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Dems maintain they’re ‘looking forward’ as questions about Biden loom

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Democrats thought they were done with Joe Biden. Now, new revelations about his mental and physical decline while in office are putting a harsh spotlight back on him — and Democrats’ failings last year — at a critical moment in the party’s attempts to move on.

On Blue Light News, Democrats rallying against the GOP megabill that could slash Medicaid benefits and enact sweeping tax cuts instead ran into blaring headlines this week about Biden’s deteriorating condition and doomed campaign.

“It’s a discussion that was overdue. I don’t know if it’s helpful, but it’s unavoidable,” said Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.), the 78-year-old who called for Biden to step aside from the ticket last year.

In interviews with more than two dozen other Democrats on Capitol Hill, lawmakers met questions about Biden’s campaign failings and mental lapses with heavy sighs and topical pivots. Many talked about “looking forward” — to combating President Donald Trump, to retaking control of Congress — in a sign of how awkward and potentially damaging the recriminations about Biden have become.

Many in the party had treated Biden with kid gloves in the aftermath of Kamala Harris’ loss to Trump, with lawmakers publicly and privately lauding Harris’ effort and eliding Biden’s drag on the ticket.

Now, most in the party are desperate to talk about anything else.

“Our energy needs to be in our priorities to be looking forward, not backwards,” said Rep. Greg Stanton (D-Ariz.). “This relitigation is backwards looking, and that’s not very helpful to us.”

Top Democratic congressional leaders also shrugged off Biden when confronted this week with the latest divulgences about his mental and physical acuity — and whether they helped cover them up.

“We’re not looking backward, we’re looking forward at this moment in time,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a Tuesday press conference. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer echoed him hours later: “We’re just looking forward.”

A Biden spokesperson declined to comment.

But the party’s problems aren’t going away with Biden. All week, while contending with news coverage and a forthcoming book about the past president, the party was also confronting turmoil at the Democratic National Committee over a DNC official’s effort to challenge “asleep at the wheel” Democrats. House Democrats raced to shut down a rogue Trump impeachment effort by Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-Mich.). And there was a spate of negative press about one of the party’s own senators, John Fetterman.

Some Democrats welcomed the renewed conversations about Biden, worried their party has yet to fully reckon with last year’s electoral shellacking. It has been a point of tension in the party since last year, flaring up for some House members at the White House Christmas party. One Democratic lawmaker approached Harris in the photo line to tell her “we love you,” according to a person familiar with the interaction and granted anonymity to speak freely. When the lawmaker got to Biden, the then-president asked, “Well, do you love me, too?”

Even today, there are Democrats who think the party should be doing more to learn from their mistakes in 2024.

“Joe Biden clearly just was not capable of delivering the message we needed to deliver in 2024,” said Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) “Why did it take so long? Why was it so hard to recognize that and make the change? So I guess to some degree it is helpful to have that conversation.”

“It’s OK for us to come to grips with our failures so that we can make the changes necessary to win. And while I am very much focused on the future, I’m concerned that there’s still a lot of denial in our party about how badly we’ve lost,” said Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.), who was one of the first Democrats to call for Biden to step aside last summer.

He added: “Some of the same people who just want to move on are the same people who are basically in denial that we lost.”

Others like Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.) acknowledged that the former president clearly lost a step, but didn’t believe it was a death knell to the party’s prospects of winning future elections.

“Look, most Democrats … had no idea that Biden had lost some of it — not all of it — but he lost some of it. It’s one of those things that happens in all aspects of life. You don’t want it to happen at that level, but it does,” Cleaver said. “I think some people in the White House who were trying to be helpful, didn’t talk to the right people who … could have addressed it a little better. But it’s not like that’s going to destroy the Democratic Party.”

But their views are far from the prevailing ones. Instead, on Capitol Hill, Democrats were rushing to shift the public’s focus to the House GOP’s megabill — and a moment of unity for Democrats as they lined up in opposition to Trump’s domestic agenda. Ideological disagreements on taxes, immigration and entitlements have largely been paved over with the legislation giving Democrats plenty to oppose.

“We have more important things to talk about,” said Rep. Betty McCollum (D-Minn.) when asked questions about revelations about Biden’s mental acuity this week — a far cry from where she was some 10 months ago, when she joined an ever-growing caucus of Democrats calling for the then-president to leave the Democratic ticket.

Others saw this moment as another chance to take a dig at the GOP.

“There’s nothing more unifying than watching Republicans try to rip [health care] away and absolutely destroy our economy,” said Rep. Hillary Scholten (D-Mich.).

“So I think important conversations are being had about the values that unite us.”

Andrew Howard contributed to this report.

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Furious allies lobby Trump to keep deporting migrants

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Top allies of President Donald Trump are furious at the White House’s new rhetorical emphasis on deporting violent criminals over all unauthorized immigrants — and they’re launching a lobbying effort to reverse that reversal.

A group of longtime Trump allies, immigration restrictionist groups and hawkish policy experts have formed the Mass Deportation Coalition to lobby the Trump administration to refocus its efforts on deporting all eligible migrants. The group has commissioned new polling from one of Trump’s top pollsters to back its thesis that doing so will ensure GOP wins this November, and plans to share that data with White House officials, agency heads and every member of Congress.

