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Who is John Lewis, the Rep. Who Calls Trump Illegitimate?
The New American ^ | 17 January 2017 | Steve Byas

Posted on 01/17/2017 7:32:47 AM PST by VitacoreVision

“I don’t see this president-elect as a legitimate president,” Representative John Lewis (D-Ga.; shown) said of Donald Trump on NBC News this past Sunday. “I think the Russians participated in helping this man get elected. And they helped destroy the candidacy of Hillary Clinton.”

Not surprisingly, Trump struck back in his inimitable style, tweeting, “Congressman John Lewis should spend more time on fixing and helping his district, which is in horrible shape and falling apart (not to mention crime infested) rather than falsely complaining about the election results. All talk, talk, talk --- no action or results. Sad!”

Trump then suggested what Lewis could do, if he really wanted to make a positive difference: “Congressman John Lewis should finally focus on the burning and crime infested inner-cities of the U.S. I can use all the help I can get!”

One would think that the criticism over this exchange would be reserved for Lewis, who is calling the incoming president of the United States “illegitimate.” Yet, most of the negative reaction was directed not at Lewis, but at Trump! An the basis for directing the chastisement at the president-elect instead of Trump seems to be based on what Lewis did — or more accurately, what was done to him — back in the early 1960s.

An ally of the late Martin Luther King, Lewis was assaulted during the “Freedom Rides,” in which blacks and whites rode together in a bus across the Deep South in protest of state laws dictating racial segregation. He was hit in the head with a wooden crate, which rendered him unconscious. Most famously, Lewis was among those injured at Edmund Pettus Bridge in Alabama, in the Selma March of 1965.

Since that time, Lewis has made many inflammatory remarks over the years against political opponents, with reactions to those comments being met with accusations that the responder is being somehow disrespectful of Lewis’ courage during his civil rights activities.

Regarding Tump’s response to Lewis, Senator Kamala Harris, a left-wing Democrat from California, said, “John Lewis is an icon of the Civil Rights movement who is fearless in the pursuit of justice and equality. He deserves better than this.” Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi implied that Trump was trying to “silence” Lewis: “Let us remember that many have tried to silence John Lewis over the years. All have failed.”

Howard Wolfson, who was the communications director for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, also took umbrage at the temerity of Trump to respond to Lewis’ caustic remarks, saying, “John Lewis did more to make America great in one day on the Edmund Pettus Bridge than Donald Trump ever will.”

Not all the negative reaction came from Democrats. Senator Ben Sasse, a Republican from Nebraska, but an intense critic of Trump, apparently had no problem with Lewis’ calling Trump an illegitimate president, but rather took issue with Trump’s daring to respond. “John Lewis and his ‘talk’ have changed the world.”

On the other hand, Senator Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat, when asked by CNN’s Jake Tapper whether Trump was a legitimate president, responded, “Absolutely.” Manchin told Tapper that he believed it was time to “move on,” and “come together as a country.” Even CNN’s Anderson Cooper took issue with Lewis’ characterization of Trump as an illegitimate president. “I get he doesn’t like Donald Trump,” Cooper conceded. “I get he doesn’t accept the results of the election, but is this helpful in any way?” Cooper noted that if a Republican had said something similar about a President-elect Hillary Clinton, “Democrats would be up in arms.”

Appearing on CBS’s Face the Nation, Vice President-elect Mike Pence was challenged about Trump’s response to Lewis. Moderator John Dickerson suggested that Trump should have just let the comments go without a response. Pence defended Trump, while also attempting to be conciliatory. “Donald Trump won this election fair and square,” Pence told Dickerson, pointing out that Trump carried 30 out of 50 states, including Lewis’ state of Georgia. He called Lewis’ comments “deeply disappointing,” yet offered that Lewis was a man he had served with and respected.

“We honor the sacrifice that he made but part of the result of what happened on Bloody Sunday [in 1965] and the courage that he showed was the Voting Rights Act,” Pence said. “So for someone of his stature not just in the civil rights movement but in voting rights to make a comment that he did not consider Donald Trump to be a legitimate president, I think, is deeply disappointing.”

Lewis’ tactic is clear. He gets to attack his political enemies at will, using all sorts of incendiary language, and if someone dares to retaliate, that person is then tarred as, at best, insensitive to the “courage” of Lewis, and at worst, a racial bigot. No doubt Pence does not want to be tarred as a racist.

