The White House and the president [Donald Trump] himself remains very worrisome, alarming, almost.
I'm not going to go on this fishing expedition that they want me to, that the Democrats want me to, the president has a duty and obligation to comply with the law. But again he's exempt from almost all of these things.
My question is about the head of the Office of Government Ethics. Is he acting ethically when he sent out nine tweets praising Donald Trump saying that his plan was brilliant. How did he come to that conclusion? And how does come to his current conclusions having never done an investigation and never looked at the paperwork in the point where he can actually come to a reasonable conclusion?I think that's unethical.
Federal spending is atrocious.
Straw purchasing is illegal.
You know, I think what people want more than anything is they just want people to do what they say they're going to do.
The president-elect [Donald Trump] has a duty and obligation to abide by the law. And he's except from most all of these laws.
A premium support program is different than a voucher program. They're just fundamentally different.
The only good place for a sage grouse to be listed is on the menu of a French bistro. It does not deserve federal protection, period.
I mean Donald Trump is a legitimate president. He won fair and square. He didn't win the election because of Russian interference.
I didn't investigate Hillary Clinton before she was in office, I started investigated Hillary Clinton's actions after the inspector-general said that there was classified information housed in a non-classified setting.
Until we see something that is actually wrongdoing, we're probably not going to go on a fishing trip to go see look at.
My fellow Americans, it has been the honor of my life to serve you. I won't stop. In fact, I will be right there with you as a citizen for all my remaining days.
[Donald Trump] has done a financial disclosure, which has gone through the Office of Government Ethics. I think he's done that twice. That is his duty under the law. I hear no complaints about that.
I mean the former presidents are going to be there [on Donald Trump inauguration]. The Clintons are going to be there. Jimmy Carter is going to be there. If Donald Trump needs a lesson in John Lewis and what he has done beyond talk, he could ask his own vice president.Mike Pence went to Selma in 2010 with John Lewis, was there on the Pettus Bridge, talked about him as somebody who has the moral authority and courage that continues to inspire millions of Americans.
Incredible how unnecessary it [questions the legitimacy of President-elect Donald Trump] was, because John Lewis was articulating something that most Democrats simply aren't, calling Trump illegitimate.
I'm not just going to go on these fishing expeditions. I didn't do that with President Obama. We didn't go through this with President [Barack] Obama. I think the world and certainly the American voters understand that Donald Trump has mass holdings. He's worth billions of dollars. He's been very successful in business. And I think the American voters understood that when they voted him in.
What you need to look at is what is required by law, which I believe that Donald Trump has complied with.
Governor Romney has paid 100 percent of his taxes that are owed. He has complied 100 percent with what the law requires.
I was ranked the second most conservative member in the House.
I've always viewed Mitt Romney as a very conservative person.
If you're going to grow the economy, if people are going to have more income, you have to have stability in the marketplace.
I really truly worry that the debt is one of the single biggest threat to the United States of America, that we're talking about a problem that is multi-trillion in its depth and I think we ought to be cutting more.
You dont raise taxes in times of such uncertainty.
I mean, Donald Trump hasn't even been sworn in yet. And so I do believe that he has set up a plan where the revenue or the profits that are coming to the hotel will be given directly to the Treasury.