Democrats do not respect boundaries of the constitution. ‘Life, Liberty & Levin’ host states that Biden and his party are the worst since slavery.
Hosting guests Stephen Moore and Stephen Miller, Levin called the sudden “Marxist” weave of the federal government a “massive de-growth movement dress[ed] up as climate change and the Green New Deal.”
He also said that congressional Democrats with Biden’s approval want to permanently transform America from a capitalist model to one that is far to the left by using “American Marxism” through large legislative bills camouflaged as “infrastructure” and “voting rights.”
Combined, he said, the Democrats want to to void the opposition Republican Party and control all the power in a way that has not be seen in over 150 years.
“The economics of that, how that’s going to impoverish so many Americans in the war on success, the destruction of the voting system to make it [so] only one party can ever win, blowing out the Republican state legislatures so they have no say on it,” he said.
“This is probably the most diabolical presidency and diabolical Democrat Party, probably since slavery,” Levin added, as most of the Southern states where slavery – and Jim Crow segregation after the Civil War – was commonplace were Democratic Party strongholds.
Levin went on to describe what he called the collective “thin reed” that separates 245 years of American liberty from tyranny – the two moderate Democratic Sens. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Joe Manchin III of West Virginia.
“Every other single Democrat senator is marching right behind Chuck Schumer and the American Marxists,” he warned. Schumer, the Senate Majority leader from New York, continues to seek passage of both the S.1 voting law overhaul dubbed the “For the People Act” and the $3.5 trillion “human infrastructure” bill that Levin warned is a disguised package of far-left “de-growth” policies.
Levin said Americans must call out Manchin and Sinema to request that they break with their party on these actions, adding that their roles as one of the several remaining congressional moderates are evidence America is “always one election away from tyranny.”
“[Democrats] will ram through whatever they have to. They don’t play within the boundaries of the Constitution. They play outside the boundaries,” he said.
Levin said the Democrats’ small margin can be either expanded or erased in upcoming elections. In 2022, key Senate races include seats in Arizona, Georgia, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Nevada and Wisconsin.
Levin added that on the GOP side, it is troubling that many of the minority party’s senators are not as worried as he and others are about the alleged legislative concerns he has called out.
On “Hannity” last week, Levin dubbed GOP senators who supported the Democrats’ first infrastructure package this week the Bernie “Madoffs of the Republican Party”
Later on “Life, Liberty & Levin,”, Miller, a former speechwriter and aide to President Donald Trump, said that Biden is “the vessel that American Marxists have been waiting for their entire lives to advance their radical program.”
“What they are doing is they’re putting it all into one bill,” he said. “Everything you just listed off from the equity agenda to the destruction of voting rights to the climate agenda to, of course, the open borders agenda.”
“And they reason that if we did this in five or six bills, we would get crushed by the sheer weight of the exercise… It’s up to everyone watching this program, and it’s up to all the American people to say to their senators, no, do not pass this bill. Do not destroy our country. Do not take away our treasured American way of life.”
Miller added that one other Senate Democrat, Mark Kelly of Arizona, supposedly has reservations about the $3.5 trillion spending bill described by Levin. Miller stated that Kelly is up for reelection in 2022 and has not yet shown any indication on how he will vote.
Kelly recently told Newsweek that “a lot of work remains” in rebuilding the U.S. economy, and that he is worried about the price of the bill, and whether it will be paid for correctly. His intrastate colleague Sinema also in the same report she said she will not support a $3.5 trillion price tag.