But no one is questioning anything Lewis did on behalf of terminating segregation laws over a half-century ago. Pence’s careful response, defending Trump, while conceding his respect for Lewis, demonstrates the effectiveness of the tactic that Lewis and his allies use on a regular basis to advance a left-wing political agenda.

Because of the reputation Lewis earned in getting assaulted during the civil rights battles of the 1960s, his very radical record is not properly addressed. For example, when Martin Luther King delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech in August 1963, Lewis was another speaker at the same event. His remarks were much more aggressive than King’s, and reportedly were moderated before they were delivered. In the speech as delivered, Lewis called for “radical social, political and economic changes.”

While some might retort that Lewis was only referencing the need for change to end legal discrimination against African-Americans, the truth is that Lewis has a long record of hard-core leftism. He was a founding member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, which was formed with the assistance of the Democratic Socialists of America. In the early 1960s, Lewis was a sponsor and vice chairman of a Communist Party USA front group known as the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee.

In 1965, Lewis won the Eugene Debs Award, named for the founder of the Socialist Party of America. In 1967, Lewis called Norman Thomas, the six-time presidential nominee of the Socialist Party, a man who “has symbolized to millions of Americans the ideals of peace, freedom and equality.”

Not surprisingly, then, the Democratic Socialists of America Political Action Committee endorsed Lewis’ 1996 congressional campaign.

Some of Lewis’ activities were even left of the democratic socialists, however. In 1965, Lewis wrote an article for Freedomways, a Communist Party USA publication, favorable to Paul Robeson, a member of the Communist Party USA, and a noted admirer of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin. In the article, Lewis said that he and other civil rights activists were “Paul Robeson’s spiritual children.” History has shown that communists have often used legitimate social grievances (such as segregation laws) to advance their own nefarious goals, and if grievances do not exist, they work to create them.

As recently as 2003, Lewis wrote an article for the People’s Weekly World, a magazine of the Communist Party USA.

Lewis’ vitriolic attacks upon political opponents have not been limited to Trump. For example, he has insinuated that Senator Jeff Sessions (R-Alabama), Trump’s pick for attorney general, is a racist. “Those who are committed to equal justice in our society wonder whether Senator Sessions’ calls for law and order will mean today what it meant in Alabama when I was coming up back then. The rule of law was used to violate the human and civil rights of the poor, the dispossessed, people of color,” Lewis said recently.

He was a leader in organizing the sit-in on the floor of Congress, calling for stricter gun control legislation. “We have been quiet for too long.”

Lewis’ use of the race card is not reserved for Trump or his political appointees. During the 2008 election, Lewis attacked Republican nominee John McCain, hardly a staunch conservative. “What I am seeing reminds me too much of another destructive period in American history. Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and division.” In 2012, he compared Republican nominee Mitt Romney to the segregationists of the 1960s. “I’ve seen this before, I lived this before ... Brothers and sister, do you want to go back?” Lewis asked, implying that a Romney administration would return America to the days of racial segregation.

And, of course, Lewis returned to the same theme in last year’s presidential campaign, when he compared Trump to segregationist Governor George Wallace of Alabama. “Trump reminds me so much of a lot of the things George Wallace said and did.”

Lewis is not above using such rhetoric against members of his own political party, if necessary — including even the most leftist of its members, such as Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who is an open socialist. He even challenged the civil rights credentials of Sanders, saying “I never saw him” during the civil rights struggles. Actually, Sanders was arrested in a civil-rights protest in Chicago, but Lewis was supporting Sanders’ opponent for the Democratic Party nod, Hillary Clinton, and he is used to not being challenged, regardless of what negative things he says about political opponents — at least not until Trump came along.

During the 2010 congressional battle over the adoption of the Affordable Care Act, Representative Andre Carson (D-Ind.), a member of the Congressional Black Caucus, claimed that “Tea Party” protesters made racial insults against Lewis. Carson charged that “hundreds of people” were chanting “Kill the bill,” and using the “N-word.” Carson said that as they walked from the Cannon House Office Building, Capitol Police were forced to protect them from Tea Party members, who were there to protest the passage of ObamaCare. Representative Emanuel Cleaver (D-Missouri), another black member of Congress, even claimed that he was spat on by a protester, and the police arrested the person. Yet, Sgt. Kimberly Schneider of the U.S. Capitol Police said no arrests were made. None of the videos made of the walk over to the Capitol provides any evidence of the claims made by Carson and Cleaver, yet Lewis has not said anything to challenge their version of events.

