Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar will deliver a speech on the rule of law Wednesday night, and what she portrayed when President Trump over-introduction Wednesday night, as Democrats hope to find effective messaging that will resonate with voters’ early days of Republicans’ second term in the White House.
The excerpts obtained by CBS News ahead of the event hosted by the New Republic show Klobuchar are Senate Democrat Klobuchar, who has not ruled out the 2028 presidential election and plans to “a attempt by Donald Trump to reshape the executive office as a part of exemption from external accountability.”
"He is engaging in unprecedented over-division, ignoring the rule of law and pretending that independent judiciary is a mistake, not a feature of our system," the Minnesota Senator Program said.
Mr. Trump's first few months since returning to the White House, he found that the president and his allies were inclined to executive power. His administration clashed with Democrats over cuts approved spending and tangled with multiple Federal Judge Overimmigration.
White House spokesman Kush Desai responded to Klobuchar's plan remarks, criticizing the legal cases Trump faced during the 2024 cycle and the party's immigration policies.
"The Trump administration will continue to legally use all the leverage of power granted by the Constitution and Congress to the executive branch, ultimately putting Americans and the United States in chief," Desai said in an email.
Klobuchar, a leading Democrat on the Senate Agriculture Committee and served as a Hennepin County prosecutor in Minnesota before being elected as Washington, also hopes to try to see what her perception of the impact on tariffs looks like in the real world during Mr. Trump’s second term.
"Who and who are the tariffs on Trump?" Klobuchar's excerpt. "Small business. Small farmers. Consumers facing a $4,000 tariff."
Mr. Trump recently took to social media and defended his tariff policy, writing: "Very stupid Democrats are doing their best to devalue what is going on. They are not fueling at all and have lost all levels of confidence. It's a financial revolution and they are overwhelmed."
The senior Minnesota senator is seen as the 2028 presidential candidate for 2028, and she finished a strong and surprising third in the New Hampshire primary in the 2020 primary until she faced a struggle soon after, and soon after. Klobuchar has not pointed out whether she will seek presidency in 2028, but running was not explicitly ruled out when asked Sunday with the press host Kristen Welker.
Klobuchar's political power has risen in Washington since the 2020 campaign, and she has also been focusing on antitrust issues, a topic that has also been intertwined during the upcoming speech on Wednesday.
“We hear a lot of phrases these days – the rule of law. As our economy moves forward to the cliff, you might ask – “Why is this important to me?” "It's a reasonable question," Klobuchar will say on Wednesday. "My answer? Everything we have confidence in this country (including our economy) is glued together by law."
Klobuchar's speech was due to the conspiracy that continued to spin because who is truly the leader of the Democratic Party after the left faced the left in the 2024 election. After last fall’s election, Democrats hope to draw a path forward that cost the party the White House and Senate and failed to retake the House. Meanwhile, there is a clear tension within the party’s foundation, which is the best way to challenge Mr. Trump after his compelling victory in November.
Despite the national Democrats struggling in 2024, the Minnesota senator has performed well in her hometown politics.
Last year, Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris won Minnesota by four points, a surprisingly close result, as Richard Nixon hasn't voted for Republicans since 1972. Klobuchar again has a higher turnout than her highest turnout in Minnesota’s Democratic Party (Minnesta) as she performed well in a quarter of the game. Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.