Breaking News
Breaking News
from Washington and beyond

Here Are All the Democrats Who Voted for the “Anti-Zionism Is Antisemitism” Bill

The resolution makes a dangerous conflation—and quite a few Democrats gave their wholehearted support.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Ninety-five Democrats helped the House GOP pass its disingenuous resolution against antisemitism on Tuesday, which effectively condemns any criticism of the Israeli state.

House Resolution 894 falsely states that “anti-Zionism is antisemitism” and criticizes several protest chants for Palestinian freedom that are protected by the First Amendment, including “From the River to the Sea,” “Palestine Will Be Free,” and “Gaza Will Win.”

It passed with 311 votes in its favor, 14 against it (13 of them Democrats), and 92 present votes from Democrats.

“The resolution suggests that all anti-Zionism—it states—is antisemitism. That’s either intellectually disingenuous or just factually wrong,” said New York Representative Jerry Nadler, who voted present. “The authors if they were at all familiar with Jewish history & culture should know about Jewish anti-Zionism that was and is expressly not antisemitic. This resolution ignores the fact that even today, certain Orthodox Hasidic Jewish communities … have held views that are at odds with the modern Zionist conception.”

Notably, some of the yea votes came from Democrats who have also supported calls for a cease-fire, including Representatives Kweisi Mfume, Maxwell Frost, Jared Huffman, Terri Sewell, and Sanford Bishop Jr.

Here are the 95 Democrats who voted for the resolution:

  • Alma Adams (NC)
  • Colin Allred (TX)
  • Gabe Amo (RI)
  • Jake Auchincloss (MA)
  • Ami Bera (CA)
  • Sanford D. Bishop Jr. (GA)
  • Lisa Blunt Rochester (DE)
  • Julia Brownley (CA)
  • Nikki Budzinski (IL)
  • Yadira Caraveo (CO)
  • Salud Carbajal (CA)
  • Matt Cartwright (PA)
  • Kathy Castor (FL)
  • Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (FL)
  • Steve Cohen (TN)
  • Jim Costa (CA)
  • Joe Courtney (CT)
  • Angie Craig (MN)
  • Jason Crow (CO)
  • Henry Cuellar (TX)
  • Don Davis (NC)
  • Rosa DeLauro (CT)
  • Chris Deluzio (PA)
  • Anna Eshoo (CA)
  • Lizzie Fletcher (TX)
  • Lois Frankel (FL)
  • Maxwell Frost (FL)
  • Ruben Gallego (AZ)
  • Jared Golden (ME)
  • Vicente Gonzalez (TX)
  • Josh Gottheimer (NJ)
  • Josh Harder (CA)
  • Jahana Hayes (CT)
  • Brian Higgins (NY)
  • Jim Himes (CT)
  • Steven Horsford (NV)
  • Steny Hoyer (MD)
  • Jared Huffman (CA)
  • Jeff Jackson (NC)
  • William Keating (MA)
  • Derek Kilmer (WA)
  • Ann Kuster (NH)
  • Greg Landsman (OH)
  • John Larson (CT)
  • Susie Lee (NV)
  • Mike Levin (CA)
  • Stephen Lynch (MA)
  • Kathy Manning (NC)
  • Doris Matsui (CA)
  • Kweisi Mfume (MD)
  • Joe Morelle (NY)
  • Jared Moskowitz (FL)
  • Seth Moulton (MA)
  • Frank J. Mrvan (IN)
  • Richard Neal (MA)
  • Joe Neguse (CO)
  • Wiley Nickel (NC)
  • Donald Norcross (NJ)
  • Frank Pallone Jr. (NJ)
  • Jimmy Panetta (CA)
  • Chris Pappas (NH)
  • Bill Pascrell Jr. (NJ)
  • Mary Peltola (AK)
  • Marie Gluesenkamp Pérez (WA)
  • Scott Peters (CA)
  • Brittany Pettersen (CO)
  • Mike Quigley (IL)
  • C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger (MD)
  • Adam Schiff (CA)
  • Brad Schneider (IL)
  • Hillary Scholten (MI)
  • Kim Schrier (WA)
  • David Scott (GA)
  • Terri Sewell (AL)
  • Brad Sherman (CA)
  • Elissa Slotkin (MI)
  • Adam Smith (WA)
  • Eric Sorensen (IL)
  • Darren Soto (FL)
  • Abigail Spanberger (VA)
  • Melanie Stansbury (NM)
  • Greg Stanton (AZ)
  • Haley Stevens (MI)
  • Eric Swalwell (CA)
  • Emilia Sykes (OH)
  • Shri Thanedar (MI)
  • Mike Thompson (CA)
  • Dina Titus (NV)
  • Norma Torres (CA)
  • Ritchie Torres (NY)
  • David Trone (MD)
  • Juan Vargas (CA)
  • Marc Veasey (TX)
  • Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL)
  • Frederica Wilson (FL)

Just 14 lawmakers voted against the resolution, including Representatives Jamaal Bowman, Cori Bush, Gerald Connolly, Jesús Garcia, Raúl Grijalva, Pramila Jayapal, Summer Lee, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Ayanna Pressley, Delia Ramirez, Bonnie Watson Coleman, and Congress’s only Palestinian representative, Rashida Tlaib. The small Democratic crowd was also joined by one Republican congressman, Representative Thomas Massie.

