The Suspect in the J6 Pipe Bombing Incident Has Been Captured. Why the...
A Newsom Nihilist Nomination?
The Importance of Being Earnest
Media Make 'Venezuelan Fishermen' the New 'Maryland Father,' and Covering Up the Minnesota...
New Mexico Democrats Push Bill Based on Results of Idiotic Study
Israeli Prime Minister Says He'll Happily Visit NYC Despite Mamdani's Threat to Uphold...
Climate Study That Shaped Global Policy Retracted After Major Error
Inside a Secret Transgender Health Conference: Clinicians Admit They're All Just 'Winging...
U.S. Secret Service Seized 16 Illegal Skimmers, Stopped $16M in Fraud
Two Men Charged After 1,585 Pounds of Meth Found Hidden in Blackberry Shipments...
SCOTUS Upholds New Texas Redistricting Map
Georgia CEO Gets Eight Years for Bribery Scheme Involving Honduran Police Contracts
Appeals Court Grants Administrative Stay to Keep National Guard in D.C.
Santa Monica Doctor Gets 30 Months for Illegally Supplying Ketamine to Actor Matthew...
The Day a Mall Became a Stage for a Hate Movement
Tipsheet
Premium

If Looks Could Kill: Why Murkowski Stared Down This Reporter After OBBB Vote

AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Early Tuesday morning, as the marathon vote-a-rama dragged on, Senate Majority Leader John Thune was said to be focusing on one GOP holdout in particular: Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who had reservations about Medicaid and food assistance. She ultimately went along with the majority of her Republican colleagues to bring the One Bill Beautiful Bill to passage, but not without criticism from some of the GOP opponents to the measure, such as Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, who voted against the reconciliation package.

NBC News reporter Ryan Nobles approached Murkowski to ask for her comment to Paul, who claimed her vote was a “bailout for Alaska at the expense of the rest of the country.”

“Oh my—” she replied, before staring at him silently for 10 seconds, prompting Nobles to remind her he was only the messenger.

"My response is I have an obligation to the people of the state of Alaska, and I live up to that every single day," Murkowski responded, adding that Paul characterizing her vote as a “bailout” was “offensive.”  

"Do I like this bill? No,” she continued. “Because I tried to take care of Alaska's interests, but I know that in many parts of the country there are Americans that are not going to be advantaged by this bill. I don't like that. I don't like the fact that we moved through an artificial deadline, an artificial timeline, to produce something—to meet a deadline rather than to actually try to produce the best bill for the country.

"But when I saw the direction that this is going—you know, you can either say, 'I don't like it,' and not try to help my state, or you can roll up your sleeves,” she said.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement