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Marjorie Taylor Greene moves to CENSURE Squad Rep. Ilhan Omar after her alleged 'Somali first' declaration sparked Republican outrage and calls for her to resign
Daily Mail ^ | 2/05/24 | Morgan Phillips

Posted on 02/05/2024 4:11:45 PM PST by Libloather

The House is expected to vote on whether or not to censure Rep. Ilhan Omar for her alleged 'Somali first' remarks.

The privileged resolution was pushed to the House floor by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and will come up for a vote either Monday or Tuesday.

If the resolution passes, the Minnesota Democrat would be the fourth member of Congress to be censured this term, following Democratic Reps. Jamaal Bowman, N.Y., Rashida Tlaib, Mich., and Adam Schiff, Calif.

According to one translation of a now-viral clip of remarks Omar made in Somalian, she said her allegiances lie with Somalia over the U.S.

'We are an organized society, brothers and sisters, people of the same blood, people who know they are Somalis first, Muslims second, who protect one another,' Omar allegedly said.

'I urge my colleagues to vote to censure, but I wish I had the votes to expel and deport her,' Greene wrote on X.

Last week Whip Tom Emmer asked the Ethics Committee to investigate Omar over the remarks, DailyMail.com exclusively reported.

Omar claims that translation is not accurate and that 'propagandists' are twisting her words.

The clip was first shared by Somaliland Ambassador Rhoda Elmi, who called them 'unbecoming' and 'lacking in common decency.'

Somaliland is an unrecognized state that Somalia views as its own territory.

Omar, the first Somali-American in Congress, said in the clip she would do everything in her power to prevent the disputed, breakaway territory from entering a sea-access deal with Ethiopia.

'Sleep in comfort knowing I am here to protect the interest of Somalia from inside the U.S. system,' Omar said, according to the widely-shared, translated version of the video.

Omar reportedly said in her speech that 'the U.S. government will only do what Somalians in the U.S. tell them to do.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Conspiracy; History; Local News
KEYWORDS: domesticenemies; greene; omar; resign; somalia
She's the one who married her brother.
1 posted on 02/05/2024 4:11:45 PM PST by Libloather
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To: Libloather

Good for you, Madame MTG! She is probably getting next to no assistance from her far more cautious fellow republicans.
The average republican seeks to avoid that sort of direct confrontation with the Dems.

Think of how a Cat hates to get her feet wet, and will daintily shake the drops of water off each foot as soon as she can step away from that dreaded puddle of problems.


2 posted on 02/05/2024 4:18:32 PM PST by lee martell
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To: Libloather

George Santos her!

Same deal. Also, George Santos Cori Bush.


3 posted on 02/05/2024 4:20:17 PM PST by Alas Babylon! (Repeal the Patriot Act; Abolish the DHS; reform FBI top to bottom!)
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To: Libloather

She yells what the rest of the RINO’s whisper at cocktail parties.


4 posted on 02/05/2024 4:21:20 PM PST by crusty old prospector
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To: Libloather

Off topic, but the full transcript of Tuckers interview with Putin is on amg-news.com


5 posted on 02/05/2024 4:23:58 PM PST by digger48
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To: All

2016: Ilhan Omar meets with President Mohamud at Villa Somalia

Hiiraan Online, Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Minnesota legislator Ilhan Omar and her husband meet with President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud

Mogadishu (HOL) - Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud met with Ilhan Omar, a member of the Minnesota House of Representatives in the United States on Tuesday at Villa Somalia.

Accompanied by her husband, Ilhan Omar was welcomed to the presidential palace by Abdirahman Osman.

Ilhan Omar is the first Somali-American legislator in the history of the United States. She was born in Mogadishu before fleeing to a Kenyan refugee camp on the onset of the Somali civil war.

President Mohamud thanked Ilhan for visiting her motherland and congratulated her on victory this past November. The pair met briefly and discussed the political atmosphere in Somalia including upcoming elections.

During their meeting, Ms. Omar welcomed the 30% quota allocated for women in parliament and urged the President to do anything in his power to achieve that benchmark.

