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Democrats Invite Fired Federal Workers to Trump’s Congress Speech

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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Rather than boycott President Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress, some Democratic lawmakers are inviting former federal workers to the speech on Tuesday as a way to protest the mass firings and funding cuts that have defined Mr. Trump’s first month back in office.

Federal workers’ treatment by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has energized constituents across the country in recent weeks, with many overloading lawmakers’ phone lines and showing up at town halls to voice their displeasure.

“What the Democrats are showing with our guests is that it’s the American people who are being hurt by the actions of Elon Musk and Donald Trump,” said Representative Brad Schneider, Democrat of Illinois. Mr. Schneider said he chose not to skip the address — other Democrats such as Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut have said they won’t attend — so that the president “didn’t get a free pass” and would see the effects his administration has had on people.
When asked for comment, a White House spokesman, Harrison Fields, said Democrats were “exploiting the American people for political points.”
Mr. Schneider’s guest, Adam Mulvey, is a 20-year Army veteran who in February was terminated from his role as an emergency management specialist at a federal health center in North Chicago that serves both veteran and active-duty personnel.
Also invited to the address is Gabriel D’Alatri, a Marine Corps veteran and former Internal Revenue Service project manager from Connecticut who was fired just five days before he completed his probationary period. Mr. D’Alatri said his termination letter indicated that he was fired for “performance issues” even though he never had a bad performance review.
“It came as a shock to me and my family,” said Mr. D’Alatri, who will attend Mr. Trump’s address as a guest of his congressman, Representative Joe Courtney, Democrat of Connecticut. As an I.R.S. project manager, Mr. D’Alatri managed the department’s facilities in Connecticut and also coordinated reasonable accommodation requests for employees with disabilities. Mr. D’Alatri said that he voted for Mr. Trump in November and that it was too early to decide whether or not he regretted his choice.
Mr. Courtney said his constituent’s story was an example of how “indiscriminate and mindless” the Trump administration’s cuts had been.

 
Rather than boycott President Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress, some Democratic lawmakers are inviting former federal workers to the speech on Tuesday as a way to protest the mass firings and funding cuts that have defined Mr. Trump’s first month back in office.

Federal workers’ treatment by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has energized constituents across the country in recent weeks, with many overloading lawmakers’ phone lines and showing up at town halls to voice their displeasure.

“What the Democrats are showing with our guests is that it’s the American people who are being hurt by the actions of Elon Musk and Donald Trump,” said Representative Brad Schneider, Democrat of Illinois. Mr. Schneider said he chose not to skip the address — other Democrats such as Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut have said they won’t attend — so that the president “didn’t get a free pass” and would see the effects his administration has had on people.
When asked for comment, a White House spokesman, Harrison Fields, said Democrats were “exploiting the American people for political points.”
Mr. Schneider’s guest, Adam Mulvey, is a 20-year Army veteran who in February was terminated from his role as an emergency management specialist at a federal health center in North Chicago that serves both veteran and active-duty personnel.
Also invited to the address is Gabriel D’Alatri, a Marine Corps veteran and former Internal Revenue Service project manager from Connecticut who was fired just five days before he completed his probationary period. Mr. D’Alatri said his termination letter indicated that he was fired for “performance issues” even though he never had a bad performance review.
“It came as a shock to me and my family,” said Mr. D’Alatri, who will attend Mr. Trump’s address as a guest of his congressman, Representative Joe Courtney, Democrat of Connecticut. As an I.R.S. project manager, Mr. D’Alatri managed the department’s facilities in Connecticut and also coordinated reasonable accommodation requests for employees with disabilities. Mr. D’Alatri said that he voted for Mr. Trump in November and that it was too early to decide whether or not he regretted his choice.
Mr. Courtney said his constituent’s story was an example of how “indiscriminate and mindless” the Trump administration’s cuts had been.

Shouldn't they be looking for work or enjoying their generous 8 month severance package?
 
"Mr. D’Alatri said that he voted for Mr. Trump in November and that it was too early to decide whether or not he regretted his choice." So he's out of work and it appears as though, according to him, he was fired under false pretenses. At the same time it's too early to decide whether or not he regretted voting for the guy who was directly behind this. Maybe when he struggles to find a job and his unemployment runs out and his family suffers for it he'll begin to have second thoughts? 🤔

#notacult
 
"Mr. D’Alatri said that he voted for Mr. Trump in November and that it was too early to decide whether or not he regretted his choice." So he's out of work and it appears as though, according to him, he was fired under false pretenses. At the same time it's too early to decide whether or not he regretted voting for the guy who was directly behind this. Maybe when he struggles to find a job and his unemployment runs out and his family suffers for it he'll begin to have second thoughts? 🤔

#notacult

I'm sure his sacrifice will be appreciated by the C-suite bros that benefit from the impending corporate tax cuts.
 
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She's had some lasting power for a woman who's chief accomplishment is tying for 5th in a swimming event at NCAAs.
Being a perpetual victim will always give you a home in today's GQP. She is going to grift the rubes for their last dollar. The, "It's only about saving girls sports", rubes here will gladly hand over that last dollar.
 
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