WASHINGTON – Minnesotans in the U.S. House split along party lines in the vote denouncing President Donald Trump over tweets and comments widely seen as racist that singled out U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar and three congressional representatives who are women of color.
Omar, a freshman lawmaker from Minneapolis, has found herself at the center of an escalating skirmish between the Republican White House and House Democrats. It grew from a series of tweets by Trump over the weekend, in which he said the four liberal congresswomen, who have dubbed themselves "the Squad," should go back to their ancestral countries "and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came."
Democrats quickly introduced a resolution condemning the president, which led to a tumultuous afternoon debate Tuesday.
All three Republicans in Minnesota's delegation — Tom Emmer, Pete Stauber and Jim Hagedorn — opposed the resolution. "I did not run for Congress to get distracted by the name-calling happening on both sides of the aisle," Stauber said in a statement. "I was elected to Congress to find solutions to the most pressing issues facing Minnesotans."
Emmer said in a statement that the vote marked "the second time in six months House Democrats are considering legislation to condemn the remarks of elected officials rather than govern … This back-and-forth is about politics, nothing more, and I hope Congress will start to worry less about 'tweets' and more about actual solutions to improve the lives of Americans."
All three have been strong Trump supporters.
Minnesota Democrats in the U.S. House have largely defended Omar against the president's attacks. All five voted in favor of the resolution, including Collin Peterson, whose district went heavily for Trump in 2016.
Among Trump's strongest critics in the delegation is St. Paul Democrat Betty McCollum, who denounced him in a statement Monday.