Sen. Raphael Warnock slams Trump for selling Bibles



Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., on Sunday excoriated former President Donald Trump over the $60 Bibles he is selling in partnership with country music star Lee Greenwood.

Warnock, who serves as senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, condemned Trump for selling the Christian holy text at a high price during an interview on CNN.

“The Bible does not need Donald Trump’s endorsement, and Jesus, in the very last week of his life, chased the money changers out of the temple, those who would take sacred things and use them as cheap relics to be sold in the marketplace,” he said. “The sad thing is that none of us are surprised by this — this is what we expect from the former president.”

Warnock pointed to Trump’s failed business ventures including steaks and the defunct Trump University, both of which have faced legal repercussions.

“If he’s not selling us steaks, he’s selling us a school whose degree is not worth the paper that is written on it. If he’s not selling us a school, he’s selling us sneakers, and now he’s trying to sell the scriptures,” he said.

The Georgia Democrat argued that Trump selling pricey Bibles is a “risky bet” because the text conflicts with the former president’s conduct.

“Donald Trump is doing what he’s always done, and this time it’s a risky bet because the folks who buy those Bibles might actually open them up, where it says things like, ‘Thou shalt not lie. Thou shalt not bear false witness,’ where it warns about wolves dressed up in sheep’s clothing,” he added. “I think you ought to be careful. This is risky business for somebody like Donald Trump.”

The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to NBC News’ request for comment when asked about Warnock’s remarks.

Trump began promoting the Bibles during Holy Week, the days leading up to Easter and a sacred time for many Christians. In a video promoting the Bibles posted to his Truth Social platform, Trump said that the holy text is “my favorite book” and warned that “religion and Christianity are the biggest things missing from this country, and I truly believe that we need to bring them back.”

Trump, who has a long history of selling branded merchandise under his name, is set to receive royalties from the sales of his $60 Bible, a person familiar with the arrangement told The New York Times. The terms of the royalty agreement are unclear.





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Lawmakers on Capitol Hill remember longtime former Sen. Joe Lieberman


Lawmakers on Capitol Hill remember longtime former Sen. Joe Lieberman – CBS News

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Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are mourning the loss of Joe Lieberman, 82, a longtime senator from Connecticut who was once the Democratic Party’s nominee for vice president in 2000. He died Wednesday in New York City from complications from a fall, according to a statement from his family.

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New Jersey Democrat targets Sen. Menendez’s access to classified information — and Trump’s



WASHINGTON — Now charged with 18 federal counts, embattled Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., faces a mounting pressure campaign from his colleagues in Congress.

Rep. Mikie Sherrill, D-N.J., will announce legislation Friday that would prohibit people charged with certain crimes from receiving classified information, implicitly targeting Menendez, who was charged with bribery, conspiring with foreign governments and other counts.

If approved by Congress, the bill — titled the Guarding the United States Against Reckless Disclosures Act, or GUARD Act for short — would apply to any federal official or candidate charged with compromising U.S. national security, acting as a foreign agent, obstructing an official proceeding or unlawfully retaining classified national defense information, according to a copy first shared with NBC News.

The bill could also apply to former President Donald Trump. In addition to members of Congress, Sherrill’s legislation would cover the president, the vice president, candidates for federal office who receive classified information, members of the military and employees of the Transportation Security Administration and the U.S. Postal Service.

Trump, who has been charged with mishandling classified information and with obstructing Congress’ certification of the 2020 presidential election results, will soon begin to receive intelligence briefings, as is customary for presidential nominees to ensure a smooth transition of power. It’s one of the reasons Sherrill is introducing the legislation now.

“We have a former president who has shown a long history of disclosing secrets to adversaries, trying to hide and destroy information, not being clear on what he’s held and is now under indictment for these infractions,” Sherrill said in an interview Wednesday. “And yet our intelligence community is supposed to start briefing him?

“This legislation seeks to remedy that and make sure that people who are under indictment cannot have access to state secrets,” she added.

Trump and Menendez have pleaded not guilty, and neither has yet gone to trial. But Sherrill, a former federal prosecutor and Navy pilot, believes neither man should have access to classified information in the meantime. 

Sherrill called on Menendez to resign hours after he was initially indicted in September and accused of taking lavish gifts in exchange for using his influence as the chair of the powerful Foreign Relations Committee at the time.

Menendez stepped down as chair in the fall but has rejected calls to resign from Congress from more than half of his Democratic Senate colleagues and the entire New Jersey House delegation, except for his son, Democratic Rep. Robert Menendez Jr.

“It has long been a concern of mine about keeping access to classified information from people who seem willing to give away state secrets or undermine our national security,” Sherrill said. “So of course when Menendez was charged with acting as a foreign agent — how someone like that could have access to classified information when he has already misused it in such a powerful position is mind-boggling to me.”

Her bill would allow majority votes in the House and the Senate to override it and allow access to sensitive information case by case.

Menendez’s most vocal critic, Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., introduced his own resolution to strip him of his committee assignments and ban him from receiving classified information after he continued to attend briefings on sensitive national security matters. But that legislation hasn’t gone anywhere. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., described Menendez’s legal woes as “serious allegations” but has declined to call on him to step down.

Sherrill said she didn’t discuss her effort with Fetterman.

Despite growing criticism and increased scrutiny, Menendez announced this month that he would run for re-election as an independent if he is exonerated. He is scheduled to go on trial in May, and the independent filing deadline is June 4.

“At a time like this, when we have a former president like Trump trying to call into question a lot of the institutions of our government, a lot of our values, it’s very important that we have leaders in office that people can have faith in,” Sherrill said.

“I don’t think you can argue that anyone can have faith in Menendez, who has used his office to enrich himself, who has put his interests, in a very Trump-like way, quite frankly, ahead of the interests of the nation,” she said.



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Former Sen. Joe Lieberman has died


Former Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman has died, his family announced in a statement Wednesday. He was 82.

Lieberman died Wednesday afternoon in New York after suffering complications from a fall, his family said in the statement.

“Senator Lieberman’s love of God, his family, and America endured throughout his life of service in the public interest,” his family said.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.



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Sen. Raphael Warnock says “Georgia voters are going to do for Joe Biden what they did for me”


Sen. Raphael Warnock says “Georgia voters are going to do for Joe Biden what they did for me” – CBS News

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Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock tells “Face the Nation” that he believes that “Georgia voters are going to do for Joe Biden what they did for me” and go blue again in 2020. “The more Donald Trump talks, the better our fortunes will be,” he said about Democrats.

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Sen. Lisa Murkowski signals openness to leaving the GOP



Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a vocal critic of former President Donald Trump, signaled that she would be open to leaving the Republican Party.

Pressed on whether she is considering becoming an independent, Murkowski replied, “I’m very independent-minded,” adding, “I just regret that our party is seemingly becoming a party of Donald Trump.”

Murkowski demurred when asked whether she would be open to being an independent who causes with Republicans.

“I am navigating my way through some very interesting political times. Let’s just leave it at that,” she said in an interview that aired on CNN Sunday.

The Alaska Republican also reiterated her stance against voting for Trump in the 2024 presidential election.

“I wish that as Republicans, we had a nominee that I could get behind. I certainly can’t get behind Donald Trump,” she said.

Murkowski told NBC News this month that she “could not” vote for Trump or President Joe Biden in the 2024 election.

Murkowski and fellow Trump critic Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, had endorsed Trump challenger Nikki Haley ahead of Super Tuesday. But Haley dropped her bid after losing every primary contest except Vermont and Washington, D.C.

Before Haley ended her campaign, Murkowski told NBC News that she wasn’t sure how she’d approach the presidential election if Haley dropped out — and signaled she wasn’t alone in her uncertainty.

“Lisa Murkowski is not the only one in this camp right now,” she said.

Murkowski is among the seven Republican senators who voted to convict Trump in his second impeachment trial after the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol attack and became a target for Trump and his allies.

Murkowski, who has served in the Senate for more than two decades, won re-election in 2022 against Trump-endorsed Kelly Tshibaka, a former Alaska Department of Administration commissioner.





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Transcript: Sen. Raphael Warnock on “Face the Nation,” March 24, 2024


The following is a transcript of an interview with Sen. Raphael Warnock, Democrat of Georgia, that aired on March 24, 2024.


MARGARET BRENNAN: Welcome back to “Face The Nation”. We go now to Georgia Democratic Senator, Reverend Raphael Warnock. He is part of President Biden’s reelection campaign. Good morning, and welcome to Face The Nation.

