Comments by "Kair Idon" (@kairidon3363) on "Devon Archer testimony was 'absolutely devastating,' says Peter Schweizer" video.
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"He came to dinner, and we ate and kind of talked about the world, I guess, and the weather, and then everybody − everybody left," Archer said.
The other dinner involved the World Food Program USA, in which Hunter served as board chairman.
"Like I've said across the board, there was no business-deals specifics discussed ever at any of these things, but it was a nice, you know, conversation," Archer said to the committee. "It was dinner conversation."
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@ThePhenom777 Dark Brandon owns you so hard, even Republicans have to admit he's right:
While Congressman Wittman voted against the infrastructure bill, he's ecstatic that the Port of Virginia received the funding that he worked so hard over the years to secure," a spokesperson told ABC News.
Shortly after voting against the measure last fall, Rep. Gary Palmer, R-Ala., celebrated its hundreds of millions in funding for a stalled highway project in Birmingham.
Last week, Rep. Kay Granger, R-Texas, touted new funding for a flood control project from the package, which she opposed last year, decrying it at the time as a "so-called infrastructure bill."
Rep. Ashley Hinson, R-Iowa, a freshman lawmaker who also voted against the infrastructure bill, celebrating new "game-changing" funding to upgrade locks along the Upper Mississippi River.
In November, Rep. Rob Wittman, R-Va., was one of 205 House Republicans to vote against the bipartisan, $1.5 trillion infrastructure bill, calling it irresponsible and the "Green New Deal in disguise." On Friday, he took to Twitter to tout funding from the bill he voted against -- highlighting a $70 million expansion of the Port of Virginia in Norfolk -- one of the busiest and deepest ports in the United States.
In 2021, Alabama Senator Tommy Tuberville voted against President Joe Biden’s infrastructure bill, which he said would fail to give his state a “fair slice of the pie while also saddling Alabama taxpayers with even more debt.” But the Republican sounded a different note this week, when he touted the “crucial funds to boost ongoing broadband efforts” his state would receive — without noting that those funds were part of the 2021 infrastructure legislation he had vocally opposed.
Marsha Blackburn celebrated the “progress” on broadband in Tennessee; John Cornyn did the same in Texas; Nancy Mace held a press conference Wednesday to promote a $26 million grant for a transit project — “one of the largest” such grants, she said — that was made possible through the Democratic-led legislation, which she condemned in 2021 as a “monstrosity.” Blackburn, Mace and Cornyn all voted against the infrastructure package.
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