Rep. Victoria Spartz (R-IN) pushed back on claims that President Donald Trump yelled at her in a phone conversation to change her vote on a budget resolution, calling the reports “fake news.” Spartz was among a handful of hard-liner holdouts on the resolution to unlock reconciliation,
"We are standing with the Ukrainian people, and we are standing with their fight for sovereignty and freedom, and we want the aid to continue," an organizer said.
Indiana Republican Rep. Victoria Spartz huddled at the back of the chamber with other GOP holdouts. At one point, Rep. Guy Reschenthaler and Rep. Tom Emmer backed Spartz and her fellow rebel Rep.
Indiana Rep. Victoria Spartz stuck to her principles as a fiscal hawk and opposed the GOP budget resolution that would balloon the deficit by trillions of dollars — right up until Tuesday evening.
Sen. Jim Banks led a letter to state lawmakers urging support of House Bill 1531, which passed the House last month.
Indiana, signaled support for President Trump's handling of peace negotiations with Russia to end the war in her home country of Ukraine. She also backs Trump's idea to secure Ukrainian mineral rights from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to repay the U.
warning came amid the unveiling of a new plan by the Trump administration to alleviate egg prices, which included investing another $1 billion in helping American farms tighten up biosecurity to keep the avian flu out of their broods and outsourcing up to 100 million eggs from other countries to feed the American market.
Congresswoman Spartz joins Tony Katz Today to explain why she changed her vote to a yes, despite her misgivings about all the deficit federal spending. #Victoria Spartz, #Indiana, #HouseOfRepresentatives,
Congresswoman Victoria Spartz stated that the budget approved by Republicans will not lead to cuts in Medicaid or other benefits, and that the cuts proposed will target waste, fraud, and abuse within the health care system.
Despite their differences, Spartz noted that Trump still invited Zelenskyy to the White House, even after past criticism.
Rep. Virginia Spartz (R-IN) was a "firm no" on the House budget resolution until she got a phone call from President Donald Trump in which he was "fuming" and "screaming" at her, reported Puck's Leigh Ann Caldwell.