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Lauren Boebert

Rep. Lauren Boebert faces lawsuit after blocking constituents on Twitter

Republican U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado is facing a lawsuit for allegedly violating the First Amendment rights of her constituents, including a former lawmaker.

Former state Rep. Bri Buentello, a Democrat, has reportedly filed the suit in U.S. District Court in Denver.

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'Farcically stupid' GOPer Boebert brutally dismantled by Democrat for lies about Capitol assault

During an appearance on MSNBC's "The Sunday Show," Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-NY) didn't mince any words when asked about newly-elected Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO), calling her "stupid" and not worth anyone's time.

Speaking with host Jonathan Capehart, Maloney was asked about an accusation leveled at him by Boebert -- that she had to retract -- which opened the door for the blunt-talking Maloney to call out the GOP lawmaker in the thrall of QAnon conspiracies.

"You know, when you said bumper crop of crazy colleagues, it made me think of this back and forth that seems to be happening," Capehart stated. "Let me read it to the audience what your colleague, Congresswoman Boebert said: 'Sean Maloney's comments were extremely dangerous and shameful. there's not an ounce of truth to things he claimed about me.' Having read that, and the comments you just made, even in past interviews, you've never named anyone. Why do you think your colleague from the other side of the aisle is singling you out?"

"Well because she's incompetent," Maloney quickly shot back. "Because she jumped to a conclusion and didn't bother to look at what I said."

"She apologized, by the way, a short while later because we produced the transcript which demonstrated her comments, her tweet, her letter were farcically stupid and wrong," he continued. "So the problem is when you get this kind of incompetence mixed together with arrogance, when people believe that they're right when they are demonstrably wrong."

"Now, Congresswoman Boebert has made a video bragging she's going bring a gun to the capitol -- go Google it," he added. "Everyone can watch it if you want to waste two minutes of your life. [Rep.] Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) said publicly he was armed during the insurrection. He made a six-minute video before the insurrection talking about how the election was stolen. There are QAnon conspiracy theorists yelling at Capitol police. I'm not making this up, but I'm always careful about things I don't have personal knowledge of. Congresswoman Boebert -- I think she's off to a disastrous start."

Watch below:


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Aide cites insurrection as he quits as Rep. Lauren Boebert's communications director: report

Republicans who pushed the conspiracy theory of election fraud continue to lose political support as the backlash agains the insurrection they incited continues to mount.

"The communications director for Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado, a firebrand Republican freshman who boasts about carrying a gun to work, has quit after less than two weeks on the job," Axios reported Saturday.

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Conspiracy-pushing GOP lawmaker  trying to distance himself from riot he helped incite: report

One of the most controversial new member of Congress was the focus of a brutal new exposé in New York magazine.

"Madison Cawthorn has a vision of a January 6 that did not happen. One in which he does the noble thing for career and country. He uses his MAGA celebrity for good. He transforms from sh*tposter to statesman. And he emerges from the U.S. Capitol as America's savior," Olivia Nuzzi reported.

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Dem lawmaker slams 'elitist' Republicans who bullied Capitol cops over metal detectors

On MSNBC Saturday, Rep. Norma Torres (D-CA) tore into Republican lawmakers who defied and bullied Capitol Police officers trying to send them through metal detectors.

"I understand some Republican colleagues are defying going through those," said anchor Alex Witt. "They just walked around and made excuses for why going through a metal detector shouldn't apply to them. What do you say to that?"

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'Bitter infighting' over Trump has Republicans worried they'll lose even more seats in 2022: report

According to a report from the New York Times' Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin, Republican lawmakers are already at each other's throats over Donald Trump re-election loss -- and the loss of control of the Senate -- with some GOP officials worried the internal war could spill out from behind closed doors and impact the 2022 midterm.

At issue are Republicans who are still loyal to the ousted Trump and those who want to put the past four years behind them after it culminated in the loss of the Senate and the White House to the Democrats.

The report notes that fans of the president who are still in office are working at ousting colleagues they feel were not loyal to Trump both after his election loss and then again after he was accused of inciting a riot at the Capitol that led to five deaths on January 6th.

According to the report, at the president's urging, pro-Trump lawmakers are attempting to undercut leadership Republicans including Sen. John Thune (SD) and Rep. Liz Cheney (WY) and may encourage primaries against the two among others.

"In Washington, Republicans are particularly concerned about a handful of extreme-right House members who could run for Senate in swing states, potentially tarnishing the party in some of the most politically important areas of the country," the report states. "The highest-profile tests of Mr. Trump's clout may come in two sparsely populated Western states, South Dakota and Wyoming, where the president has targeted a pair of G.O.P. leaders: John Thune, the second-ranking Senate Republican, and Liz Cheney, the third-ranking House Republican."