SENATOR RAPHAEL WARNOCK (D-GA): Thank you so much for inviting me.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Senator, your state of Georgia was so key to President Biden’s win back in 2020. Our polling now, though, shows Donald Trump with 51% of the potential 2024 vote, Biden at 48%. When it comes to Black voters, support has dropped since the last election. Why do you think that enthusiasm has declined?

SEN. WARNOCK: Well, listen, you know, it- it’s still relatively early in the campaign. And I can tell you as someone whose name has been on the ballot five times in less than three years, that the polls don’t tell you nearly as much as the people do. I think that at the end of the day, Black voters, Georgia voters, will see that this is a binary choice. And the- the more Donald Trump talks, the better our fortunes will be. And in the end, I believe that Georgia voters are going to do for Joe Biden what they did for me.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Respectfully, Senator, I- I keep hearing that argument that, oh, the other guy’s worse, is the affirmative argument somehow, I mean, what do you think is actually helping Trump’s appeal, though, among Black voters?

SEN. WARNOCK: Actually, I think we’re seeing a whole lot more than that. Look, Black wealth is up 60%. We’ve seen a 30 year high in the creation of Black small businesses. We’ve invested $7 billion in historically Black colleges and universities, and Black unemployment is at an all time low. 

And so I’m very proud of the work that we’ve been able to do together, in partnership with the Biden administration. I’m proud of my legislation that capped the cost of insulin to no more than $35 of out of pocket costs for seniors. I’m trying to get that done for everybody. And, you know, I- as I move across the state and across the country, I’ve made it a habit of late to ask people, if you or somebody you know has had your student debt canceled. And hands go up all over the room. We’ve done $144 billion dollars of student debt cancellation, helping some 4 million Americans. And- and again, I- I think that at the end of the day, people will see that this is a binary choice, the- the juxtaposition, the contrast could not be more stark. And they’re going to send Joe Biden and Kamala Harris back to the White House.

MARGARET BRENNAN: But in- in states like Georgia, Democrats have been campaigning on action on voting rights, safeguarding democracy, police reform. The administration hasn’t been able to legislate, really, on any of those things. Trayvon Martin’s mom was at an event this past week and said, “The people are not understanding what the politicians are doing, and the politicians definitely don’t understand what the people want.” She was talking about the state level, but at the federal level, how do you explain the inaction on these issues?

SEN. WARNOCK: Well, nobody has been more vigilant and focused on the issue and the Senate on voting rights than me. I was John Lewis’s pastor. And I saw up close his courage, the depth of his commitment, his understanding that change is slow. That’s the nature of politics and history. Often we take one step forward, we take another step back, but we keep pushing. And in a real sense, in the history of this country, there are moments when the democracy expands. There are moments when it contracts. And a Donald Trump part two, would represent a contraction that we cannot bear. When we think about the threat; the threat on voting rights, the threat on women’s reproductive rights, their ability to decide what happens to their own body. And so we remain vigilant. I reintroduced a few days ago, the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. And I remind my colleagues that the last time we authorized voting rights in this country, it passed the Senate 98 to zero. It was signed into law by Republican President George W. Bush– 

MARGARET BRENNAN: Has Leader Schumer told you when he’ll bring that to a vote? 

SEN. WARNOCK: — It’s- we have reintroduced it, and we will continue to push the issue. Here’s the thing. I think that the reason why we’re seeing such pushback from the other side on voting rights, on an issue that used to be bipartisan, is because Donald Trump and his allies know that they are losing the argument. They know that they are out of step with the American people on voting rights, on reproductive choice, on the ability of workers to participate and enjoy some of the prosperity that they’re creating for others. People who know they’re losing the argument tend to engage in voter suppression, but we won’t let up for one minute and I won’t rest until we pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and the Freedom to Vote Act. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: You have been outspoken on the issue of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. According to CBS polling, it is 61% of Black adults polled by CBS say Biden should encourage Israel to decrease or stop military actions and the feelings are really strong, particularly among younger voters. Recently, we also saw a thousand Black pastors from congregations across the country issue the demand for a ceasefire. Sir, of all the issues facing the Black community, why do you think this particular one is resonating in the way that it is?

