Netanyahu FUMING After Kamala Harris Calls For Gaza Case-Fired, End to War

  • 2 months ago
Netanyahu FUMING After Kamala Harris Calls For Gaza Case-Fired, End to War
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Summary:
The outrage around the Secret Service catastrophe begins to die down as a new USSS acting director was named. But this should only fuel the fire of contempt. In this episode, I discuss the shocking similarities between Kim Cheatle and Ronald Rowe, even more new developments in the assassination case, as well as the incoming freight train that is Kamala Harris for President.

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Transcript
00:00Good morning and happy Friday.
00:12I'm Amber Duke and joined by my co-host Jessica Burbank today.
00:16Jessica, good morning.
00:17I just wanted to get another day of rising in with you, Amber.
00:20You just can't stay away.
00:21All right.
00:22We have a lot of news to get to today, as always, and we're going to start off with
00:28Vice President Kamala Harris meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
00:33yesterday.
00:34The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee delivered remarks following the meeting, expressing
00:39her unwavering support for the existence of the state of Israel.
00:44Now Harris also underscored the need for a ceasefire in Gaza and expressed a forcefulness
00:50on ending the war.
00:51So I just had a frank and constructive meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu.
00:55I told him that I will always ensure that Israel is able to defend itself, including
01:01from Iran and Iran-backed militias such as Hamas and Hezbollah.
01:07I have had an unwavering commitment to the existence of the state of Israel, to its security,
01:14and to the people of Israel.
01:16I've said it many times, but it bears repeating.
01:19Israel has a right to defend itself and how it does so matters.
01:26Now Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, met with Harris after he spent almost three
01:31hours with Joe Biden.
01:33They were discussing a Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal.
01:38Netanyahu was reportedly disappointed with Harris's remarks after their meeting.
01:43One Israeli official said, quote, we hope that Harris's public criticism of Israel won't
01:48give Hamas the impression that there's daylight between the U.S. and Israel, and as a result
01:53make it harder to get a deal.
01:56The Israeli prime minister will meet with former President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago
02:01estate today.
02:03It's their first meeting since Trump left the White House, and sources told CNN the
02:08meeting was requested by Netanyahu.
02:11Joining us now to discuss is White House columnist at The Hill, Niall Stanage.
02:16Niall, good morning.
02:17Thank you for joining us.
02:19How problematic do you think this could be electorally for Kamala Harris?
02:24She has signaled public support for Israel, but also has, of course, suggested there should
02:30be a ceasefire.
02:32She also put out a pretty strong statement condemning some of the more violent protests
02:36that took place in the nation's capital earlier this week.
02:40Has she done enough to satisfy the Democratic base that is more pro-Palestinian on this
02:45issue?
02:46Well, I think the electoral element of this issue is really complicated.
02:52I mean, people, of course, have very strong views on the morality of it in various ways,
02:57but electorally it has always been more complicated for Democrats than for Republicans, because
03:01most Republican voters are pretty strongly pro-Israel.
03:05And the Democratic Party, in terms of its voter base, leans pretty heavily more pro-Palestinian,
03:12but isn't without a pro-Israel element.
03:15And so I think you see Harris trying to sort of navigate her way through that.
03:20The criticisms of the protesters around Union Station here in D.C., those were very strong
03:25criticisms.
03:26Then she, as you showed in the clip you played, both voiced support for Israel and pretty
03:34strong criticism of the way it has conducted itself in Gaza.
03:39That's an attempt to, as I say, navigate through the Democratic politics of it.
03:44Those politics are pretty thorny, I think.
03:47Harris finds herself in a really tough position with these pro-Palestine progressives that
03:52are considering whether or not to go with Harris.
03:54They're in the coconut army right now, which is equally part serious as is a joke.
04:00I'm not saying some people think it's a joke and others think it's serious.
04:03It's both at the same time for most of the people in this movement.
04:07And they want action on Gaza.
04:10And it puts Harris in a tough position because she right now is in the Biden administration,
04:14not the Harris administration.
04:15She's not in a position to deliver action.
04:18Do you think these words will be enough to bring in the youth vote?
04:23I think they might be, Jess, if they are perceived as signaling a change.
04:29But the problem is exactly the one that you outlined, honestly.
04:34Kamala Harris is the presidential candidate at the same time as she's the sitting vice
04:39president.
04:40So she has no real power yet.
04:43You can argue that that influence certainly is moving pretty rapidly toward her and away
04:49from President Biden.
04:50But it's not her who's setting the policy.
04:53So she has to, in a sense, wear a couple of different hats as, on one hand, the supportive