Those seats, along with others held by Republicans in the House who voted for impeachment have some Republican officials worried a bruising primary could leave them with a candidate who is too extreme for the district, allowing the seat to flip to the Democrats.

"If Ms. Cheney is deposed, it could encourage primary challenges against other Republicans who supported impeachment or censure, including more moderate lawmakers like Representatives Peter Meijer and Fred Upton of Michigan and John Katko of New York, whose districts could slip away from Republicans if they nominated hard-line Trump loyalists," the Times reports. "But in a sign that Mr. Trump can't expect to fully dictate party affairs, Mr. McCarthy has indicated that he opposes calls to remove her from leadership"

Additionally, Republicans are worried about overly ambitious newly elected far-right lawmakers who may decide to run for higher office seats held by their Republican colleagues.

"Privately, Republican officials are concerned about possible campaigns for higher office by some of the high-profile backbenchers in the House who have railed against the election results and propagated fringe conspiracy theories. Among those figures are Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Andy Biggs of Arizona. All three states have Senate seats and governorships up for election in 2022," the report states.

According to Scott Reed, the former chief political strategist for the Chamber of Commerce, "In 2022, we'll be faced with the Trump pitchfork crowd, and there will need to be an effort to beat them back," he said before adding, "Hopefully they'll create multicandidate races where their influence will be diluted."

You can read more here.

GOP's Lauren Boebert denies that she led 'insurrectionists' on Capitol tour ahead of violent assault

A newly elected Republican congresswoman denied leading a tour last week for "insurrectionists" who violently stormed the U.S. Capitol the following day.

Democrats have called for an investigation into claims that some GOP House members gave "reconnaissance" tours to groups on Jan. 5, the day before President Donald Trump's supporters burst into the Capitol in an effort to overturn his election loss, and Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) pushed back against suspicions against her, reported the Washington Post.

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MSNBC's Morning Joe says Qanon cultists pose violent threat to their Democratic colleagues

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough warned that Qanon cultists in Congress were putting their colleagues in danger.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and other members of the so-called "Squad" worried that Republican lawmakers who've expressed support for the right-wing conspiracy theory or white supremacist groups would direct President Donald Trump's supporters to their location during the violent Capitol siege, and the "Morning Joe" host said those fears were justified.

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Fines for US lawmakers who refuse to walk through metal detectors

US lawmakers who refuse to go through metal detectors installed at the House of Representatives after last week's Capitol riot will be fined, Speaker Nancy Pelosi said late Wednesday.

The fine for the first offense will be $5,000, and $10,000 for the second, Pelosi said in a statement. Fines will be docked directly from members' salaries.

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Twitter locks account of congresswoman who live-tweeted about Nancy Pelosi's location during riot

UPDATE: Lauren Boebert's account was unlocked following the original publication of this story:


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'Have they ever had a job before?' Cori Bush tears into Republicans for evading metal detectors to enter House chamber

Democratic Congresswoman Cori Bush late Tuesday suggested that some of her House Republican colleagues find a different line of work after several GOP lawmakers refused to walk through metal detectors established as a precautionary measure in the wake of the deadly invasion of the U.S. Capitol last week by a mob of President Donald Trump's supporters.

"If they won't abide by the simple things that this job calls for, then go find another one."
—Rep. Cori Bush

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House Democrats worried about newly-elected QAnon lawmakers being near Biden: Morning Joe co-hosts

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough and Willie Geist wondered whether some newly-elected members of Congress posed a violent threat to Democratic lawmakers and President-elect Joe Biden.

At least two Republican congresswomen -- Reps. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) -- have expressed support for the baseless and violent QAnon conspiracy, and some of their new colleagues fear they pose a security threat to other members, Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

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A '1776 moment': Here's how pro-Trump lawmakers egged on GOP voters to the point of violence

On Monday, The New York Times painted a picture of how GOP lawmakers faithful to outgoing President Donald Trump whipped up the masses into a frenzy that culminated in the attack on the U.S. Capitol — and potentially more armed demonstrations at state houses next week.

"A handful of Mr. Trump's most loyal allies in the House had gone even further in the days and weeks before the riot, urging their supporters to come to Washington on Jan. 6 to make a defiant last stand to keep him in power," reported Catie Edmondson and Luke Broadwater. "They linked arms with the organizers of the protest and used inflammatory, bellicose language to describe the stakes."

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