Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Democrat reads letter in Congress calling Trump supporters 'ignorant,' 'racist' and 'steeped in religious beliefs' If your a leftist you cans ay anything without fear of rebuttal.

Democrat reads letter in Congress calling Trump supporters 'ignorant,' 'racist' and 'steeped in religious beliefs'

"As my mother used to say, just plain dumb"

Photo By Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call 
Republicans objected after a speech from Democratic Rep. Marcia Fudge (Ohio) which contained insults to President Donald Trump and his supporters.
Fudge introduced the letter from one of her constituents during her speech Tuesday on the floor of Congress.
"A mobster, a con man, a gangster in the White House? I think so," the letter began.
The letter criticized House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for not pushing for an impeachment vote against the president, and then turned its ire to his supporters.
"It is glaringly apparent that many who support the present administration are either racist, steeped in religious beliefs, ignorant, or, as my mother used to say, just plain dumb," Fudge read.
"They have chosen to support a president who has a proven record of being sexually condescending to women," she continued, "will not oppose the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan and other hate organizations, is indecisive, is condescending to anyone who challenge him, and hides behind his twitter account rather than dealing with the real issues in our country and around the world."
Fudge also read the accusation that the president is a "proven liar," and described the Republican party as a "Trump cult."
Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-Ind.) complained that Fudge was out of order in her insults to the president, to which she replied, "And so are you!"
Fudge seized headlines in November for challenging Pelosi's candidacy for the speakership of the U.S. House of Representatives. She later relented and backed Pelosi's election.

Here's the video of Fudge's contentious comments:












Congresswoman Marcia Fudge asks judge for order to protect her from community activist

Congresswoman Marcia Fudge files protection order
CLEVELAND -- U.S. Representative Marcia Fudge (D) Ohio, appeared in a Cuyahoga County courtroom on Wednesday, asking a judge to grant an order, protecting her from a community activist.
Congresswoman Fudge told the court she was leaving a public event in January, when she was confronted by 45-year-old Mary Ann Lorient about her previous support for accused killer Lance Mason.
Mason, a disgraced former judge and Cleveland city administrator, is under arrest for the murder of his former wife, Aisha Fraser, following a history of abuse.
Lorient recorded the confrontation with Fudge on her cell phone and presented it to Judge Shirley Strickland Saffold. Lorient is heard telling Marcia Fudge, “You have blood on your hands; you understand me?  You are a murderer."
The security detail for Congresswoman Fudge maintained that Mary Ann Lorient has shown up at a number of her public events, but Lorient maintained the event in January was the first and only time she met Fudge.
Lorient claims Rep. Fudge knocked her cell phone out of her hand, and the community activist shouted in the courtroom, "You hit me. That's a fact, Congresswoman; that's a fact."
Fudge denied the claim, telling the judge, "She is just fabricating this entire story… if I had hit her, she would have been hurt."
Mary Ann Lorient said she believes Rep. Fudge helped Lance Mason get out of prison early after he was convicted of brutally assaulting his then wife in 2014, and then helped him secure a job with the city of Cleveland.
She contends a letter of support written by Fudge was an abuse of power and set the stage for the murder of Aisha Fraser. "Other people wrote letters but she took it a step further.  She instructed him to write an apology letter; she instructed him and referred to her as a drama queen wife. Who does that?” said Lorient.
During the court hearing, Marcia Fudge responded to Lorient's claim that she had “blood on her hands." "I wrote one letter; an additional 35 people wrote letters on his behalf. Certainly if I could foresee what he was going to do, I may not have, but Lance Mason was my friend. I wrote the letter."
After listening to both sides, Judge Strickland Saffold granted Marcia Fudge's request for the protection order.
The judge told Mary Ann Lorient, "Just being a public official doesn't give anybody the right to come and approach us in our face, to enter in some type of altercation with us, to follow us out, to call us murderers.”
Strickland Saffold also told Lorient she is free to criticize Congresswoman Fudge in any way she chooses, but under the protection order, she is not permitted to come within 500 feet of Fudge.

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