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Archive for 2024

LAWLER CAMPAIGN SLAMS MONDAIRE JONES AND DCCC FOR THEIR LIES ABOUT LEGISLATION THAT ACTUALLY GIVES PREGNANT WOMEN MORE OPTIONS

January 19, 2024

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: [email protected]

Pearl River, NY, 1/19/2024 – In response to recent false attacks from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) and Mondaire Jones regarding H.R. 6914, the Pregnant Students’ Rights Act, and H.R. 6918, the Supporting Pregnant and Parenting Women and Families Act, Chris Russell, spokesperson for the Lawler for Congress campaign, issued the following statement:

“It’s clear the cold weather must have frozen the brains of hacks at the DCCC and Mondaire Jones’ campaign,” continued Russell. “The idea that they are now on record stating that a young woman who becomes pregnant at college should be bullied and shamed into having an abortion, and starved of the ability to make an informed decision about her own reproductive health, is sick and twisted stuff.”

“The deeply personal choice these young women are confronted with should be respected, regardless of what that choice is,” concluded Russell.

New York’s 17th Congressional District is just north of New York City and contains all or parts of Rockland, Putnam, Dutchess, and Westchester Counties.

Mondaire Jones Abandoned the Hudson Valley for Personal Gain

January 19, 2024

Opinion | The North Salem Post

I’m writing to express my profound disappointment with former Congressman Mondaire Jones for deciding to run in the Hudson Valley after having abandoned us to run in Brooklyn for another Congressional seat just a couple years ago. Mondaire Jones made it clear when he left us: his personal ambitions come before the needs of the Hudson Valley. His move blatantly disregarded our community, which he had been elected to represent and serve.

The Hudson Valley deserves dedicated representation, not blind political ambition. That’s why I’m so thankful Congressman Lawler is our current representative. Mike understands the needs of our community and is dedicated to serving us here in the Hudson Valley. From fighting for tax relief to keeping our communities safe to returning federal dollars to projects in towns and villages across our community, Congressman Lawler has been hard at work on our behalf.

Our district needs leaders like Congressman Lawler who are committed to their people, not their career trajectory. Mondaire Jones’s self-serving moves are a stark reminder of this reality.

Marcus Sarno

Lawler’s Bipartisan Pragmatism a Welcome Respite From Today’s Politics

January 16, 2024

Opinion – Examiner Media

I am writing to express my gratitude to Congressman Mike Lawler for his commitment to fiscal responsibility and his work to reduce our national debt. His support for the Fiscal Responsibility Act and the recent appropriations agreement between Senate Majority Leader Schumer and House Speaker Mike Johnson is commendable and shows his dedication to the financial future of our country.

The Fiscal Responsibility Act was a landmark piece of legislation that is projected to save taxpayers $2.1 trillion over the next 10 years. This agreement, a result of bipartisan cooperation, is a positive step toward getting our national debt under control while ensuring the government remains open. It’s heartening to see such collaborative efforts in Congress, especially in times of extreme partisan divide.

Congressman Lawler’s continued bipartisan efforts reflect a deep understanding of the challenges we face as a country and a genuine commitment to address them responsibly. His efforts give me confidence that we have a representative who is not only aware of the fiscal cliff at hand but also actively working toward pragmatic solutions.

Congressman Lawler’s bipartisan commitment is a far cry from his likely opponent, Mondaire Jones, who was ranked as the third most progressive member when he served in the House of Representatives.
Voters in the 17th Congressional District should choose to re-elect Lawler, whose steadfast commitment to commonsense progress and fiscal pragmatism far outweigh Mr. Jones’ commitment to radical progressivism and wanton spending.

Ted Lai
Sleepy Hollow

Bowman co-sponsors bill that seeks $14 trillion in slavery reparations for Black Americans

January 16, 2024

Lohud

State-sanctioned slavery existed in what became the United States for 246 years. Ten of the nation’s first 12 presidents enslaved Black people, including one who engaged in slave trading from the Oval Office.

Enslaved people — both in the North and the South — helped build our nation and were a foundation of the 18th and 19th century economies. The Hudson Valley’s Philipse family, with a mansion in Yonkers and a mill up the river at Philipsburg Manor, made a portion of their fortune through the slave trade.

New York’s gradual emancipation in 1799 subjected current slaves to lifelong bondage but granted freedom to those born after 1799 by 1827. National emancipation came in 1865, but freedom for the former slaves did not bring prosperity or the rights enjoyed by other Americans.

U.S. Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-Yonkers, said it’s time for the federal government to finally acknowledge the deep, lasting harms suffered by African Americans. He backs federal legislation that would create a $14 trillion reparations program to aid the descendants of enslaved Black people and people of African descent.

To put the price-tag in perspective, the federal government spent about $7 trillion in 2020, about 28% of the nation’s $25 trillion ecomomy.

There are about 42 million African Americans in the United States, representing 12% of our nation’s population, according to the 2020 census. That means the proposed reparations program could deliver roughly $333,000 per person. Bowman said it could be paid over decades.

“Who says the $14 trillion needs to be paid out in one shot?” said Bowman. “It might be possible for it to be paid out over 5 or 10 or 20 years. You could take that $333,000 and break it up into monthly checks over X amount of time. There are creative ways to do the right thing and do what needs to be done.”

For Bowman, the reparations discussion encompasses a broad look at racial inequities across American society, including housing, mass incarceration, higher education and wealth inequality.

The bill co-sponsored by Bowman, which was introduced in 2023, comes 35 years after a bill to set up a federal commission to study reparations was first introduced. That bill remains pending and was reintroduced again this year as well. 

Bowman’s bill, meanwhile, lacks a Senate sponsor, which means it won’t advance, even if it passes the U.S. House.

A new reckoning with slavery

The call for federal reparations is part of our country’s reckoning with slavery, a reckoning that has found a foothold at historic sites at Philipse Manor Hall in Yonkers and Philipsburgh Manor in Sleepy Hollow.

The house resolution notes that scholars have estimated that the U.S. benefited from 222 million hours of forced labor from 1619 to 1865. That’s equal to $97 trillion in today’s dollars, the bill states.

“There were 246 years of free labor that produced trillions or hundreds of trillions of dollars for the U.S. economy,” said Bowman. “The economy wouldn’t exist in the way it does today if slavery hadn’t built it.”

Bowman was among nine original sponsors of House Resolution 414 in 2023, which, in a gripping narrative, details the history of enslavement in America, and the vestiges of slavery that the sponsors say continue to inflict harm on Black Americans.

The bill calls for policies that would accompany the monetary awards: free college education at the nation’s 107 Historically Black Colleges and Universities, funding for the National Publishers Association and National Association of Black Broadcasters, and restoration of voting rights for persons currently or previously incarcerated.

“I think people incarcerated should be able to vote,” said Bowman. “And I definitely think that when they come out, they should automatically be enfranchised.”

Reparations on the table

The bill is the latest attempt by Black representatives to promote reparations. Bowman is also a current co-sponsor of House Resolution 40, first introduced in 1989, which would set up a commission to study reparations.

While the federal bill to create a commission has yet to pass, the states of New York and California have authorized such studies, with New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signing a bill to launch a panel in December.

In 2023, the city of Evanston, Illinois approved a reparations program to provide $10 million over a decade through $25,000 housing assistance grants to Black residents for down payments, repairs or mortgage payments to atone for racist housing polices in the past. Funding comes from taxes on cannabis and the sales of homes costing more than $1 million.

The federal government set a precedent for paying reparations in 1988, providing recompense to 82,000 Japanese Americans who were survivors of internment during World War II. That program was on a much smaller scale than contemplated by Bowman’s bill, with $20,000 paid to each survivor.

Hudson Valley split on reparations

There’s a split among Hudson Valley Democrats on HR 414. Supporting the bill are Bowman and former Bedford Supervisor MaryAnn Carr. She is challenging former Rep. Mondaire Jones for the Democratic nomination in the neighboring 17th District, now represented by Rep. Mike Lawler, R-Pearl River.

Opposing HR 414 are Jones and Westchester County Executive George Latimer, D-Rye, looking to oust Bowman. Instead, Latimer and Jones back House Resolution 40, which calls for a reparations commission, and an apology from the federal government for 246 years of state-sanctioned chattel slavery.

“The issue of reparations deserves serious consideration and dialogue, which is why I support HR 40,” Latimer said. “But HR 414 is a one-house bill with no chance of passage, so it is clearly a political statement more than anything else,”

While Jones opposes Bowman’s reparations bill, he backs conducting a federal study into the impacts of slavery.

“I recognize that the impacts of slavery and subsequent state-sponsored discrimination in the United States are still being felt today, from the vast racial wealth gap to residential segregation and unequal educational opportunities across public schools,” he said. “As Congress looks to level the playing field for all Americans, regardless of race, it is important to study these impacts more closely.”

Rep. Lawler, meanwhile, said that it would be wrong to burden 21st century taxpayers with paying for the abhorrent system of slavery that was abolished in the 19th century.

“Congressman Lawler strongly opposes any law that would force today’s American taxpayers to pay reparations for slavery that ended 160 years ago – and nearly 200 years ago in New York State,” said Lawler campaign spokesman Chris Russell. “Aside from the $14-trillion dollar price tag requiring massive tax or debt increases, the congressman believes such a law would only lead to a greater racial divide and resentment at a time when we need to come together as a nation.”

How to pay for reparations

Bowman maintains the federal government has the wherewithal to pay the tab. He cited the space race in the 1960s and 1970s as well the recent federal response to COVID as examples of how the federal government can respond.

“When COVID was destroying us, we invested in the American people in a way that kept the economy afloat,” said Bowman. “The government can invest the same way in reparations without raising taxes on anyone.”

He said the government stepped up in the crisis, spending an estimated $1.6 trillion in 2020, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data compiled by USAFacts. That year, the federal government took in $3.6 trillion in revenue yet spent $6.6 trillion, adding $3 trillion to the burgeoning federal deficit.

“Where did the money come from?” Bowman said. “We spent it into existence.”

John Buhl at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, a think tank in Washington, D.C., said the impact of reparations of this magnitude would depend on the financing of the borrowing package, the distribution timetable, as well as possible spending offsets. He noted that reducing poverty among Black Americans would lower demand for federal programs while “addressing longstanding moral issues.”

“So it certainly can be done, there are just side effects we would need to prepare for,” Buhl said.

Bowman also said that such investments in the Black community could spell dividends for the economy, as well.

He noted that the $14-trillion price-tag in the bill may be adjusted upward to $16 trillion to account for inflation that will occur before the bill finally passes.

“Let’s say the investment of $16 trillion will yield $100 trillion on the back end,” Bowman said. “It’s just like when you invest in child care. Every dollar you invest in child care yields $14 on the back end.”

Mike Lawler Slams ‘New York’s Arbitrary Rent Control Laws’ Demands Action From HUD

January 13, 2024

New York migrant surge at center of Mayorkas impeachment hearing

January 10, 2024

Spectrum News NY1
By Kevin Frey

Pushing ahead with their plan to impeach Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, House Republicans are putting New York’s migrant crisis front and center.

“Our governor has said flat out there’s no room left in New York. There’s no room at the inn. Don’t send migrants here anymore,” Rep. Anthony D’Esposito said Wednesday at the first impeachment hearing.

Preliminary reports released by the House GOP as part of their case for removing Mayorkas repeatedly cite conditions in New York City, highlighting violent crimes allegedly committed by migrants and the financial burden the surge of asylum seekers is imposing on the city. 

What You Need To Know
  • Preliminary reports released by the House GOP as part of their case for impeaching Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas repeatedly cite conditions in New York City tied to the influx of migrants
  • New York’s swing district Republicans are so far all indicating they will support ousting MayorkasRep.
  • Dan Goldman, who served as counsel for Democrats during the first impeachment of then-President Donald Trump, said what Republicans are alleging does not approach a high crime or misdemeanor
  • Across Capitol Hill, a group of Senate Democrats and Republicans are continuing negotiations toward a possible border policy deal

“He has taken an oath. He’s failed his oath, and he deserves to be impeached,” D’Esposito said in an interview outside the hearing room.

New York’s swing district Republicans are so far all indicating they will support ousting Mayorkas. Some were at the border last week alongside House Speaker Mike Johnson and dozens of their House GOP colleagues. 

Rep. Marc Molinaro said in a statement that “if [Mayorkas] worked for me — and he wouldn’t — I’d have fired him.”

In a post on social media, Rep. Nick LaLota called Mayorkas the “worst cabinet Secretary in our nation’s history,” while Rep. Brandon Williams called him a “failure” who “needs to go.”

In an interview during the border trip, Rep. Mike Lawler told Spectrum News that “Mayorkas has failed in his responsibilities to secure our border and protect the homeland.”

“He has lied before Congress on numerous occasions,” Lawler said.

Across the aisle, Rep. Dan Goldman, who served as counsel for Democrats during the first impeachment of then-President Donald Trump, said what Republicans are alleging does not approach a high crime or misdemeanor and instead amounts to a policy disagreement. 

“It is bastardizing and denigrating the impeachment clause of the Constitution,” Goldman said in an interview. 

He accuses the GOP — including those from New York — of playing politics in the lead up to November

“Let’s stop using this as political theater and as a political weapon so that you can get reelected, and let’s actually do the work that the American people sent us here to do, which is to solve the problems,” Goldman said.

Across Capitol Hill, a group of Senate Democrats and Republicans are continuing negotiations toward a possible border policy deal. But Republicans in the House are already warning they may not accept such an agreement.

Lawler legislation would name Holmes post office building in memory of late Dutchess sheriff

January 9, 2024

Mid-Hudson News

HOLMES – Congressman Michael Lawler Monday announced legislation designating the postal service building in Holmes as the “Sheriff Adrian ‘Butch’ Anderson Post Office Building.”

Lawler made the announcement in front of the post office on Monday.

“He was a tremendous man. He loved Pawling. He loved Dutchess County,” said current Sherif Kirk Imperati, who had served as Anderson’s undersheriff. “He led from the front and not from behind. He was a great boss and a great friend.”

County Executive Sue Serino said Anderson was “larger than life he really lived by the mantra ‘treat people the way you would want to be treated’.”

Anderson began his law enforcement career in 1970 when he was appointed a deputy sheriff in the Dutchess Sheriff’s Office. He served in the Uniform Patrol Division until he was promoted to detective in 1974.

In 1983, he was elected mayor of the Village of Pawling, a role he held for eight years.

Anderson was elected sheriff in 1999 and held that post until his death on September 29, 2021 during his sixth term.

CONGRESSMAN MIKE LAWLER RAISES OVER $3.31 MILLION IN 2023

January 8, 2024

Lawler campaign enters 2024 with over $2.5 million cash-on-hand, in strong position to win re-election in NY-17

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: [email protected]

Pearl River, NY, 1/8/2023… The Lawler for Congress campaign released the following statement after raising over $3,311,000 in 2023, putting Congressman Mike Lawler among the top freshman fundraisers in the House for the entire year.

“Congressman Lawler has kept his promise to be a bipartisan problem solver in Washington and his supporters in the Hudson Valley and across the country acknowledged his efforts with over $700,000 in contributions in Q4, ensuring Congressman Lawler enters 2024 with over $2.5 million cash-on-hand,”  said Lawler for Congress spokesman Chris Russell. “Mike and the team are grateful to everyone who contributed to make 2023 so successful and we are ready to win in 2024.”

“Congressman Lawler’s radical opponent, Mondaire Jones, described himself as a ‘socialist’, called for defunding the police, embraced open borders, and supported dangerous cashless bail laws while compiling one of the partisan and extreme voting records in the entire House – and then his own party chased him out of office,” said Russell. “No amount of spending by dark-money liberal PACs or radical efforts to gerrymander New York’s maps can change those facts or make him electable in the Hudson Valley.”

LAWLER CAMPAIGN CALLS INTO QUESTION SQUAD-LOVING MONDAIRE JONES’ SUPPORT FOR ISRAEL

January 8, 2024

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: [email protected]

1/8/2024, New City, NY – As Israel has fought to defend itself against the existential threat of Hamas, far-left politicians have begun turning on our greatest ally, including Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren who have criticized and even called for the ending of aid to Israel in its hour of need. Mondaire Jones, who claims to support Israel, aligned himself closely with ‘the Squad’ while in Congress, who proudly touted endorsements from Senators Warren and Sanders in a newly unearthed podcast with Mehdi Hasanwhose anti-Israel views were too extreme for even MSNBC, and proudly affiliated himself with the Democratic Socialists of America in 2019.