6 posted on 02/05/2024 4:24:12 PM PST by Liz (Matthew 11.28-30: Come to me, all you who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you strength.)
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To: Libloather

It’s long past time to run this terrorist supporting trash out of Congress, and out of the country.
Islam and the Constitution will never live peacefully together. It’s time to make the choice.


7 posted on 02/05/2024 4:25:44 PM PST by Fireone (Who killed Obama's chef?)
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To: Libloather

Omar is a squirrel designed to get the public to ignore the rest of Congress being in bed with Ukraine, China, and Israel.


8 posted on 02/05/2024 4:25:48 PM PST by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: Libloather

Omar should get the Santos treatment.


9 posted on 02/05/2024 4:58:26 PM PST by ChuckHam
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To: Libloather

Is this pestiferous vermin even here legally?


10 posted on 02/06/2024 2:54:57 AM PST by Jimmy Valentine (DemocRATS - when they speak, they lie; when they are silent, they are stealing the American Dreams)
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To: All

‘He was loved by everyone’: Somali community remembers Nur Omar Mohamed, who died of COVID-19
Best known as Ilhan Omar’s father, Nur was a prominent Somali military officer who encouraged his children to succeed

by Ibrahim Hirsi,sahanjournal.com, June 20, 2020

pic-—Nur Omar Mohamed, the father of Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, died Monday from complications related to COVID-19. Credit: Photo courtesy of Ilhan Omar

Nur Omar Mohamed was an esteemed senior officer in the Somali National Army well before the country plunged into anarchy following the fall of the Siad Barre regime in the early 1990s.

A few years after that, he ended up in Minnesota with his family. Most Americans knew nothing about his prestigious career as a colonel who led a successful regiment in the Somali-Ethiopian war during the late 1970s. To them, he was just another faceless Somali refugee.

He picked up jobs as a cab driver and postal worker to make ends meet. But more than two decades later, he regained some of his lost status through his daughters Ilhan Omar, who became the first Muslim lawmaker to wear a hijab in the United States Congress, and Sahra Noor, a health care executive.

Nur died Monday from COVID-19 complications at the Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis. He was 67.

Those who knew Nur described him as a humble, kind and caring person. Yusuf Ismail Faraton, also a former Somali colonel and currently a delivery driver for U.S. Bank, had known Nur since the early 1970s. “He was always smiling and treated everyone with respect,” Faraton said

Osman Ali Ahmed, director of community partnerships at Great MN Schools, first met Nur in 2013 at a political rally in Minneapolis. His smile, Osman said, was the first thing he noticed about Nur. “He was just this smiling guy,” he said.

Bill Emory, who served as the political director for Ilhan when she ran for a seat in the state House in 2016, remembered his interactions with Nur at one tense moment during the campaign. “I can’t recall exactly what he said that day, but I will never forget how I felt after he said it,” Emory said of Nur in a Facebook post. “He was reassuring, calm, smiling.”

News stories about Nur’s death have for the most part obscured his legacy, painting him as little more than Rep. Ilhan Omar’s father. But Nur was a leader in his own right, and those who knew him well hailed him as a national treasure for Somalis at home and in the diaspora.

Life in Somalia
Nur was born in Bandarbeyla, a coastal town in northeastern Somalia, and grew up in Mogadishu, where he completed his middle and high school education, relatives said.

He joined the Somali National Army after obtaining a military education in Russia, Faraton said. Thousands of Somali students in that decade received scholarships from the Soviet Union to train as medical doctors, technicians and military specialists.

When he returned to Somalia, Nur began his climb in the military hierarchy, eventually becoming a colonel. During the 1977-1978 Somali-Ethiopian war, he led a regiment, Faraton said. “Nur played a significant role in the war,” he added. “He was one of the officers who were recognized for their work.”

Nur wasn’t bothered by the pressure to conform to certain aspects of the Somali culture. When Nur fell in love with the woman who would become Ilhan’s mother, for instance, he did something traditional Somali men don’t ever do: He moved in with his wife and her family.

“There was nothing typical about my family,” Ilhan wrote in her new memoir, This is What America Looks Like: My Journey from Refugee to Congresswoman. “To this day, I don’t know a family quite like ours.”

