Former Capitol Police Officer Michael Fanone Was Out of Control During Jack Smith's...
Darrell Issa's Questions for Jack Smith Did Not Sit Well With Dems
Jim Jordan Gets Jack Smith to Admit How Far He Was Willing to...
Is Political Murder Becoming ‘Acceptable’? These Numbers Say 'Yes.'
Governors Newsom and Walz Lurch Toward Infanticide
Bari Weiss Is Still Scorched After Running Disputed 60 Minutes Segment, and Another...
Passengers Applaud After Woman Kicked Off Miami Flight Following Bizarre Political Rant
Javier Milei Declares the United States a 'Beacon of Liberty' at the World...
The First Son, Credited With Saving the Life of a 'Very Close' Female...
DHS Slams Democrat Story Which Claims ICE Used 5-Year-Old As Bait
Cleaning Up SNAP: Healthier Food, Safer Cards, and Real Fraud Enforcement
Florida Nursing Assistant Convicted in $11.4 Million Medicare Brace Fraud Scheme
U.S. House Approves $10B for ICE Funding, Avoids Shutdown
Jury Convicts California Couple Charged with $100 Million Fraud
Two Men Sentenced in Nearly $2M COVID-19 Relief Fraud Scheme
Tipsheet

Store Shelves Are Empty Again

AP Photo/Evan Vucci

A week before Christmas White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki stepped to the lectern in the Brady Briefing room to declare President Joe Biden saved the holiday and that the supply chain crisis hadn't come to fruition. 

Advertisement

"Good news, we've saved Christmas," Psaki said on December 22, 2021. "And that is because President Biden recognized this challenge early, acted as an honest broker to bring key stakeholders together, and focused on addressing practical problems across the global supply chain."

White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain also touted the "accomplishment."

But fast forward into the new year and grocery stores around the country are completely bare, proving the supply chain crisis is far from over. 

Advertisement

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos