My VIPs for this week are the few
politicians that are courageous enough to defend the President of the United
States against attacks about his summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Two of the most outspoken people are Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) and Representative
Steve Scalise (R-LA). Their defenses are outlined below.
Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
sponsored a bill that would condemn Russia for their meddling in the 2016 U.S.
election and asked that the Senate give it a unanimous consent decree. He said, “The Congress must make it clear that
we accept the assessment of our intelligence community with regard to Russian
election interfering in our country and in other democracies.”
Senator Paul voted to block the bill, saying that it was motivated by “Trump motivation syndrome.” He said the
following in his own speech from the floor of the Senate.
Trump derangement syndrome has
officially come to the Senate! The hatred for the President is so intense that
partisans would rather risk war than give diplomacy a chance.
Does anybody remember that Ronald Reagan
sat down with Gorbachev and we lessened the nuclear tensions? We need to still have
those openings.
Nobody is saying or excusing Russia
meddling in our elections, absolutely, we should protect the integrity of our
elections. But simply bringing the hatred of the president to the Senate floor,
in order to say we’re done with diplomacy, we’re going to add more sanctions
and more sanctions.
You know what? I would rather that we
still have more open channels of discussion with the Russians.
As cries of treason and impeachment
are heard more often by the deranged mainstream media and liberals, Scalise gives them a history lesson. He reminds them of “what took place between Russia and the United States during
the Obama years.” He tweeted, “President @realDonaldTrump went into this
meeting with Putin from a position of American strength to combat Russian
aggression, but it’s important to remember how Russia was allowed to get to
this point.” He then proceeds to explain how it happened.
Scalise starts with 2009 when then-Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton hit the “reset button” to “reset relations with Russia
and the United States.” Then he goes to March 2012 when Barack Obama was caught
on a hot mike making the following comment to then-Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev. “This is my last election. After my election I [will] have more
flexibility.” Medvedev replied, “I understand. I will transmit this information
to Vladimir, and I stand with you.” Then there was the presidential debate of
2012 when Mitt Romney called Russia “our top geopolitical foe.” Obama, other
Democrats, and the media all mocked Romney’s statement. They said that it was “outdated”
and “a throwback to the Cold War.”
I agree with both Scalise and Paul.
We must remember that Russian aggression got to this point during the Obama
administration. Obama was too soft with Russia, and Trump has been much tougher.
Yet, we must also keep the channels of communication open in order to defuse
tensions and eliminate the possibility of the differences between the two
countries escalating into nuclear war.
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