Three black members of the Tea Party protest said they also did not hear any racial slurs. When asked if she had witnessed or heard any racial comments, Tea Party member Charlene Freedman, an African-American, said, “Absolutely not ... I’ve heard nothing about racism ... nothing at all.” Jay Jarbo of Atlanta, another black Tea Party member protesting the Affordable Care Act, perhaps summed it up the best: “I just want to see them follow the Constitution, and they’re not doing that. Anyone that tries to throw around the racial thing, just squash it, because this has nothing to do with race. I haven’t heard anyone say anything about race at any of these events. Honestly, this is the type of thing people bring up to distract from the real issues, and it’s always about race in this country, and it’s always the last card in the deck that everyone plays.”

Actually, when it comes to Congressman John Lewis, the race card appears to be the first card in the deck that he always plays. Regardless of what Lewis did back in the 1960s, it does not entitle him to say whatever he wishes, true or false, without being challenged.

Speaking of cards, Lewis apparently has gotten used to Republican politicians such as Bush, McCain, and Romney, who will not respond to Lewis’ vicious attacks, and tend to fold even while holding a Royal Flush. Now, however, Lewis is in a new game, where he has to deal with a Trump Card.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: civilrights; johnlewis; martinlutherking; trump
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Trump is being criticized for his response to John Lewis, who said that Trump is not a "legitimate" president. But does Lewis' status as an icon of the Civil Rights movement entitle him to say whatever he wants without being challenged? By Steve Byas
1 posted on 01/17/2017 7:32:47 AM PST by VitacoreVision
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To: VitacoreVision

The media is portraying Lewis as the only one who participated in the Civil Rights Movement with King...


2 posted on 01/17/2017 7:40:22 AM PST by JBW1949 (I'm really PC....PATRIOTICALLY CORRECT!!!!)
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To: VitacoreVision

Lewis is one of many who don’t know what natural born citizen means.

Barry Soetoro/Barack Hussein Obama admitted that his having a foreign national father made him a British subject at birth.

He is not a natural born citizen.

Obama was the illegitimate President.

Children of foreign nationals inherit the nationality of their foreign national parent(s).

They are NOT natural born citizens.

Only when one CANNOT be anything else is one NATURALLY a US citizen, born here of citizen parents, no possibility of being anything else.


3 posted on 01/17/2017 7:41:55 AM PST by Lurkinanloomin (Natural Born Citizen Means Born Here Of Citizen Parents)
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To: VitacoreVision

See tag line.


4 posted on 01/17/2017 7:42:00 AM PST by Mr. Douglas (Best. Election. EVER!)
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To: VitacoreVision

Trump, as usual is right. Lewis has been a complete do-nothing in Congress. Unless you want to count sponsoring a bill to divert funds away from our military as an accomplishment. The only two bills he ever introduced died on the floor.


5 posted on 01/17/2017 7:44:34 AM PST by jazminerose (Adorable Deplorable)
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To: VitacoreVision
Notice the only Republican willing to stand behind Trump and challenge Lewis is his Vice President elect.

All the other Republicans are heads down in their foxholes.

I've seen this for decades — Republicans letting their leader take all the liberal hits instead of getting out in front of their leader (like Pelosi, Reid and other leaders in their party).

Trump is out their on his own, God bless him, taking all the blows.

Disappointing. They should all be calling Lewis the Communist that he is.

6 posted on 01/17/2017 7:46:32 AM PST by detch (")
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To: VitacoreVision

I wonder what the party affiliation of the one who swung the baton at Lewis was.


7 posted on 01/17/2017 7:48:29 AM PST by lacrew
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To: VitacoreVision

A list of John Lewis’s accomplishments:

1.


8 posted on 01/17/2017 7:49:07 AM PST by JayAr36 (Lets just reneame the Democrats to DRATS. I think the description is accurate.)
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To: VitacoreVision

Selma, Alabama, Bloody Sunday, March 7, 1965

Deep in the democrat run south.

Under the orders of a democrat governor 150 Alabama state troopers, sheriff ’s deputies, and others,
mostly all democrats themselves, order civil rights demonstrators to disperse.

After a short warning they advance on the demonstrators wielding clubs and tear gas.

In the ensuing melee, John Lewis, 25 years old at the time, suffered a skull fracture.

