Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Jewish Group Visiting Capitol Bewildered After Boebert Asks Them If They're Doing 'Reconnaissance'

Jewish Group Visiting Capitol Bewildered After Boebert Asks Them If They're Doing 'Reconnaissance'
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Representative Lauren Boebert, a Colorado Republican, stunned a group of Jewish visitors to the United States Capitol after she asked them if they were conducting "reconnaissance" after she ran into them while they waited for an elevator.

Members of the group, who were wearing yarmulkes, had come in to meet Representative Tom Suozzi. The group's organizer is an Orthodox Jew and sports a full beard.


A witness said Boebert stepped out of the elevator, looked at the visitors “from head to toe," and then asked if they had come to conduct "reconnaissance."

A rabbi who spoke to Buzzfeed News said the experience blindsided him:

“When I heard that, I actually turned to the person standing next to me and asked, ‘Did you just hear that?’ You know, I’m not sure to be offended or not. I was very confused.”

The incident also earned a rebuke from Suozzi, a Democrat who represents New York, who brought the group in to commemorate the 41st anniversary of the end of the Iran hostage crisis.

Regarding Boebert, Suozzi said members of Congress "can't be cavalier in the comments" they make, especially when they risk offending or discriminating against others:

"The bottom line is that everyone, especially members of Congress, have to be very, very thoughtful in the language they use. Because when you're a member of Congress, you have an important role to play in society."
"You can't be cavalier in the comments you make especially if they could be perceived as being antisemitic, or discriminatory."

Boebert, for her part, went on to defend her remarks, referencing comments from Democrats about tours she gave prior to the insurrection of January 6:

“I saw a large group and made a joke. Sadly when Democrats see the same they demonize my family for a year straight. I’m too short to see anyone’s yarmulkes."

That response did not go over well with Boebert's critics, who've accused her of anti-Semitic bigotry in the wake of the Colleyville synagogue hostage crisis, when a British Pakistani armed with a pistol took four people hostage during a Sabbath service.






Allegations that Boebert gave a "large tour" prior to the insurrection surfaced after the attack, coming shortly after authorities announced they would investigate whether lawmakers gave rioters a tour of the Capitol building ahead of time, compromising security.

In the week after the attack, Representative Steve Cohen, a Tennessee Democrat, said he saw Boebert "taking a group of people for a tour sometime after the 3rd [of January] and before the 6th [the day of the attack]." He said he did not know whether any of the individuals who were with Boebert that day later participated in the attack.

The extent of Boebert's alleged involvement in the insurrection, which took place when a mob of former President Donald Trump's supporters stormed the United States Capitol on the false premise the 2020 election had been stolen,

In October 2021, Rolling Stone published an article stating several supporters of former President Trump who helped plan the insurrection had multiple planning sessions with senior White House staffers and Republican members of Congress.

Sources who spoke to the magazine said they met with several high-profile Trump acolytes, including Representatives Paul Gosar (Arizona), Marjorie Taylor Greene (Georgia), Madison Cawthorn (North Carolina) and Boebert herself.

Organizers claim Gosar promised "blanket pardons" to anyone who participated in the attack, adding they "would talk to Boebert's team, Cawthorn's team, Gosar's team like back to back to back to back."

More from People/lauren-boebert

A birthday cake with number 4 and number zero candles on top of it.
a red velvet birthday cake with white frosting
Photo by Adrian Greaves on Unsplash

People Over 40 Reveal Which Physical Changes They Weren't Prepared For

Aging is a funny and unpredictable thing.

While many children dread the thought of growing up, others can't wait to become grown-ups, and not be beholden to school and homework, and living in their own house, under their own rules.

Keep Reading Show less
ride sign saying "chaos"
Nick Page on Unsplash

People Describe The Most Insane Event They've Ever Witnessed

Chaos is, according to the lexicographers at Oxford, a "state of complete disorder and confusion."

Humans find chaos entertaining to watch—hence the popularity of so-called reality TV—but not as much fun to be in the thick of. People may love the moment a "Real Housewife" flips a table, but would be less thrilled if a family member did it during dinner.

Keep Reading Show less
JD Vance and Karoline Leavitt
Hu Yousong/Xinhua via Getty Images

Trump Administration Dragged Over 'Sexy' Photoshoot For Damning 'Vanity Fair' Article

Vanity Fair has attracted significant attention this week after inviting Vice President JD Vance, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, and Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, among other Trump officials, for a photoshoot ahead of the publication's profile on Chief of Staff Susie Wiles—not realizing just how brutal the two-part article would be.

The profile takes an unusually intimate look at Wiles, a veteran political operative long known for projecting unwavering loyalty to her boss.

Keep Reading Show less
Kim Kardashian
Aeon/GC Images via Getty Images

Kim Kardashian Mocked For Beige 'Ozempic Santa' In NYC Skims Store—And This Is Why We Can't Have Nice Things

Santa Claus has survived centuries of tradition, but he was no match for beige, shapewear, or Kim Kardashian. A holiday TikTok posted last Monday to the SKIMS account sparked widespread mockery after showing Santa Claus visiting the brand’s New York City flagship store in a look that was unmistakably on-brand.

Gone was the iconic red velvet suit. In its place was a muted beige ensemble that looked less North Pole and more minimalist showroom chic.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots from @whodemboyz' TikTok video
@whodemboyz/TikTok

Guy Calls Out Bugles For 'Ruining' His Childhood After They Changed Their Iconic Shape

Possibly more than any other generation, Millennials were raised with interactive snacks and candies. From dippable cookies and candies to chips perfectly shaped for scooping and build-your-own pizzas, consumers found the interactive experience to be more important than the food itself.

Bugles are a fan favorite example, because while the chips were tasty and crispy, with a solid variety of flavors to choose from, the real point of them was their iconic shape, like the mouth of a bugle horn. Though we didn't openly talk about it at the time, it was a Millennial pastime to put the Bugles on our fingers like long nails, pretending we were fashionistas and gremlins and vampires.

Keep Reading Show less