The Nur family led a middle-class life in a Mogadishu compound, where members of the household had equal say in family matters. “We were unlike a traditional hierarchical Somali family, where when the father or mother spoke no one else dared utter a word,” Ilhan wrote. “Instead, everyone, even the youngest child, me, was brought into every decision.”

Nur’s prestigious career in the military ended in 1991 after the Barre regime was ousted, and the country sank into civil war. The family escaped to Utange refugee camp in Kenya.

Life in Minnesota
Four years later, in 1995, Nur and his family arrived in the U.S. as refugees. The family spent the first two years in Arlington, Virginia, before moving to Minneapolis and establishing a permanent home in the Cedar Riverside neighborhood.

Here, Nur was no longer the affluent colonel he was in Mogadishu.

But this loss of status wasn’t unique. In The New Immigration: An Interdisciplinary Reader, Carola Suárez-Orozco wrote that new immigrants and refugees from middle-class backgrounds “frequently find employment in positions far below their training and qualifications because of language difficulties, lack of connections, or lack of certification in certain professions.”

When Faraton, Nur’s former army comrade, arrived in the U.S. in 1993, the only place he could find a job was at the rental car company Hertz in Minneapolis. “Guess who was in my team?” he asked laughing. A former lieutenant colonel and a doctor he had known in Somalia.

Two of Nur’s seven children are among the most successful women in the immigrant communities in the state. Ilhan grew to become the first Muslim hijabi to serve in Congress and Sahra was until recently the CEO of People’s Center Health Services in the Cedar Riverside neighborhood.

Ilhan said in her book that her father encouraged her to do well in school. “Every quarter he reviewed my report cards,” she wrote. “If I got all As, I received three hundred dollars. For As and Bs, I’d get two hundred. If there was a single C, the amount went down to one hundred.”

Nur stood by his daughter both in political campaigns and victory celebrations. When Ilhan was elected to Congress in 2018, Nur told a reporter that he was elated to see his child earn a significant spot in U.S. politics. “Our efforts bore fruit,” he said in Somali. “I hope she will serve well those who elected her, Somalis and non-Somalis.”

‘He was loved by everyone’
When the news of his death emerged on the night of June 15, Faraton said he was shocked. “I wasn’t aware of him having a serious illness,” he added. “I called 10 people just to make sure what I was hearing was true. I could not believe it.”

The two last spoke a few months earlier, Faraton said, when he invited Nur to catch up over tea at home. “We can’t visit; we can’t visit,” Nur responded, mindful of the social distancing guidelines.

Throughout the decades Faraton knew Nur, he said, he had never seen him grumpy. “He was always happy, smiling,” Faraton recalled. “He was loved by everyone.”

Emory said that after Ilhan didn’t secure the endorsement at that 2016 convention, he was “crushed, exhausted, frustrated, disappointed, and consumed with the idea that I had failed the team.”

Then he saw Nur. “This wasn’t the end of the road, he reminded me. There were so many big things ahead of us,” Emory said. “He was grateful to me for all the work I was doing for his daughter and her campaign. He felt confident that once we had all had a rest, that we were well-prepared for the next step.”

It wasn’t just his daughter for whom Nur cheered. In 2018, when Osman ran for a seat in the state Legislature, Nur messaged him from Somalia, where he was visiting. “I wish you all the best with the campaign,” he wrote to him. “I’m in Somalia at the moment but I spoke with people to support you.”

In addition to his commitment to help young people fulfill their political ambitions, Nur was involved in efforts to rebuild and strengthen the security forces of Puntland, an autonomous state in northeastern Somalia.

“His death is a loss for all Somali people,” Faraton said. “Not just one family.”

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IBRAHIM HIRSI
ihirsi@sahanjournal.com
Ibrahim Hirsi is a reporter at Sahan Journal, where he covers immigrant communities and the politics and policies that affect them. He was previously a staff writer for MinnPost and MPR News. Ibrahim got... More by Ibrahim Hirsi


11 posted on 02/06/2024 4:40:19 AM PST by Liz (Matthew 11.28-30: Come to me, all you who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you strength.)
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