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#cuellar — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #cuellar, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Democratic leaders were outspoken during the massive US military buildup in the Middle East,
    ⭐️decrying his unwillingness to engage with Congress and lack of long-term strategy for Iran.
    🔸They noted that it was Trump, during his first term, who shredded Barack Obama’s nuclear agreement with Iran.

    Once the US and Israeli military struck on Saturday, the sharpest voices accused the president of riding roughshod over the constitution.
    Senator Bernie #Sanders denounced the assault as “an illegal, premeditated and unconstitutional war”,
    while Senator Chris #Van #Hollen warned it amounted to a “regime-change war” that would leave the US less secure.

    Senator Tim #Kaine, long a thorn in the side of presidents of both parties on war powers, called the strikes “a colossal mistake”
    and demanded a swift vote requiring Trump to seek authorisation.

    Others, however, were more qualified. Tom #Suozzi, a New York Democrat who co-chairs the Problem Solvers caucus, wrote on X: “I agree with the President’s objectives that Iran can never be allowed to obtain nuclear capabilities.”
    Henry #Cuellar of Texas said the threat posed by Iran was “real and longstanding”.
    And not all Democrats are lining up behind a war powers rebuke.

    There may be enough defections to block a war powers resolution,
    -- although a few libertarian Republicans could join those in favor.
    The split also exposes a deeper unease within Democratic ranks over how robustly to confront Iran and how far to go in backing Israeli military action.
    There are also political traps as Republicans accuse them of lacking patriotism and ignoring the Iranian diaspora who have taken to the streets to celebrate Khamenei’s downfall.
    The discomfort is embodied by Senator Mark #Kelly, a former combat pilot and potential 2028 presidential contender. Appearing on NBC’s Meet the Press, Kelly was asked if he agrees with Lindsey Graham, a hawkish Republican senator, that the world is now safer because the supreme leader of Iran is dead.
    Kelly replied: “Well, I agree with that part. I mean, it’s a good thing that the supreme leader is gone and some of the folks around him.”
    👍But he also delivered a withering assessment of the White House’s preparation.
    ♦️ “Hope is not a strategy,” Kelly warned,
    questioning whether the administration had any serious plan for the aftermath.
    Air power can destroy targets, he added,
    ⚡️but fully eliminating capabilities without boots on the ground is “incredibly challenging”.

    The congressional debate over war powers would mostly be symbolic.
    🆘Even if a resolution were to pass the narrowly split Congress, Trump likely would veto it and Congress would not have the two-thirds majority needed to overturn that rejection.
    Congress has often failed to block other US military actions, including in a Senate vote on Venezuela,
    👉but the roll calls stand as a public record.
    theguardian.com/us-news/2026/m

  2. #TFG #Politics #Pardons #Cuellar

    Cuellar had zero intention of becoming a Republican, noting that he did not know why Trump may have assumed that. When Cuellar made clear he was not switching parties, Trump aired his frustrations on X and endorsed the top GOP candidate running against him, Tano Tijerina. The president also made clear that he had no regrets about pardoning Cuellar.

    notus.org/campaigns/it-clears-

  3. Seven #Quisling #Democrats voted to fund #ICE, rather than shut it down.

    Seven #House Democrats broke with much of their party to vote in favor of funding U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), helping advance a Department of Homeland Security (#DHS) spending measure in committee despite strong opposition from progressives.

    The seven Democratic representatives who voted yes to approve ICE funding were:

    Tom #Suozzi (New York)
    Henry #Cuellar (Texas)
    Don #Davis (North Carolina)
    Laura #Gillen (New York)
    Jared #Golden (Maine)
    Vicente #Gonzalez (Texas)
    Marie Glusenkamp #Perez (Washington)

    Primary the fuck out of them. I don’t care if we run a goddamn giraffe or an inflated penis balloon, if they aren’t with us, they are against us, and if they are against us, fuck them. ( Disclaimer, I know two of these assholes, and boy howdy are they not gonna be pleased to hear from me in the morning, I can tell you.)

  4. Nor were Trump’s pardons confined to financial crime alone.

    In the political realm,
    he used them to dismantle the already-fragile idea of
    public accountability,
    🆘 turning American public squares into carnivals of bribery and fraud.