The new poll was conducted by McLaughlin & Associates, a pollster that Trump has used in all of his presidential elections, and shared exclusively with POLITICO. It found that 66 percent of likely 2026 voters support deporting any migrants who enter the country illegally. When asked if they support deporting all deportable migrants, not just violent criminals, a majority (58 percent) say they do.

Eighty-seven percent of Trump 2024 voters surveyed, including 79 percent of Hispanic Trump voters, want the president to exceed the previous largest deportation effort in history, led in the 1950s by former President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

“Overwhelmingly, Trump voters expect this from the administration. They don’t just support it, they expect it,” said Chris Chmielenski, president of the Immigration Accountability Project, which advocates for conservative immigration policy. “This is a good way to re-energize the base as we move into the midterms, the same way that Trump was able to do so in the lead up to the 2024 general election.”

The new coalition includes Mark Morgan, the former acting commissioner of Customs and Border Protection under Trump; Erik Prince, a Trump ally and former Blackwater CEO; as well as a number of conservative think-tanks and lobbying groups close to the Trump administration including the Heritage Foundation, Federation for American Immigration Reform American Moment, and the Claremont Institute.

Morgan, who also served as chief of the U.S. Border Patrol under both former President Barack Obama and Trump, said a deportation strategy that involves targeting only violent criminals, gang members or terrorists for deportation is “a Clinton-Obama-Biden policy. And it’s historically been a disastrous failure.”

The campaign comes as other Republican strategists and lawmakers warn Trump’s mass deportation agenda is becoming increasingly unpopular following ICE operations in Minnesota that killed two U.S. citizens, and could hurt the party’s chances of retaining control of Congress.

Since then, the administration has pivoted its message on immigration enforcement while overhauling its leadership at DHS. Border czar Tom Homan replaced CBP chief Greg Bovino in Minneapolis and drew down the immigration enforcement presence there; the president ousted DHS Secretary Kristi Noem last week and tapped Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) to replace her; and even Trump, in his State of the Union address, focused mostly on border security and deporting violent criminals.

On Tuesday, White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair instructed House Republicans to curb their hardline rhetoric and instead focus on removing violent criminals. Blair doubled down in a post on X, writing thatRepublicans are focused on “deporting the violent/criminal illegals that Joe Biden & the Democrats in Congress let in.”

Those comments angered members of the coalition, who say taking a “worst of the worst” approach to deportations is not a winning policy.

Still, the coalition’s poll results differ drastically from other recent polling on immigration: A January POLITICO poll found that nearly half of U.S. adults say Trump’s mass deportation campaign is too aggressive, including 1 in 5 of his 2024 voters. AFebruary NPR/PBS/Marist poll found that 65 percent of U.S. adults think Immigration and Customs Enforcements has gone too far in enforcing immigration laws.

In a statement, White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson denied that the White House has shifted its deportation approach.

“Nobody is changing the Administration’s immigration enforcement agenda,” Jackson said. “President Trump’s highest priority has always been the deportation of illegal alien criminals who endanger American communities. As the Department of Homeland Security has repeatedly said, approximately 70 percent of deportations to date have been illegal aliens with criminal records. Thanks to President Trump’s strong immigration enforcement policies, approximately 3 million illegals have left the United States, either through forced deportation or self-deportation, with zero illegals coming through the most secure border in U.S. History for nine straight months.”

According to an internal DHS document obtained by CBS News, less than 14 percent of those arrested by ICE in Trump’s first year in office had violent criminal records.

Hispanic GOP lawmakers have recently lobbied DHS and the White House, expressing concern that the aggressive deportation approach could alienate the Hispanic voters that helped secure Trump’s victory in 2024. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) acknowledged those concerns Tuesday, telling reporters that there has been a “hiccup” with some Hispanic and other voters who view DHS’ approach as “overzealous.”

“Everybody can describe it differently, but here’s the good news,” Johnson added. “We’re in a course-correction mode right now.”

But the Mass Deportation Coalition is hoping its poll — which was commissioned by Chmielenski’s Immigration Accountability Project and conducted between Feb. 27 and March 3 — will course-correct that course correction. The online survey had a sample of 2,000 likely voters and a margin of error of 2.2 percent.

Chmielenski said he views the first year of Trump’s term as “phase one” of this deportation push, and now wants to see the administration enter “phase two”: by focusing on worksite raids, targeting any deportable individual and reaching 1 million removals in 2026. The Department of Homeland Security said it deported more than 600,000 individuals in 2025.

“Now that we’re a year into the administration, the public sentiment hasn’t changed,” Chmielenski said. “We still believe the Trump administration … has a mandate on mass deportations.”

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Tillis says DOJ probe of Powell ‘reaching the point of the absurd’

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Tillis says DOJ probe of Powell ‘reaching the point of the absurd’

The North Carolina Republican said Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh “possesses impeccable credentials and a clear vision for maintaining the Fed’s independence…
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House GOP eyes reconciliation process to pass Middle East war aid

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House GOP eyes reconciliation process to pass Middle East war aid

It’s just one option being considered as Republicans seek to advance the White House’s biggest priorities…
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