04:59vice president and, on the other, as the presumptive Democratic nominee.
05:03I think a lot of us assume she would move maybe one or two notches more toward a broadly
05:10pro-Palestinian position.
05:13But that's just based on sort of trying to read between the lines at this point.
05:17It isn't based on any substantive policy change because she doesn't have the power to make
05:21one.
05:22Yeah, I wanted to dig into that sort of dichotomy with where Kamala Harris sits right now in
05:26terms of her positioning as we head into November because she was the one who gave this speech
05:32shortly after the meetings between both herself and then Joe Biden with the prime minister.
05:37And she also is likely trying to demonstrate that she has some kind of foreign policy experience.
05:43That has been a weak spot in her previous presidential campaign as well as her campaigns
05:48for Senate.
05:49So how exactly does she strike that balance without stepping on the toes of Joe Biden
05:55and giving the American people the impression that Joe Biden is basically acting as a lame
06:00duck president?
06:01With great difficulty, I think.
06:03I just think that is an inherently difficult thing to do, whether one prizes Kamala Harris's
06:10political skills highly or not.
06:12That's just a difficult task that she has.
06:14And I do think its difficulty was shown in particularly stark relief yesterday because
06:20on one hand it seemed like she wanted those images of her, you know, on the world stage.
06:28But then when Netanyahu is coming to visit, that's an image of you beside Benjamin Netanyahu,
06:32which is a very problematic image from the point of view of the Democratic base.
06:37I think that we do seem to be seeing her move into more of the sort of ceremonial, ceremonial
06:44is a bit unfair actually, just more high profile moments that she is participating in.
06:50The other thing that is very notable, Amber, is just how much more intense the attention
06:56is on her now.
06:58You know, two or three weeks ago, even a vice presidential event was kind of a little bit
07:03of an afterthought.
07:04And you very rarely saw it on any cable news channel unless there was something dramatic
07:07happening.
07:08I was at the White House immediately after President Biden had stepped aside when she
07:13did this event, which was basically in celebration of college athletes.
07:17And there were, you know, reams of press there.
07:20So she'll get the attention.
07:22The question is, does that does that rebound to her benefit or to her detriment?
07:28It seems that a lot of people are holding on to hope that Kamala Harris will be different
07:32once she gets into office upon winning in November on Gaza.
07:37But there were protests across D.C.
07:39I went to a couple of them downtown.
07:42They were overwhelmingly peaceful.
07:44MPD was creating a line between a handful of counter protesters to, you know, keep the
07:50peace as they were.
07:51I saw on several occasions getting into the pro-Palestinian protesters space.
07:55There was some graffiti on a replica of the Liberty Bell that got the attention of many
08:00conservatives, of course, the flag burning, which is a form of protest in the United States
08:04that is perfectly legal, I will say, under the First Amendment.
08:08But Kamala Harris did pen a letter and put it out as as a PDF letter from her office.
08:16And this got the attention of some of the protesters.
08:18It got the attention of the youth.
08:20But I think it might matter that that was a letter and it was to satisfy maybe some
08:25of the more conservative members of the Democratic Party, some of the more pro-Israel members
08:29of the Democratic Party.
08:30But what she said in the speech, how she didn't make those same comments and echo what she
08:35said in the letter.
08:36Do you think that matters?
08:37Do you think that signals a change or are we really just grabbing at nothing here, Niall?
08:42I think as much as we can read those clues, Jessica, it seems to suggest a bit of a change.
08:51But I don't think the people who were protesting, you know, around Union Station and elsewhere
08:56across D.C. should yet take too much faith that a Harris presidency, if it arrives, is
09:02going to be a kind of free Palestine presidency.
09:05I mean, I don't think that's where she stands at all.
09:08I think she's trying to display, to a degree, greater empathy for the many, many millions
09:15of Americans and people around the world, for that matter, who find the suffering of
09:19the Palestinians just horrific and have real human empathy for it.
09:24But the letter that you noted was pretty strong, very much so, actually.
09:30Just not that anecdotal evidence is necessarily massively dispositive one way or another.
09:37But I spoke, I went down to one of the protests, was speaking to a couple of attendees, including
09:42one young woman who said that she planned to vote for the Green Party candidate even
09:47though she was, she had mixed feelings because she wanted to vote for a woman who could be
09:51the first woman president, i.e. Vice President Harris.
09:54But she felt she couldn't do that unless Harris promised much more of a block on any U.S.
09:59military aid to Israel in the future.
10:02All right, Niall, thank you so much for joining us.
10:04We're going to be back with more Rising after this.

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