He then goes on to join the political party of his oppressors and becomes a lifelong democrat himself.

He turns himself into a civil rights icon and builds a political career on the strength of his black skin and the injury sustained at the march.

He dedicates his life to attacking, smearing and destroying members of the republican party even though it was democrats, not republicans, who fought against black civil rights advocates and cracked his skull back in Selma on Bloody Sunday.


9 posted on 01/17/2017 7:51:51 AM PST by Iron Munro (If Illegals voted Rebublican 50 Million Democrats Would Be Screaming "Build The Wall!")
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To: VitacoreVision

John Lewis is going to be named the Patron Saint of Racism.


10 posted on 01/17/2017 7:51:53 AM PST by kiryandil (Will Hillary's BrownShirt Media thugs demand that The Deplorables all wear six-pointed Orange Stars?)
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To: VitacoreVision

A 100% racist.


11 posted on 01/17/2017 7:54:25 AM PST by mulligan
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To: detch

Yep. This is why I have not been a republican since around midway through the dubya term. And I was a lifelong republican before that.

The republican platform is still solid, it’s just that it seems to be all talk.


12 posted on 01/17/2017 7:56:26 AM PST by Mr. Douglas (Best. Election. EVER!)
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To: JBW1949

Good grief. That was more than 50 years ago and a lot of the people involved then are no longer among the living. Lewis really needs to move on.


13 posted on 01/17/2017 7:56:51 AM PST by Grams A (The Sun will rise in the East in the morning and God is still on his throne.)
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To: detch

And a liar! He said this inauguration is the 1st he’ll ever miss. Buttt.... He didn’t attend Bush’s inauguration either.


14 posted on 01/17/2017 8:06:38 AM PST by Harpotoo
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To: Mr. Douglas

The GOP is getting to be the Dem lite.


15 posted on 01/17/2017 8:10:21 AM PST by granada
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To: VitacoreVision

Seems Lewis said Bush was also illegitimate and boycotted his inauguration. Looking for fame and flame?? I now question his “goodness” in the Civil Rights Movement....self benefit??


16 posted on 01/17/2017 8:18:45 AM PST by Sacajaweau
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To: Iron Munro

Like McCain, he’s a “hero” for being a victim and they both have been milking that for way too long.

Glad Trump shone the light on both of them.


17 posted on 01/17/2017 8:37:25 AM PST by aquila48
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To: VitacoreVision
Lewis didn't go to Bush's inaugural either - he didn't think President Bush was legitimate either.

It might be an ancestral thing; the folks to aren't coming tend to historically come from freedomless hellholes run by thugs. Might be easier to take the person out of the hellhole than to take the hellhole mentality out of the person.

18 posted on 01/17/2017 8:43:08 AM PST by GOPJ ("Reporters honored MLK by spreading hate & lies. News at 11." - Freeper FreedomGuru)
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To: VitacoreVision

There were many whites, marching with King and Lewis.

But racist blacks rarely mention them.


19 posted on 01/17/2017 8:45:06 AM PST by truth_seeker
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To: VitacoreVision
Hillary Clinton is not a ‘legal candidate’ either, she was under ‘3 indictments’ during her campaign ...

It has been proved that the ‘super delegates’ were stolen from Sanders to Clinton...She tried to say she won Utah, but Sanders won Utah in the primaries, and along with proving that Cruz ‘stole’ the caucus votes from PE Trump, we also proved that Sanders was denied by the Clinton Campaign and given back to the Sanders campaign...

She was while running in the ‘presidential campaign’ charges were again brought against her by the FBI and not dropped until 3 days before Nov. 8th...

It was proved that Trump won 31 States and she won 22 States, he won more counties across America than Obama did...

Also, during the ‘re count’ endeavor it was proved that more votes went to Trump than Clinton...

During the ‘EV’ votes, Clinton had more votes against her than Trump had against him...

During the Senate verification it was tried and over ruled that those Senators supporting Clinton to over turn the EV vote record was against the Constitution, therefore shut down...

If anyone came close to PE Trump during the primaries, it was Sanders and because of the ‘voter fraud’ that the DNC and Debbie ‘bigmouth’ Shultz caused, the Super delegates went to Clinton when they should have went to Sanders...

20 posted on 01/17/2017 8:56:30 AM PST by HarleyLady27 ('THE FORCE AWAKENS!!!' Trump/Pence: MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!)
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