During the podcast, Mondaire Jones is touted as the newest member of ‘the Squad’, with Mehdi Hassan heralding him:

Mehdi Hasan: “The Squad looks like it’s set to grow on Capitol Hill. This week saw big historic wins for progressives in Democratic congressional primaries.”

Mondaire Jones: More people who have the lived experiences that would inform our policy discussions should be at the table of power—fighting tooth and nail for the things we say we care about as the Democratic Party.

Mehdi Hasan: “That’s Mondaire Jones!”

Later in the interview, Mondaire Jones proudly touts endorsements from Sanders and Warren, stating:

Mondaire Jones: “Elizabeth Warren, Julián Castro, and Bernie Sanders have all endorsed my campaign.”

Mehdi Hasan: “A very good trio to be endorsed by, I’ll say.”

Ciro Riccardi, campaign manager for Congressman Mike Lawler, reacted to the unearthed interview.

“Mondaire Jones can’t have it both ways.  You either stand with Israel and denounce the anti-Israel rhetoric of people like Senators Warren, Sanders, and his fellow ‘Squad’ members or you don’t.  It’s time for moral clarity, not straddling the fence. Which is it, Mondaire?” asked Riccardi.  “Jones can try to rebrand himself a ‘pragmatist’ all he wants, but the truth is he’s a self-described ‘socialist’ with one of the most extreme voting records in Congress.”

Congressman Mike Lawler remains committed to supporting Israel in its time of existential need, and will not let radical leftists like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren change his mind.

###

Clips referred to in the release above can be made available to credentialed members of the press upon request. Please email [email protected] for copies.

Lawler: Biden admin’s statement on GOP, border is ‘beneath’ White House 

January 3, 2024

The Hill
By Miranda Nazzaro

Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) railed against the White House’s criticism of Republicans’ handling of the border situation, calling the remarks a “joke” and “beneath” the White House.

White House spokesperson Andrew Bates on Wednesday accused Republicans of exacerbating the crisis at the southern border ahead of a group of House Republicans’ trip to the southern border, led by House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.).

Asked about Bates’s comments on NewsNation’s “The Hill,” Lawler said, “That’s such a joke and, frankly, beneath the White House to put out a statement like that.”

“The reality is this — House Republicans are the only ones that have done anything on border security this year,” Lawler continued. “We passed H.R. 2 seven months ago, the strongest border security measure in the history of Congress.”

The H.R. 2 Secure the Border bill is a sweeping package passed by House Republicans in May. The package included limits to asylum protections, provisions to resume construction of the border wall, and an expansion of the qualifications for refugee status, among other changes.

“So the failure here is on the part of the administration, whose policies have exacerbated the crisis,” Lawler said, adding later, “This is a crisis of their own making. And it is a dereliction of duty on the part of [President] Joe Biden, [Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro] Mayorkas and frankly, [Democratic New York Sen.] Chuck Schumer, as the majority leader.”

Earlier Wednesday, Bates on behalf of the White House took a dig at House Republicans, arguing the conference has an “anti-border security record” after they obstructed Biden’s border proposals and voted against border security funding. He pointed to the GOP’s lack of support for Biden’s supplemental funding request — which included new border security funds and funding for Ukraine, Israel and the Indo-Pacific — and the president’s plans to modernize the immigration system.

Lawler was among a delegation of about 60 Republicans who visited the southern border near Eagle Pass, Texas, on Wednesday, to address their concerns over the influx of migrants at the border.

Lawler said the lawmakers witnessed migrants crossing the border and spoke with Customs and Border Patrol agents about the numbers behind the crossings.

Senators and the White House have negotiated for weeks over a deal for border security changes that would also unlock funding for Ukraine.

“So this is a real crisis that needs to be addressed, and the administration needs to take it seriously and the negations have to be in good faith,” Lawler said, adding the Senate negotiations are “seemingly halfhearted and mealy-mouthed at best.”

The White House did not immediately respond to The Hill’s request for comment.

NewsNation is owned by Nexstar Media Group, which also owns The Hill.