The Squad Has a Meltdown Over Pro-Terrorism Encampments Getting Dismantled
Dutch Police Bust Up Pro-Hamas Camp With Bulldozers at the University of Amsterdam
Joe Biden Is Unraveling American-Israeli Relations Before Our Eyes
Joe Biden Just Lost Another Battle With His Teleprompter
PolitiFact Hates Facts From Campuses
Police Officer Stuck in BLM Nightmare
Liberal Media Shocked to Learn Joe Biden Isn't Doing Too Hot In the...
Rep. Brian Mast Has Perfect Response to Pro-Hamas Activists Ambushing Him
Speaker Mike Johnson Gets to Keep His Job
Prosecutor Leading Stormy Daniels Questioning In Trump Trial Is a Major Biden Donor
Trump Finds Brilliant Way to Sidestep Judge Merchan's Unconstitutional Gag Order
Lloyd Austin Confirms Delay in Aid to Israel: 'We’ve Paused One Shipment of...
Here’s Why This Democrat Rep Thinks NPR Is 'Necessary’ for Americans
Department of Education's Move Forces Jewish Groups to Pull Out of Meeting
Sickening: 'Newcomer' Illegal Immigrant Arrested in Florida for Heinous Crime
Tipsheet

Democrats Upended the 'Unity Breakfast' in Selma This Weekend to Complain About 'Stolen Elections'

AP Photo/Kathy Willens

Cold shoulders, bitter speeches, and "chilliness" are not terms you'd hope to find at a unity breakfast, but such was the case among Democrats who attended an event in Selma, Alabama this weekend. The Martin Luther King and Coretta Scott King Unity Breakfast was part of the annual Selma Bridge Crossing Jubilee. The jubilee is held in remembrance of the Bloody Sunday March of 1965 and a celebration of the Civil Rights Act.

Advertisement

Once given the mic, Democrats in attendance turned Sunday into an airing of grievances about how the past few elections were stolen from them. One speaker, for instance, used the stage to sound off on how Hillary Clinton, who was awarded the International Unity Award at Sunday's gathering, had been treated unfairly during the 2016 presidential election. 

"She won the election, and it was stolen from her," according former Alabama state senator Hank Sanders. "It was stolen from her by the FBI. It was stolen from her by the Russians." 

Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) was also bitter about the conclusion of Georgia's gubernatorial race, where former Secretary of State Brian Kemp prevailed over Stacey Abrams. 

Abrams, too, did not concede lightly. She bowed out of the race on November 16, but blamed her loss on voter suppression. Her opponent, Republican Brian Kemp, was also serving as the state's chief elections administrator.

"Democracy failed in Georgia," she claimed at the time.

Clinton agreed that Abrams was the rightful winner.

"Stacey Abrams should be governor, leading that state, right now," Clinton said in her remarks on Sunday in Selma. 

Advertisement

Speaking of Clinton, she didn't exactly receive the warmest welcome from a former rival at the breakfast. Just a few days after Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) told the women on "The View" that he'd probably not be seeking Hillary Clinton's advice in 2020, the two reportedly barely acknowledged each other on Sunday. The most the Washington Post's Matt Viser saw was a brief handshake.

This is all very reminiscent of the 2017 "unity tour," courtesy of the DNC.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement