House Dem breaks with party on McIver and Padilla incidents (No Labels Problem Solver Jared Golden of Maine) [View all]
Democrats in Congress have largely closed ranks around Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-N.J.) and Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) but centrist Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine) is panning what he calls their "politics as theater."
https://www.axios.com/2025/06/12/alex-padilla-lamonica-mciver-jared-golden
Why it matters: Golden represents a district President Trump won last year and is always walking a careful line between supporting his party and
maintaining his independence. On this, he is steering hard away from the party line. "I think that it's never good when a senator or member of Congress gets roughed up by law enforcement," he said in an interview with Axios at the Capitol. But, he added, "I don't think politics as theater is what our job is here."
What happened: Padilla was
forcibly removed by law enforcement as he tried to confront Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem during a press conference at the Los Angeles FBI headquarters on Thursday. Officers detained Padilla, held him on the ground and handcuffed him, though the senator was later allowed to meet with Noem. The incident came after
McIver was indicted for allegedly assaulting law enforcement during a scuffle with DHS officers outside an ICE facility in her home state last month, which she denies.
What he's saying: "Storming into the FBI headquarters and trying to break up a press conference and rushing on a [Cabinet] secretary is not really the job of an elected official," Golden said. Of McIver, he said: "Where I come from, if you shove a police officer, you're probably getting arrested." Still, he added: "I am not in any way saying that means law enforcement should be slamming people around."
The other side: "Everyone is entitled to their respective opinions.
For me, the video I saw was clear," Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), a member of Democratic leadership, told Axios when asked about Golden's comments. Padilla "was at his place of work. He works in that building. He went to the press conference ... he identified himself as a U.S. senator and then they manhandle him to the ground and arrest him," Garcia said. "I think it's crystal clear that that is unacceptable and an incredible overreach and quite dangerous ... and I think the American public is as outraged as the Congress."
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