Top Four U.S. Congressional Leaders Invite Netanyahu To Address Congress

The top four U.S. congressional leaders sent a joint letter to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu inviting him to come to the U.S. to address Congress.

“Last year, Congress was proud to host Israeli President Isaac Herzog in Washington to celebrate 75 years of friendship and partnership between our two democracies,” the letter said, which was signed by House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA), Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-NY), and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY).

“Less than three months later, the horrific attacks of October 7th shocked the world and forced your nation into a fight for its very existence,” the leaders said. “We join the State of Israel in your struggle against terror, especially as Hamas continues to hold American and Israeli citizens captive and its leaders jeopardize regional stability.”

They said that because Israel was having to fight for its very existence, they wanted to invite Netanyahu to “address a Joint Meeting of Congress.”

“The existential challenges we face, including the growing partnership between Iran, Russia, and China, threaten the security, peace, and prosperity of our countries and of free people around the world,” they said. “To build on our enduring relationship and to highlight America’s solidarity with Israel, we invite you to share the Israeli government’s vision for defending democracy, combatting terror, and establishing a just and lasting peace in the region.”

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The top four leaders of the House and Senate have invited Prime Minister Netanyahu to address a joint meeting of Congress. pic.twitter.com/lTR2iUi4nz

— Yashar Ali 🐘 (@yashar) May 31, 2024

Trump Lawyer Todd Blanche: ‘We Were All More Upset Than Trump Was’ Over The Trial’s Unfairness

Trump attorney Todd Blanche said on Friday that former President Donald Trump’s legal team was even more upset than he was about just how unfair the trial in Manhattan was following its conclusion.

The verdict was the culmination of a weeks-long courtroom battle in which Trump said that he was the target of a “political persecution” — a point that was seemingly validated when President Joe Biden sent his re-campaign to hold a political event outside the courthouse this week. The former president was found guilty on all 34 charges brought in the hush-money trial.

“We have been saying for over a year that we couldn’t get a fair trial in Manhattan, we couldn’t get a fair trial with the judge,” Blanche told Fox News. “And it played out in lots of ways exactly as we expected.”

“I think that there were a lot of decisions that [the judge] made leading up to the trial which really hurt us, a trial that we very much disagree with,” he continued. “And what happens in a trial is, you show up for trial and all those decisions that have been made in the weeks and months leading up to trial, they matter, the evidence that can come in, the evidence that cannot come in. And when we showed up at trial, that’s where we really felt that we weren’t getting a fair shake.”

He said that Trump’s constitutional rights were violated “in many ways,” including “the gag order that was put in place.”

“You had a situation where President Trump, who’s on the campaign trail and is trying to compete with voices that are saying things every day that he cannot respond to without the risk of being fined, which he was, or going to prison for violating it,” he said. “That affects not only President Trump. That affects every voter, whether they’re going to vote for President Trump or against President Trump. That affects every single voter in this country, because they don’t get to hear from the candidate. We very much disagree with that order.”

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“There’s a lot that’s happened over the past year that I think that Americans should look very hard at, just that the whole way this case was charged,” he continued. “The district attorney says that this type of case is a bread-and-butter, that they do these cases all the time. That is not true. It’s just not true. This is a case that the records of — President Trump’s personal records, his personal checkbook from 2017, is what he was on trial for.”

“The point that we have been saying is that this is not fair,” he later added. “This is not what this country should be doing to its political leaders past and present.”

“We were all more upset than he was,” Blanche added in speaking about Trump’s initial reaction to the verdict.

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