Senator Rand Paul said he was “not invited” to the annual White House picnic, where Congressional members and their families typically attend, and framing the move to reporters Wednesday in retaliation against key elements of President Donald Trump’s agenda.
“I think they’re going to punish me because they’re afraid of what I’m saying. I can’t go to a picnic. “So, in a way it’s stupid, but this is really sad that it’s coming. But such petty vindictivesing is dealing with you.
Paul said the president attended a picnic hosted by Biden and Obama and called the White House early today to secure tickets for the annual picnic, but was told he was not invited to the event. He said the family was flying to Washington, D.C. to attend an event that includes a son, daughter-in-law and six-month-old grandson.
“I think this is incredibly trivial,” Paul told reporters.
The White House did not immediately respond to a series of questions, including whether Paul was invited to the event or whether Trump was directly involved in the decision to “nullify” him.
As Trump urges Republicans to hand over a package of measures to fund most of his domestic agenda by Independence Day, Paul is poised to prevent Senate Republicans from reaching that milestone, joining the Finance Hawks with a party that said Congressional Budget Office estimates would add $2.4 trillion to the public shortage.
In addition to his belief that the funding package “explodes debt,” the 3rd term senator criticized the bill’s spending cuts as “Wimpy and Anemic,” calling it a planned change in the “bad strategy” of the law, and suggested cutting billions of funding from the bill for Trump’s border wall.
“In private, there are quite a few people who think that we can actually save money and are open to it. “Even if you’re working together, I support border security, but I don’t support blank checks.”
Paul said this week he was scheduled to vote “no” in law and speculated that today was one of the reasons for the invitation to withdraw.
“I’m arguing from true beliefs and I’m worried that our country is suffering from debt and getting worse. They choose to respond by inviting my grandchildren to a picnic,” Paul said. “I don’t know. I really think it’s the kind of thing I’m losing the much respect I once had for Donald Trump.”
Trump frequently rampaged at Paul in response to sustained opposition, and socially rode the senators socially and socially for his criticism.
“Rand Paul barely understands the BBB, especially the incredible growth. He loves to vote “no” for everything. He thinks it’s a good politics, but it’s not.”
Paul has emerged as the lead critic of Trump’s fiscal policy, and has strongly criticised his decision to place tariffs on major US trading partners, claiming that they will lead the country into a recession.
The Libertarian Conservatives are one of four Republican senators who support a democratic resolution to block Trump’s implementation of Canadian tariffs, predicting import penalties will “threate us in the recession” and calling for a decision to place Trump’s tariffs on US trading partners. So far, this effort has stagnated in the home.
Paul also joined Democrats to introduce a bipartisan resolution to cancel the mutual tariffs Trump has imposed on dozens of countries. This time, by ending a national emergency that claimed Trump had surpassed presidential authorities and declared that he would implement global penalties.
“Tax is taxes, and tax authority belongs to Congress. The president is not the president. Our founder was clear. Tax policy should not be left in one person,” Paul said in a statement on bipartisan efforts. “By abusing urgent powers and imposing blanket tariffs, it not only increases the costs of American families, but also tramples on the constitution. It’s time for Congress to reassert that power and restore the balance of power.”
The effort failed to pass the Senate.
The difference between Paul and Trump even extends to the military parade that took place on Saturday, lawmakers likened it to a parade of a country led by a dictator.
“I wouldn’t have done that,” Paul said Tuesday. “The images you saw in the Soviet Union and North Korea. We were proud that it wasn’t.”
But even so, in the face of his criticism of Trump, Paul appears to view the rescinded invitation as shocking, noting that even Democrats remain invited to a White House picnic.
“I think I’m the first senator in US history who has not been invited to a White House picnic,” Rand told reporters. “It’s actually sad to say that literally every Democrat is invited, every Republican is invited, and my family is no longer welcome.”
