

STATE DEPARTMENT MOCKED FOR ‘CULINARY DIPLOMACY’ PROGRAM: ‘SAY SOME MORE STUPID S---’

A State Department nominee who called Biden a ‘gaffe machine’ was withdrawn on Tuesday. (AP Newsroom)
"His statements clearly do not reflect U.S. policy," Price said. "They are not a reflection of what we believe, and they are inappropriate, to say the least. We have decided to withdraw our nomination of this individual."
"We were not aware of these statements and writings that he produced," Price acknowledged.
Cavallaro’s past remarks were first reported by The Algemeiner, a non-profit news organization that covers the Middle East, Israel and "matters of Jewish interest around the world." That outlet found the 2020 tweet that criticized then-candidate Biden and several others – all of which Cavallaro has since taken down.
BIDEN GAFFES: THE PRESIDENT BATS .500 IN JANUARY, SLIP UP EVERY OTHER DAY

The nominee's controversial comments weren't noticed by the State Department during the vetting process. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Another one of his tweets criticized House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., as being "Bought. Purchased. Controlled" by pro-Israel groups. In another instance, Cavallaro described Israel as an "apartheid state."
Cavallaro put up a new Twitter threat on Tuesday that said State had informed him that it was this last tweet that disqualified him from serving on the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
"Today, the State Dept informed me that they were withdrawing my candidacy because of my view that the conditions in Israel/Palestine meet the definition of apartheid under international human rights law," he tweeted.
BIDEN’S YEAR OF FORGETTING, GOING THE WRONG WAY AND SAYING THE WRONG THING

Biden has struggled with gaffes during his campaign and during his presidency. (Andrew Caballero)
He also said he had removed "many" of his previous tweets because he was "proactively & in good faith addressing concerns the @StateDept had raised during the vetting process."
Cavallaro also argued that his nomination would not have affected U.S. policy on Israel, and he said that his removal from the process would deprive the Commission of a "committed, experienced, advocate for human rights in the Americas."