Greene removed from committees
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I wonder, is there a provision anywhere -- the Constitution or historical precedent or something else -- that gives Congress the right to reject a duly elected representative for reasons of moral turpitude or inappropriateness of any kind? Given that that creep from Alabama almost got in, and now this Greene creature, maybe Congress should pass a resolution or something . . .
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An elected official has the right to be in congress. That's as far as the constitution goes.
As far as what that individual's responsibilities, committee assignment, etc are, that, traditionally, was the job of the party to which s/he belongs. However, that's tradition, not House rules, I think.
Now, that tradition is erased.
When the GOP take the House, it will be interesting to see if the remove members from committees who are science-deniers (the idiot who was afraid that Guam would capsize), those inciting violence (Maxine Waters), and those with questionable security status (Eric Swalwell).
I don't think, because the GOP Congress doesn't have a
set of ballsspine."Politics ain't bean-bag" some guy from the South told me.
The GOP should
manwoman up and return the favor. They did that with the elimination of the judicial filibuster. They should do it again. Of course, it'll be considered a serious breach of tradition should they do it because shut up. -
The best way to handle idiots isn't to stop them, it's to let them blow themselves up.
Figuratively, of course. I don't think she'd actually wear explosive underpants.
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@doctor-phibes said in Greene removed from committees:
I don't think she'd actually wear explosive underpants.
Absolutely not. Everybody knows the Jews have cornered the market on explosive underpants. She wouldn't be caught dead in them.
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@renauda said in Greene removed from committees:
I think what you to say is give her the stage and let her dig herself into a hole from which she can't get out.
That’s what everyone said about Trump in 2016.