    🔥He pardoned #Alexander #Sittenfeld,
    a former member of the Cincinnati city council,
    convicted by a jury on both bribery and extortion charges,

    🔥#John #Rowland,
    a former Connecticut governor,
    caught out in multiple corruption cases

    🔥and #Jeremy #Hutchinson,
    a former Arkansas state legislator and scion of one of Arkansas’s most prominent political families.

    In 2023, Hutchinson pleaded guilty to accepting over $150,000 worth of bribes,
    receiving a four-year sentence as a result
    – a sentence that Trump wiped away earlier this year.

    🔥Just this month Trump announced the pardon of
    #Henry #Cuellar,
    a Texas representative and the first member of Congress in US history formally accused of acting as a foreign agent,
    allegedly overseeing multiple bribery schemes from Mexico to Azerbaijan.

    Cuellar had allegedly become an Azeri mole,
    working for a regime known for its kleptocratic brutality,
    routinely jailing dissidents, journalists and political opposition figures.

    Cuellar allegedly served as an Azeri agent
    while the regime was engaged in ethnic cleansing against Armenians,
    constituting, as Freedom House detailed,
    “war crimes and crimes against humanity”.

    💥None of that mattered.

    Cuellar was pardoned anyway,
    permitted to remain in Congress
    and transformed into a potential political ally.

    The message to lawmakers was unmistakable:

    👉 loyalty to Trump now offers protection from consequences.

    The message to foreign strongmen was equally clear.

    ❌ The United States, once again, is open for business.

    theguardian.com/us-news/ng-int

  5. Nor were Trump’s pardons confined to financial crime alone.

    In the political realm,
    he used them to dismantle the already-fragile idea of
    public accountability,
    🆘 turning American public squares into carnivals of bribery and fraud.

    🔥He pardoned #Alexander #Sittenfeld,
    a former member of the Cincinnati city council,
    convicted by a jury on both bribery and extortion charges,

    🔥#John #Rowland,
    a former Connecticut governor,
    caught out in multiple corruption cases

    🔥and #Jeremy #Hutchinson,
    a former Arkansas state legislator and scion of one of Arkansas’s most prominent political families.

    In 2023, Hutchinson pleaded guilty to accepting over $150,000 worth of bribes,
    receiving a four-year sentence as a result
    – a sentence that Trump wiped away earlier this year.

    🔥Just this month Trump announced the pardon of
    #Henry #Cuellar,
    a Texas representative and the first member of Congress in US history formally accused of acting as a foreign agent,
    allegedly overseeing multiple bribery schemes from Mexico to Azerbaijan.

    Cuellar had allegedly become an Azeri mole,
    working for a regime known for its kleptocratic brutality,
    routinely jailing dissidents, journalists and political opposition figures.

    Cuellar allegedly served as an Azeri agent
    while the regime was engaged in ethnic cleansing against Armenians,
    constituting, as Freedom House detailed,
    “war crimes and crimes against humanity”.

    💥None of that mattered.

    Cuellar was pardoned anyway,
    permitted to remain in Congress
    and transformed into a potential political ally.

    The message to lawmakers was unmistakable:

    👉 loyalty to Trump now offers protection from consequences.

    The message to foreign strongmen was equally clear.

    ❌ The United States, once again, is open for business.

    theguardian.com/us-news/ng-int

  6. Nor were Trump’s pardons confined to financial crime alone.

    In the political realm,
    he used them to dismantle the already-fragile idea of
    public accountability,
    🆘 turning American public squares into carnivals of bribery and fraud.

    🔥He pardoned #Alexander #Sittenfeld,
    a former member of the Cincinnati city council,
    convicted by a jury on both bribery and extortion charges,

    🔥#John #Rowland,
    a former Connecticut governor,
    caught out in multiple corruption cases

    🔥and #Jeremy #Hutchinson,
    a former Arkansas state legislator and scion of one of Arkansas’s most prominent political families.

    In 2023, Hutchinson pleaded guilty to accepting over $150,000 worth of bribes,
    receiving a four-year sentence as a result
    – a sentence that Trump wiped away earlier this year.

    🔥Just this month Trump announced the pardon of
    #Henry #Cuellar,
    a Texas representative and the first member of Congress in US history formally accused of acting as a foreign agent,
    allegedly overseeing multiple bribery schemes from Mexico to Azerbaijan.

