- An insider asked attendees at the Conservative Political Action Conference about the House Republican investigation.
- Some conference attendees said Republicans should abandon retaliation plans and focus on the real problem.
- “Don’t get bogged down in empty investigations,” warned one.
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — While House Republicans are thrilled that they now have investigative powers, some Conservative Political Action Conference attendees are only interested in Republican leaders seeking revenge. I am afraid that there will be
“What happened to us in the last few years…we don’t have to go back to the Democratic Party,” Michael Yadeta of Silver Spring, Maryland, told Insider. As a sore spot that should not be forgotten but needs to be set aside.
“Today is not the day to go back and cry about it,” Yadeta said outside the main CPAC ballroom, noting that lowering gas prices and fighting inflation are more pressing priorities than needing officials in the Biden administration. “All we have to do is find ways to make life easier for individual Americans.”
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan and House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer have called for a focus on economic concerns over retaliation and pet projects this week. Failed to deliver promised bomb from trusted ‘whistleblower’ and Federal prosecutors have complained that they did not indict President Joe Biden’s late son, Beau, before his death.Each.
Jordan and Comer planned to spend the next two years digging into President Biden, his troubled youngest son Hunter, and anything that could sway the 2024 election.
House Republicans have created a new “weaponization” panel designed to investigate their “Deep State” conspiracy theories. Meanwhile, other standing committees are jumping over Trump-era grievances like the southern border in an attempt to orchestrate a viral moment.
CPAC attendees who told insiders they supported the Republican House surveillance effort had mixed opinions on their preferred targets.
Some have lobbied for the release of all security camera footage of the Jan. 6, 2021 siege at the US Capitol. imprisoned mobOthers remain obsessed with Trump’s baseless allegations of election fraud, claiming that “we still need answers” about the 2020 election. I mentioned “to clarify the truth” of
One jaded attendee could barely contain herself when an insider asked her about her biggest beef.
“Corruption — by and large!” said the animated woman, who declined to give her name, waving her arms to show that corruption was everywhere.
Yadeta, who ran in the 2022 GOP primary and unsuccessfully challenged Rep. Jamie Ruskin, a Democrat of Maryland, is at least partially responsible for Ruskin’s role as impeachment manager in Trump’s second trial. and later said he did so to protest serving as a member. of the selection committee on January 6.
“I didn’t send you to impeach the president,” Yadeta complained, adding that Ruskin should have addressed community issues such as homelessness and job creation.
With that “waste of time” now behind him, Yadeta said both sides needed to move forward.
“We need to be united and love each other regardless of our political differences.
CPAC attendee Chris, who declined to give his last name, still doesn’t look like he’s up to Kumbaya’s level. But the Pennsylvania native advised Republican leaders to either put up or shut up.
“I hope we don’t get bogged down in a series of investigations that don’t come up with anything,” he told Insider.