“Unfortunately, the extreme Republican resolution, H.Res. 894, does absolutely nothing to counter antisemitism, and it only seeks to divide us and weaponize Jewish lives for political gains,” said Representative Jan Schakowsky, one of 26 Jewish members of the House who has called for an end to the Israel-Hamas conflict. “It includes an overly broad definition of antisemitism that could deem any criticism of the Israeli government as antisemitic. This resolution has been rushed to the floor without careful and considerate collaboration.”

As of Monday, 15,899 Palestinians—at least 70 percent of them women and children—have been killed in the conflict since the initial attack by Hamas, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

Tommy Tuberville Just Proved Again That He’s the Stupidest Senator

Great job, coach!

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Senator Tommy Tuberville on Tuesday finally gave up his blockade on military promotions. All he managed to accomplish in the nearly yearlong effort was to annoy all of his colleagues.

Tuberville has blocked 450 military promotions since March as a part of a one-man protest against the Defense Department’s policy of reimbursing travel costs for service members who have to travel out of state for an abortion. He announced Tuesday that he will allow most of those promotions to go forward now—but will still demand that the people nominated for four-star promotions, of which there are about 10, get roll-call votes on the Senate floor.

Typically, the Senate majority leader brings a list of proposed military promotions to the floor. The chamber votes on all the candidates at once, and unanimous consent is needed to approve the promotions. Democrats have tried to bring individual candidates to the floor for a vote, but there are too many stalled promotions for this to be efficient.

In early November, the Senate brought 61 individual nominees to the floor for a vote, but Tuberville objected to all of them, tanking each officer’s promotion. His actions finally set off his fellow Republicans, who slammed Tuberville for insisting that his blockade is not harming military readiness.

“No offense, but that’s just ridiculous,” Senator Dan Sullivan said. “He knows it. We all know it.”

“How dumb can we be, man?”

The Pentagon has warned repeatedly of the military consequences of the lawmaker’s blockade, with the secretary of the Navy accusing Tuberville of “aiding and abetting” Communist regimes by holding up promotions.

Tuberville’s crusade has led to multiple high-level positions remaining unfilled, leaving different military branches scrambling whenever something goes wrong. In early November, General Eric Smith, the commandant of the Marine Corps, was hospitalized after suffering a heart attack, further thinning the ranks. His workload had doubled thanks to Tuberville.

Now, finally, it looks like Tuberville’s little stunt is coming to an end.

Rape Allegation Against Moms for Liberty Is Starting to Cost Them

A Moms for Liberty chapter has just split from the national group.

Christian Ziegler
Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images

A local chapter of the far-right Moms for Liberty has taken a step back from its national entity amid a swirling rape allegation against the husband of one of the group’s co-founders.

The Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, chapter announced Monday that it will distance itself from its parent organization, citing a difference in values.

“The journey has always been the strength of our local community and we found all the support we need among us,” chapter chair Clarissa Paige told The News Item on Monday. “We are going to continue to champion parental rights with dignity and integrity.”

Last week, Florida GOP Chair Christian Ziegler, the husband of Moms for Liberty co-founder Bridget Ziegler, was accused of sexually assaulting a woman involved in threesomes with him and his wife.

The rape accusation became public after the Florida Center for Government Accountability published an explosive report that included a heavily redacted police report and search warrant affidavits detailing the assault.

“It’s hard to advocate for parental rights when the co-founder is caught up in the scandal,” Paige told The News Item. “Our values are not aligning with the national organization.”

The Ziegler couple are rising stars in the Florida GOP who seem unlikely to keel to the allegations. Christian Ziegler has rejected calls for his resignation, refusing to give up his seat at the helm of the state’s conservative party.

Meanwhile, Bridget Ziegler has been personally endorsed and backed several times by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, including for a school board seat and an appointment to a state board that oversees the special district previously run by Disney World. That’s in large part due to her vocal opposition to progressive education policies, including critical race theory and LGBTQ+ friendly policies. Zeigler has said she aims to bring “religious values” to public schools that are “indoctrination centers for the radical left.”

Yet her stringent moral values appear set on restricting everyone’s sexualities except her own.

