Wisconsin Senator Ron Johnson says Congress has to restore 'fiscal sanity' to the US budget

According to Johnson, the FBI needs to be investigated for their overreach of power and their politicization of the institution, as well as for covering up the Hunter Biden laptop story.
Ron Johnson, Washington, D.C., Feb. 2, 2022

Wisconsin GOP Sen. Ron Johnson says he is ready to get to work after his midterm election victory by restoring fiscal sanity and function to Congress. 

Johnson recently won his re-election for the Senate against Wisconsin Democratic Lieutenant Gov. Mandela Barnes in a close race, with Johnson taking 50.5% of the votes and Barnes taking 49.5%.

"We need to restore function and fiscal sanity first within Congress," Johnson said on the "Just the News, No Noise" TV show. "This involves processing a budget."

Another one of Johnson's goals is to investigate the claims of people who got injured from vaccines and weren't taken seriously or were silenced. 

"I've already done outreach to the doctors and medical researchers that I've been connected to globally," Johnson stated. "We need to certainly investigate the oversight on what happened with vaccines and how the the vaccine-injured were impacted."

According to Johnson, the FBI needs to be investigated for their overreach of power and their politicization of the institution, as well as for covering up the Hunter Biden laptop story.

"We still need to uncover the corruption within federal law enforcement, the Department of Justice and the FBI," Johnson said. "We still don't know who all started the letter from 51 intelligence officials that was its own information operation against the Hunter Biden laptop. I mean, that is grotesque corruption."

Johnson also says that federal health agencies need to be looked into for their mishandling of COVID. 

"Anybody that looks at our response to COVID and says it was a success, I'll show you the supposed hundreds of thousands of people that died from COVID that didn't have to because of a lack of early treatment," Johnson concluded.