logo
Senior Democrat rips into Hunter Biden's 'regrettable' claims about Joe being on sleeping pills

Senior Democrat rips into Hunter Biden's 'regrettable' claims about Joe being on sleeping pills

Daily Mail​22-07-2025
A senior member of the U.S. Senate Democratic Caucus had some choice words for Hunter Biden after the former first son made an astounding claim about the state of his father's health last year.
Connecticut Senator Richard Blumenthal said on Capitol Hill Tuesday that Hunter Biden's comments were 'regrettable, because we need to be looking forward and focusing on the past really makes no sense.'
The younger Biden appeared in an interview with YouTuber Andrew Callaghan which aired Monday, during which he made shocking claims about his father, former President Joe Biden.
Hunter revealed that the sleep aid Ambien was to blame for his father's disastrous presidential debate performance, which became a turning point in the 2024 campaign.
Monday's interview marked the one year anniversary of the presidential debate between then-incumbent Biden and current President Donald Trump, after which Biden withdrew from the race.
'I know exactly what happened in that debate,' Biden's son said. 'He flew around the world. He's 81 years old. He's tired. They gave him Ambien to be able to sleep and he gets up on the stage and looks like a deer in the headlights.'
The then president blamed his lousy June 27, 2024 performance on a cold, though had spent several days at Camp David resting up ahead of the Atlanta showdown.
As Republicans in the House and the Senate have been conducting investigations into the usage of the autopen by former President Joe Biden, Democrats have had to toe a tough line.
Blumenthal has called the GOP investigations 'performative and theatrical' and told the Washington Examiner last month that he was 'not super interested in' attending a hearing on Biden's presidential pardon power.
Yet, one of the actions taken by Biden via autopen during the last few days of presidency was the decision to commute the prison sentence of Adrian Peeler, a man who planned and committed the murder of an eight-year-old boy and his mother in 1999.
The crime happened in Connecticut, Blumenthal's home state, and the senator remarked back in January that somebody had 'dropped the ball' with that particular decision.
Hunter Biden's bombshell interview made numerous headlines Monday as the former first son unleashed f-bomb-laden rants and made shocking revelations about his family.
Hunter also attacked prominent Democrats such as his father's former ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel, who criticized Democrats performance in the 2024 election, and actor George Clooney who called for the elder Biden to drop out of the Presidential race last year.
Hunter even went as far to say that he would invade El Salvador if they refuse to send back deportees sent to the country by the Trump administration.
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz remarked that the rant was 'unhinged.'
'This is the current state of the Democrat party,' he added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Animal shelters surge with abandoned pets after owners are detained or deported in ICE immigration raids
Animal shelters surge with abandoned pets after owners are detained or deported in ICE immigration raids

The Independent

time9 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Animal shelters surge with abandoned pets after owners are detained or deported in ICE immigration raids

Pets are being abandoned and surrendered to shelters as their owners are swept up in President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. Daymi Blain operates the Adopt and Save a Life Rescue Mission in South Florida. 'This is all we're getting now: pets with deported and detained owners. Nobody calls for anything else,' she told The Washington Post. 'I don't know what's going to happen with all this, but I can tell you that the animals are the ones paying the price,' she added. Animal shelters are growing overcrowded as pets lose their homes with their owners detained or deported. All over the U.S. animal welfare groups say they're handling an uptick in calls about pets with owners picked up by immigration authorities, or who have left the country of their own accord. The rising need for space comes as animal shelters are already spread increasingly thin following the pandemic, as they deal with being short on staff and decreasing adoptions. Some animals may be euthanized because there's no space for them. 'All rescues like us plan for disasters,' Jean Harrison at the Big Fluffy Dog Rescue in Nashville told The Post. 'I plan for floods. I plan for the tornado and hurricane seasons coming up. It did not cross my mind that I needed to be prepared for an onslaught of displaced pets from deported immigrants.' The Department of Homeland Security told The Post that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement 'does NOT impound property,' but didn't clarify further. Lucero, a young dog, was abandoned close to a gas station after her owner, a trucker, was apprehended. A pair of German Shepherds, Lolita and Bruno, with six puppies, were all surrendered by a man who was set to be deported after a quarter-century in the U.S. It remains unclear how many animals have lost their homes as no government agency keeps track. Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse figures show that 56,816 people were in ICE custody as of July 13, but it remains unclear how many are pet owners. Florida, where Blain operates her shelter, had the largest single-state immigration operation in U.S. history earlier this year. The shelter has taken in as many as 19 dogs, 12 cats, 11 roosters, and a number of rabbits, guinea pigs, and pigeons, according to The Post. The Los Angeles County Department of Animal Care and Control said 15 dogs had been left behind since June following deportations. Animal Care Centers of New York City said it had handled four cases connected to immigration this year. Harrison, in Tennessee, told the paper that she had seen three 'waves' of animals come into her shelter. In the spring, families from Venezuela started leaving their pets after the Trump administration removed their deportation protections. The largest wave came in May after raids conducted by ICE. Then, there were the animals left behind, with pets in empty homes going unseen for weeks. Harrison told the paper that two rescuers found two Great Pyrenees, which should weigh about 110 pounds, weighing in at 49 pounds. 'They had some water, but no food. Nobody knew they were there,' she said.

Hulk Hogan had 'no interest' in meeting daughter Brooke's twin girls before his death, son-in-law claims
Hulk Hogan had 'no interest' in meeting daughter Brooke's twin girls before his death, son-in-law claims

Daily Mail​

time9 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Hulk Hogan had 'no interest' in meeting daughter Brooke's twin girls before his death, son-in-law claims

Hulk Hogan's son-in-law has claimed that the WWE icon had 'no interest' in meeting his daughter Brooke's twins prior to his death. The wrestling legend died at the age of 71 last week after suffering a cardiac arrest at his home in Clearwater, Florida. In the days that followed, it emerged that Hogan 's daughter would not inherit a dime from her late father's estate after their rift towards the end of his life. Brooke revealed that she 'had to step away to protect my heart' in the final two years of his life, however it appears that her partner did attempt to mend their relationship. Former NHL star Steven Oleksy remained in contact with Hogan and says he reached out 'about a month and a half' after their twins were born in January. According to People, Oleksy said: 'I sent text messages once again to kind of gauge where he was at, but there was no interest.' Reports back in April claimed that Oleksy had made several failed attempts to 'foster peace' with the wrestling legend. Oleksy continued: 'She [Brooke] was there for every surgery leading up to the last two years. She would fly down on her own dime, take care of her dad, and it just made a lot of sense. 'No one understood his body, procedures, medications and everything else more than my wife,' he said. Meanwhile, according Us Weekly back in April, Oleksy has been 'proactively trying to foster peace for years'. The outlet claims that he has requested a 'man-to-man conversation' with Hogan but his efforts have been rebuffed by the wrestling icon. The report quotes a source close to Oleksy and Brooke who claimed that the couple's 'hurt is very, very heavy'. Oleksy offered a public defense of his wife at the time, saying he wouldn't 'stand by and allow anyone to continue to hurt' Brooke. Hulk welcomed Brooke as well as son Nick, 35, with ex-wife Linda - whom he was married to from 1983 to 2009. He later tied the knot with Jennifer McDaniel in 2010 until their divorce in 2021. Two years later, the WWE legend said 'I do' to Sky Daily and the pair were married up until his death on Thursday. Brooke and her father last spoke nearly two years ago in September 2023 only weeks before he married his third wife Sky. On that call, Brooke expressed love and concern for her father - telling him that he shouldn't be working so hard due to his declining health. Despite her pleas for him to enjoy more of his life, those requests fell on deaf ears. The pair didn't speak again. Despite their fractured relationship, Brooke was recently left frustrated after being snubbed of an invite from the WWE as they paid tribute to her late father. 'For those of you giving me c*** for not attending my Dad's tributes, @WWE did not extend an invite,' she wrote on her Instagram story Wednesday. Daily Mail has contacted WWE for comment. Meanwhile, her brother Nick honored his 'best friend' and father in a heartbreaking statement as he joined the WWE's poignant tribute ahead of Monday Night Raw. He looked visibly emotional as he stood alongside WWE stars past and present for a 10-bell salute to his father. His wife Tana Lea was also seen wiping away tears after joining her husband on stage for the event in Detroit.

Four killed in Montana bar shooting that is US's ninth mass murder of 2025
Four killed in Montana bar shooting that is US's ninth mass murder of 2025

The Guardian

time20 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Four killed in Montana bar shooting that is US's ninth mass murder of 2025

Four people were killed on Friday in a shooting at a Montana bar, prompting a lockdown in a neighborhood several miles away as authorities searched a wooded area for a suspect in the case. The shooting brought the number of mass murders so far this year in the US to nine, according to the Gun Violence Archive, a non-partisan resource which defines such cases as killings in which four or more victims are killed. All those mass murders were shootings, and four have occurred in a 30-day period beginning 2 July. It was the US's second mass murder since Monday, when a man attacked a New York City skyscraper housing the National Football League's headquarters and shot four people dead before dying by suicide. Friday's mass murder in Montana happened at about 10.30am at the Owl Bar in Anaconda, according to the state's division of criminal investigation. The agency, which is leading the investigation into the shooting, confirmed four people were pronounced dead at the scene. The suspect, who was identified as 45-year-old Michael Paul Brown, lived nextdoor to the bar, according to public records. Authorities said a tactical team cleared Brown's home and that he was last seen in the Stump Town area just west of Anaconda. More than a dozen officers from local and state police converged on that area, locking it down so no one was allowed in or out. A helicopter also hovered over a nearby mountainside as officers moved among the trees, Randy Clark – a retired police officer who lives there – told the Associated Press. Brown was believed to be armed, the Montana highway patrol said in a statement. As reports of the shooting spread through town, business owners locked their doors and sheltered inside with customers. At Caterpillars to Butterflies Childcare, a nursery a few blocks from the shooting scene, owner Sage Huot said she had kept the children inside all day after someone called to let her know about the violence. 'We're constantly doing practice drills, fire drills and active shooter drills, so we locked down the facility, locked the doors, and we have a quiet spot where we play activities away from all of our windows and doors,' Huot said. Anaconda is about 75 miles (120km) south-east of Missoula. A town of about 9,000 people in a valley hemmed in by mountains, it was founded by copper barons who profited off nearby mines in the late 1800s. A defunct smelter stack looms over the valley. The owner of the Firefly Cafe in Anaconda said she locked up her business at about 11am on Friday after being alerted to the shooting by a friend. 'We are Montana, so guns are not new to us,' cafe owner Barbie Nelson said. 'For our town to be locked down, everybody's pretty rattled.' Associated Press contributed reporting

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store