2007, the first African American to chair the powerful Ways and Means Committee.

He stepped down from that committee amid an ethics cloud, and the House censured him in 2010. But he was reelected. He went on to serve in Congress until 2017, when he decided not to seek reelection.

Rangel was one of the Gang of Four — African American political figures who wielded great power in New York City and state politics, along with David Dinkins, New York City’s first black mayor; Percy Sutton, who was Manhattan Borough president, and Basil Paterson, a deputy mayor and New York secretary of state.

Few could forget Rangel after hearing him talk. His distinctive gravel-toned voice and wry sense of humor were a memorable mix.

That voice — one of the most liberal in the House — was loudest in opposition to the Iraq War, which he branded a “death tax” on poor people and minorities. In 2004, he tried to end the war by offering a bill to restart the military service draft. Republicans called his bluff and brought the bill to a vote, and even Rangel voted against it.

A year later, Rangel’s fight over the war became bitterly personal with then-Vice President Dick Cheney.

Rangel said Cheney, who has a history of heart trouble, might be too sick to perform his job.

“I would like to believe he’s sick rather than just mean and evil,” Rangel said. After several such verbal jabs, Cheney hit back, saying Rangel was “losing it.”

The charismatic Harlem lawmaker rarely backed down from a fight after he first entered the House in 1971 as a dragon slayer of sorts, having unseated Powell in the Democratic congressional primary in 1970. The flamboyant elder Powell, a city political icon first elected to the House in 1944, was ill and haunted by scandal at the time.

Rangel became leader of the main tax-writing committee of the House, which has jurisdiction over programs including Social Security and Medicare, after the 2006 midterm elections when Democrats ended 12 years of Republican control of the chamber. But in 2010, a House ethics committee conducted a hearing on 13 counts of alleged financial and fundraising misconduct over issues surrounding financial disclosures and use of congressional resources.

He was convicted of 11 ethics violations. The House found he had failed to pay taxes on a vacation villa, filed misleading financial disclosure forms and improperly solicited donations for a college center from corporations with business before his committee.

The House followed the ethics committee’s recommendation that he be censured, the most serious punishment short of expulsion.

Rangel looked after his constituents, sponsoring empowerment zones with tax credits for businesses moving into economically depressed areas and developers of low income housing.

“I have always been committed to fighting for the little guy,” Rangel said in 2012 when he announced he was running for reelection.

During the Korean War, he had earned a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star. He would always say that he measured his days, even the troubled ones around the ethics scandal, against the time in 1950 when he survived being wounded as other soldiers didn’t make it.

It became the title of his autobiography: “And I Haven’t Had A Bad Day Since.”

A high school dropout, he went to college on the G.I. Bill, getting degrees from New York University and St. John’s University Law School.

Originally Published:

Source link

Exclusive: GOP Strategist Expects Trump to Get More Involved in ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’

Republican strategist Mark Bednar assured Breitbart News Washington Bureau Chief Matt Boyle that Congress’s “big, beautiful” budget bill is still being worked on and not dead in the water as the establishment media has reported.

After the House Budget Committee rejected the GOP bill in a 16-21 vote on Friday, Chairman Jodey Arrington (R-TX) called for a redo session scheduled for Sunday night at 10:00 p.m., with Roll Call naming Reps. Chip Roy (R-TX), Ralph Norman (R-SC), Josh Brecheen (R-OK), and Andrew Clyde (R-GA) as members with “unresolved concerns” about the proposed legislation. 

“I think I saw headlines yesterday saying ‘The Republicans torpedoed their own bill,’ right? Like, this is a process, right? Like, this is what they do,” Boyle said during the latest episode of Breitbart News Saturday. “They go back and forth, they negotiate, they finagle, you know, they get their wiggles out, and then all of a sudden, they vote for it. The way I see it, Mark, we’ve only just begun here, right? Like, walk us through what happens next.”

Bednar concurred, saying he “totally agrees.”

“It’s not necessarily that this thing is dead in the water,” the longtime strategist said. “But also, we’re not just able to tap, tap, tap it in. It’s somewhere in between, where there’s still a lot of work to do.”

He went on to explain that while the budget, championed by President Donald Trump as a “big, beautiful bill,” is not over, “this isn’t arts and crafts time,” and the president will be getting more involved shortly:

You know, all the memes about Debbie Dingell falling asleep have been incredible, but there’s still a lot of work to do. And you know, this isn’t arts and crafts time. This is time to get down to brass tacks and actually get this done. And so what this means with all these holdouts recently, is they voted no in the Budget Committee, even though they already voted yes on the original house budget resolution, which actually there’s more savings and there’s less spending in the bills that have been marked up. So it’s actually an improved product upon what they’ve already supported. And also the fact that, you know, President Trump, he’s going to be the guy to get this across the finish line. So, we’re going to see his involvement probably more in the next coming few hours, days, weeks, to make sure that we can get this done.

LISTEN:

Breitbart News Saturday airs on SiriusXM Patriot 125 from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Eastern.



Source link