SEN. WARNOCK: Well, you know, we- we in the African American community, understand human struggle. We know it when we see it. And I called for a negotiated ceasefire just a couple of weeks ago, on the floor of the United States Senate. Look, the state of Israel is our ally. And there – they are our most important partner in the Middle East. But right now, we are having an important conversation about principles about American values. In a real sense, that’s what’s at stake. We cannot forget about the awful attack of Hamas on October 7, against innocent people, including Americans. We can’t turn away from that. And at the same time, we cannot turn away from the scenes of awful suffering and human catastrophe in Gaza. And so we will continue to fight for a negotiated ceasefire. I have said very clearly, that I think for the- for Mr. Netanyahu to go into Rafah, where some 1.4 million Palestinians are now sheltering, would be morally unjustifiable. It would be unconscionable. And I hope that at the end of the day, cooler heads will prevail. And that one day we can get to a two-state solution. A  Jewish democratic state of Israel living in peace, alongside its neighbors, a moment where Palestinian mothers and Jewish mothers can put their children to sleep at peace at night, and awaken to a world that embraces their humanity. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: In terms of what the US can control, the question of US military support for Israel is being debated within your party, as you know. Just yesterday, 11 organizations who operate in Gaza, including the Episcopal Church, Oxfam, Save the Children, issued a letter saying “the humanitarian response in Gaza, including us funded humanitarian assistance has been consistently and arbitrarily denied, restricted and impeded by the Israeli authorities.” Do you worry that continuing to provide American weapons to Israel will sacrifice moral authority? And do you believe that the Biden administration should suspend arms transfers?

SEN. WARNOCK: Listen, Israel lives in a dangerous neighborhood. And its enemies are more than just Hamas. They are serious and geopolitical concerns that we have to pay attention to. But look, we can walk and chew gum at the same time. We can be consistent in our support of Israel’s right to defend itself. And at the same time, be true to American values, and engage this catastrophic humanitarian situation that’s on the ground. And I’ve been saying this now for months, we’ve got to make sure that humanitarian aid gets in, to the people of Gaza. And ultimately, we need a ceasefire –

(CROSSTALK) 

MARGARET BRENNAN: But should it trigger a suspension of arms transfers?

SEN. WARNOCK: Because the answer to death and destruction is not more death and destruction.  

We have a security supplemental right now that’s already passed the Senate and it hasn’t been put on the floor of the House. That security supplemental will provide humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza. It will support our partners in the Indo-Pacific arena.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes.

SEN. WARNOCK: And it will also check Russian aggression in Ukraine. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: Okay, but I hear you stopping short of saying it should stop transfer. 17 Democratic senators have said the administration should reject Israel’s claims that it is not violating international law. You are not comfortable with that statement.

SEN. WARNOCK: I am saying that we have to continue to engage our partner and to ensure that humanitarian aid gets to the people of Gaza. And ultimately we need a ceasefire.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Sir, I know it is Palm Sunday and you will be headed to church and to preach today. Thank you for sharing your time this morning with us. We’ll be right back.

WARNOCK: Great to be with you.



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Nikki Haley criticizes GOP Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s military blockade


WASHINGTON — Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley on Tuesday argued that the months-long hold Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., has imposed on military nominations is having a detrimental effect on servicemembers as well as military readiness.

“There’s got to be other ways to go about doing this,” Haley said on conservative Hugh Hewitt’s radio show about Tuberville’s blockade on military promotions, adding that service members don’t feel like anyone has the military’s back.

Tuberville has blocked nominees in the Senate from receiving promotions for more than 250 high-ranking military officers over a Defense Department policy to pay for the travel expenses of service members traveling to other states for reproductive health care services, including abortions.

Service members “look at the fact that they’re, you know, dangling these promotions out there and using them as fodder,” said Haley, the former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. “I mean, they’re looking at the fact that people don’t see these, you know, men and women who serve as heroes anymore. And that’s sad, and it’s terrible. And you know, I appreciate what Tuberville’s trying to do. I do. Like, it’s totally wrong that the Department of Defense is doing this. But have we gotten so low that this is how we have to go about stopping it?”

Haley, who’s running for the GOP presidential nomination, said the Pentagon shouldn’t have instituted this policy in the first place.

“You know, for my husband who’s serving overseas, and for all those military men and women, the idea that this is what they’re looking back and seeing, and this is what they are dealing with on top of the stresses of keeping themselves safe and being away from their families, it’s wrong,” she said.