    Cuellar had allegedly become an Azeri mole,
    working for a regime known for its kleptocratic brutality,
    routinely jailing dissidents, journalists and political opposition figures.

    Cuellar allegedly served as an Azeri agent
    while the regime was engaged in ethnic cleansing against Armenians,
    constituting, as Freedom House detailed,
    “war crimes and crimes against humanity”.

    💥None of that mattered.

    Cuellar was pardoned anyway,
    permitted to remain in Congress
    and transformed into a potential political ally.

    The message to lawmakers was unmistakable:

    👉 loyalty to Trump now offers protection from consequences.

    The message to foreign strongmen was equally clear.

    ❌ The United States, once again, is open for business.

    theguardian.com/us-news/ng-int

  7. Nor were Trump’s pardons confined to financial crime alone.

    In the political realm,
    he used them to dismantle the already-fragile idea of
    public accountability,
    🆘 turning American public squares into carnivals of bribery and fraud.

    🔥He pardoned #Alexander #Sittenfeld,
    a former member of the Cincinnati city council,
    convicted by a jury on both bribery and extortion charges,

    🔥#John #Rowland,
    a former Connecticut governor,
    caught out in multiple corruption cases

    🔥and #Jeremy #Hutchinson,
    a former Arkansas state legislator and scion of one of Arkansas’s most prominent political families.

    In 2023, Hutchinson pleaded guilty to accepting over $150,000 worth of bribes,
    receiving a four-year sentence as a result
    – a sentence that Trump wiped away earlier this year.

    🔥Just this month Trump announced the pardon of
    #Henry #Cuellar,
    a Texas representative and the first member of Congress in US history formally accused of acting as a foreign agent,
    allegedly overseeing multiple bribery schemes from Mexico to Azerbaijan.

    Cuellar had allegedly become an Azeri mole,
    working for a regime known for its kleptocratic brutality,
    routinely jailing dissidents, journalists and political opposition figures.

    Cuellar allegedly served as an Azeri agent
    while the regime was engaged in ethnic cleansing against Armenians,
    constituting, as Freedom House detailed,
    “war crimes and crimes against humanity”.

    💥None of that mattered.

    Cuellar was pardoned anyway,
    permitted to remain in Congress
    and transformed into a potential political ally.

    The message to lawmakers was unmistakable:

    👉 loyalty to Trump now offers protection from consequences.

    The message to foreign strongmen was equally clear.

    ❌ The United States, once again, is open for business.

    theguardian.com/us-news/ng-int

  8. Nor were Trump’s pardons confined to financial crime alone.

    In the political realm,
    he used them to dismantle the already-fragile idea of
    public accountability,
    🆘 turning American public squares into carnivals of bribery and fraud.

    🔥He pardoned #Alexander #Sittenfeld,
    a former member of the Cincinnati city council,
    convicted by a jury on both bribery and extortion charges,

    🔥#John #Rowland,
    a former Connecticut governor,
    caught out in multiple corruption cases

    🔥and #Jeremy #Hutchinson,
    a former Arkansas state legislator and scion of one of Arkansas’s most prominent political families.

    In 2023, Hutchinson pleaded guilty to accepting over $150,000 worth of bribes,
    receiving a four-year sentence as a result
    – a sentence that Trump wiped away earlier this year.

    🔥Just this month Trump announced the pardon of
    #Henry #Cuellar,
    a Texas representative and the first member of Congress in US history formally accused of acting as a foreign agent,
    allegedly overseeing multiple bribery schemes from Mexico to Azerbaijan.

    Cuellar had allegedly become an Azeri mole,
    working for a regime known for its kleptocratic brutality,
    routinely jailing dissidents, journalists and political opposition figures.

    Cuellar allegedly served as an Azeri agent
    while the regime was engaged in ethnic cleansing against Armenians,
    constituting, as Freedom House detailed,
    “war crimes and crimes against humanity”.

    💥None of that mattered.

    Cuellar was pardoned anyway,
    permitted to remain in Congress
    and transformed into a potential political ally.

    The message to lawmakers was unmistakable:

    👉 loyalty to Trump now offers protection from consequences.

    The message to foreign strongmen was equally clear.

    ❌ The United States, once again, is open for business.

    theguardian.com/us-news/ng-int