

He won over voters that President Trump couldn't win just one year ago. I also asked the Senator about China’s role in exploiting our national divisions, his s corching cross-examination of AG Merrick Garland, the controversy over his infamous New York Times op-ed, and whether women in America are losing rights that took generations to secure.ĪS: Senator, a lot of Democrats voted for Glenn Youngkin in Virginia. He offered his thoughts on Pete Buttigieg’s extended paternity leave. I asked whether he considers same-sex marriage settled law. I asked whether he would personally be willing to find common cause with Liberal colleagues and whether that was even practicable in today’s polarized political climate. At last, parents are reclaiming the right to raise their children according to their judgment and values and Senator Cotton’s bill is an essential part of that.īut after Tuesday night’s stunning electoral victory in Virginia for the GOP-and, much more importantly from where I sit, a victory for parents-I spoke to the Senator about whether the GOP might become the Party of Parents or even (dare I suggest?) the party of women. It couldn’t come at a better time.įor years, parents’ rights have been subverted by state social workers, public school teachers and school guidance counselors. It is no exaggeration to say this is the single most important parents’ rights bill to come along in decades. I had planned to speak to him about the new bill he is sponsoring, the Empower Parents to Protect Their Kids Act, which would make it unlawful for schools to participate in reassigning a minor child’s gender identity without first obtaining parental permission. This morning, I spoke to Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas.