Haley voiced frustration with the fact that many families, as a result of Tuberville’s hold, are in limbo. “It’s incredibly stressful for the family. But it’s incredibly stressful for the servicemember because their life is on hold,” she said.

Asked for comment, Tuberville spokesman Steven Stafford said he didn’t view Haley’s comments as criticism, saying, “She regrets that it is necessary but doesn’t seem to dispute that it is indeed necessary.” Stafford also noted that the hold is on nominees for generals and admirals, not all officers in the military.

NBC News also reached out to Haley’s presidential campaign.

Former President Donald Trump, the frontrunner in the presidential race, has remained silent on the issue, including over the weekend when he took the stage with Tuberville in Alabama for a campaign event.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, also running for the White House, recently defended Tuberville’s blockade. “They are funding abortion tourism, which is not an appropriate thing for the military to be doing,” DeSantis said. “So I think our Republicans in the Congress should just take a stand on this. The [Pentagon] should stand down.”

Tuberville has spoken to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin several times, but he hasn’t relented. President Joe Biden and the White House have repeatedly blasted his effort. Last month, Army Secretary Christine Wormuth said that the Defense Department was unlikely to change the policy that Tuberville is protesting. “It’s the right thing to do, and I don’t think we’re going to change it,” she told NBC News.



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Sen. Tim Scott says president can’t end birthright citizenship while touring U.S.-Mexico border


Sen. Tim Scott says president can’t end birthright citizenship while touring U.S.-Mexico border – CBS News

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Republican presidential candidate Sen. Tim Scott toured the southern border in Arizona on Friday, offering his thoughts on birthright citizenship that differed from GOP rivals former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. CBS News immigration reporter Camilo Montoya-Galvez has more on that.

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Hun Sen heir could get New York business reception after Cambodia succession


By Simon Lewis and David Brunnstrom

WASHINGTON, Aug 4 (Reuters) – The incoming hereditary ruler of Cambodia, a country Washington is keen to pull out of Beijing’s orbit, could meet CEOs of U.S. firms interested in investing there in New York next month, the head of the U.S. business lobby for Southeast Asia told Reuters.

Cambodia’s long-ruling Prime Minister Hun Sen has said he will hand power to his Western-educated son, Hun Manet, 45, this month, after the incumbent Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) swept a July general election in which it was virtually unopposed.

“We hope to host (Hun Manet). We hope to see if there’s a way to start a new chapter” between the Washington and Phnom Penh, Ted Osius, president of the U.S.-ASEAN Business Council said on Thursday.

“It’s not an entirely new chapter (but) he’s not his dad, he’s a different person. So maybe there’s some opportunities here.”

Talks were underway for a hotel reception around the U.N. General Assembly (UNGA) meetings held in September, said Osius, a former career diplomat who served as America’s ambassador to Cambodia’s neighbor Vietnam.

“(We’ll) bring in CEOs, high-level execs who are interested in Cambodia and might want to get a view of the new guy. And I think he would welcome that.”

Washington, which has over the years denounced Hun Sen’s authoritarian and anti-democratic moves, has said the elections were “neither free nor fair.”

Hun Manet, educated at Western institutions including the West Point military academy in the United States, would not want to be “owned lock stock and barrel” by another country, Osius said, a reference to Cambodia’s close ties to U.S. rival China.

Cambodia’s decision to allow China’s navy to develop its naval base at Ream has upset Washington and neighbors worried it will give Beijing a new outpost near the contested South China Sea.

Osius said the U.S. approach to Cambodia had been “punitive” and Washington should look for opportunities for dialogue.

“Better for (Hun Manet) if there if he’s got some strategic options, and that could mean improving ties with us,” he said.

A spokesperson for the U.S. State Department said it had no specific comment on Hun Manet’s future leadership, but the formation of a new government was an opportunity for the CPP to improve Cambodia’s international standing.

Ways it could do this included “restoring genuine multi-party democracy, ending politically motivated trials, reversing convictions of government critics, and allowing independent media outlets to reopen and function without interference.”

Asked if Hun Manet and U.S. officials could meet on the sidelines of UNGA, the spokesperson added: “We are still determining schedules for U.S. principals and do not have any further information to share.”

Cambodia’s Washington embassy did not immediately respond to a request for comment. (Reporting by Simon Lewis and David Brunnstrom Editing by Marguerita Choy)



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