“As leaders in the Florida GOP and Moms for Liberty, the Zieglers have made a habit out of attacking anything they perceive as going against ‘family values’—be it reproductive rights or the existence of LGBTQ+ Floridians,” said Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried in a statement. “The level of hypocrisy in this situation is stunning.”

Mike Johnson’s January 6 Tape Confession Destroys GOP’s Favorite Talking Point

The House speaker announced Republicans are editing the January 6 tapes. That ruins one of their main arguments about what happened that day.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

House Speaker Mike Johnson just accidentally obliterated the Republican Party’s favorite conspiracy theory: that the January 6 insurrection was carried out by undercover federal agents and members of antifa.

Johnson told a press conference Tuesday that the GOP is editing footage of the insurrection to prevent the Justice Department from potentially identifying rioters.

“We have to blur some of the faces of persons who participated in the events of that day because we don’t want them to be retaliated against and to be charged by the DOJ,” he said.

And with just one sentence, Johnson has given away the entire game. Republicans have spent the past nearly three years insisting that the riot was caused by antifa, Black Lives Matter protesters, and even undercover FBI agents. But if that’s true, then why would the GOP want to shield those people from identification?

Republicans have thrown out conspiracy after conspiracy in an attempt to divert blame from their supporters—so much so that it’s hard to capture the full scale of it in this piece. In 2021, Texas Representative Louie Gohmert said that federal agents had embedded in extremist groups and then “egged on” rioters to incite the January 6 attack.

Just last month, Representative Clay Higgins said “ghost buses” packed with “FBI informants” descended on Washington, D.C., the night of January 5, so they could pretend to be supporters of Donald Trump.

One Trump supporter, Ray Epps, sued Fox News in July for defamation. Prominent right-wing figures on the network, including former Fox host Tucker Carlson, repeatedly claimed Epps was an FBI agent.

In reality, hundreds of people arrested for participating in the January 6 attack said they went to Washington because they felt Trump had personally told them to. And now, Johnson has revealed that Republicans don’t want any more people who tried to overthrow the government to face any repercussions.

Speaker Mike Johnson’s Right-Wing Ties Keep Getting Stranger and Scarier

A new report details the violent history of Mike Johnson’s legal clients.

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty Images

Before joining Congress, Representative Mike Johnson was a lawyer for conservative Christian causes. And one of his regular clients was a violent radical Christian activist who described himself and Johnson as “brothers.”

Johnson worked for years alongside anti-gay activist and former radical Christian preacher Grant Storms, The Daily Beast reported Tuesday. Storms told the Beast that Johnson had done copious amounts of legal work for him in the early to mid-2000s, all for free.

“We were brothers on the path,” Storms told the Beast. “He always had our back.”

Storms met Johnson in the early 2000s when the latter was working at Alliance Defending Freedom, the far-right Christian group that has recently sought to ban the abortion medication mifepristone and public drag performances. Johnson worked at the ADF for nearly a decade.

Storms initially reached out for help removing what he called “lewd” imagery from a bus station ad. He claimed the ad included an image of men having sex.

Johnson continued working with Storms after that, and he helped convince New Orleans officials to grant Storms a permit for a protest against an annual Pride celebration. Storms’s protest ended up getting national attention when an anti-gay protester attempted to murder a man with a steak knife. Storms said the attacker was not part of his organization, but the assailant later told police he went to Storms’s event because he wanted to “kill a gay man.”

Johnson represented Storms a few more times until 2005, when Storms said they lost touch. But just four years later, Johnson represented Storms’s son Jason in a violent anti-abortion case.

Jason Storms is the head of Operation Save America, one of the largest—if not the largest—militant anti-abortion groups in the country. The group made national headlines in 2009 when it was linked to the murder of Dr. George Tiller, a Kansas abortion provider. The group, then called Operation Rescue, said the killer was not a member. But he had been in touch with an Operation Rescue official about Tiller’s whereabouts.

That same year, Johnson represented Jason Storms and several other anti-abortion extremists, arguing their free speech rights had been violated when a federal court barred them from protesting outside abortion clinics.

Jason Storms also participated in the January 6 insurrection—almost fitting given that Johnson led the amicus brief that more than 100 Republicans signed in an effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election results.

It is, unfortunately, no longer a shock that Johnson supports far-right beliefs. He has described abortion as a “holocaust,” blamed the fall of Rome on LGBTQ people, and cited the “great replacement theory,” the far-right theory that white people are being replaced by nonwhite immigrants. Johnson flies a Christian nationalist flag outside his office and speaks regularly at far-right events.

But it is shocking—and terrifying—that Johnson is able to espouse these beliefs with no pushback on Capitol Hill. His ideological leanings suggest that the issues he supports and plans to prioritize in legislation will stray further and further into the fringes. And that could come at the cost of democracy.