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Wednesday, March 11, 2015

The prelude to another Clinton presidency




The scandal cauldron is already simmering and she hasn't even been nominated yet!



Hillary Clinton's Emails: Unanswered Questions About Deleted Correspondence

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Hillary Clinton was likely hoping to put the issue of her use of a private email account to rest by hosting a news conference, but more than a few questions remain unanswered. 

The former Secretary of State, who addressed the media shortly after giving a speech at the United Nations about women's empowerment, did not use a government email account during her tenure as the U.S.'s top diplomat. 







She said today that the reason for the use of one, personal account was convenience, though that does not explain the issue fully. 

Here are some of the questions that remain unanswered following Clinton's news conference. 
Why did she delete her personal emails?

Clinton argued that she had a number of emails about personal issues that should not be considered part of the public domain. 

"No one wants their personal emails made public, and I think most people understand that and respect that privacy," Clinton said today. 
How do we know what she deleted?

Clinton's word is really the only check that the public will have on this front. The emails that she chose not to keep included emails "about planning Chelsea's wedding or my mother's funeral arrangements, condolence notes to friends, as well as yoga routines, family vacations, the other things you typically find in inboxes," she said. 
Will the public ever know what emails she sent?

Yes, but only the emails that Clinton and her team have deemed related to her work as Secretary of State, and then from there, only what the State Department approved. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said that once cleared, the 55,000 pages of emails that Clinton handed over will be shared publicly on a government website though not for several months. 

When it comes to her personal emails, the public will never know. Today, Clinton ruled out an independent review of her server. 
How many emails did she have? And how many pertained to work?

Clinton amassed 62,320 emails between March 2009 and February 2013 and fewer than half of those had to do with work. 

After today's news conference, Clinton's team released a statement clarifying the exact number of work and personal emails, saying that 30,490 were handed over to the State Department because they related to work and 31,830 were deemed "private, personal records." 

Her camp clarified that the timeframe for these emails does not exactly match up to her tenure as Secretary of State -- she was sworn in on Jan. 21, 2009 -- but for roughly the first two months she used the email address she had left over from her time as senator. However, her "practice" of emailing individuals who used a government account in order to ensure that they were saved is the only record that exists for that time period. Once she transitioned from that Senate account she no longer had access. 

That would mean that she sent 21.5 work emails and 22.46 personal emails per day. 
Why didn't she just use a government account for work and a personal account for issues pertaining to her private life?

There was no official answer to this. Clinton said that she chose to use one email address out of "convenience." 

"Looking back, it would have been better if I'd simply used a second email account and carried a second phone, but at the time, this didn't seem like an issue," she said. 
Was she using a personal account to avoid having her emails recorded on government servers?

Clinton claims that she always knew that her emails to government employees, who used state.gov email addresses, "were captured and preserved immediately on the system at the State Department." 
Wasn't she breaking the rules by using a personal email account rather than a government address?

Clinton maintained that she "fully complied with every rule I was governed by." She did not directly address a 2005 update in the Foreign Affairs Manual codified by the State Department that ruled employees could only use private email accounts for official business if they turned those emails over to be entered into government computers. That ruling also forbade State Department employees from including "sensitive but unclassified" information on private email, except for some very narrow exceptions. She did, however, note that she never sent classified information via email. 
Why did she think that it was acceptable to use a private server to host her emails?

She said that the personal server set up at her house in Chappaqua, New York, was already in place for her husband and his post-presidential career. That said, The Wall Street Journal reported that Bill Clinton has only sent two emails in his entire life, so his use of the system does not necessarily mean that the system is inherently secure. 

When asked whether or not her email plan was acceptable by the White House's standards, Clinton said "there are different rules governing the White House than there are governing the rest of the executive branch." 
Was her system safe?

"It had numerous safeguards," Clinton said of the server stored at her house. "It was on property, guarded by the Secret Service, and there were no security breaches. So, I think that the use of that server, which started with my husband, certainly proved to be effective and secure." 
How many phones did she use?

During today's news conference, Clinton touted the "convenience" of using one device, but it seems her habits have changed. 

Just two weeks ago, during a talk in Silicon Valley, Clinton said that she had both an iPhone and a BlackBerry, though she did not say when exactly she began using both devices. 
How will this affect the 2016 race?

She did not answer when asked if this issue has impacted her thinking about her expected presidential run, but Republicans are jumping into the controversy. 

Rep. Trent Gowdy, who heads the House committee investigating the attack on the American consulate in Benghazi, Libya, said that "there is no way to accept" Clinton's explanation and is calling for an independent third party to review her server. 






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Tuesday, March 10, 2015

His story is more shaky then a Chihuahua with Parkinson's disease





White House Reset: Obama Knew Of Hillary's Private Email



NEIL MUNRO
White House Correspondent





WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama actually did know that Hillary Clinton used a non-government email address when she was secretary of state, but didn't know the extent of her private email system, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Monday.

"I would not describe the numbers of emails as large. … He was not aware of the details of how that email address and that server had been set up," Earnest said.

That's a shift from Saturday, March 7, when Obama told CBS that he learned about Clinton's private email system in the news.

"Mr. President, when did you first learn that Hillary Clinton used an email system outside the U.S. government for official business while she was secretary of state?" CBS News' Bill Plante asked.

"Uh," Obama replied, "the same time everybody else learned it through news reports."

Earnest dodged questions about the president's knowledge of Clinton's email practices, and how the administration should respond.

"I'm not going to get into a lot of detail. … The president did email with Secretary Clinton," he said.

When asked what Obama will do to ensure that copies of all of Clinton's emails were available to the public, Earnest dodged again. "That might be one step too far. It is the responsibility of the State Department," he said.

If congressional leaders, such as Rep. Trey Gowdy, want copies of Clinton's emails, they should contact the State Department, Earnest said.

"He should raise that directly with State Department officials," said Earnest.

Earnest was also asked why there are large gaps in the email records sent by Clinton to the State Department, including a gap during a Clinton trip to the Middle East during which she was photographed using her Blackberry phone.

"Maybe she was using her Blackberry to read the news … or tweeting," Earnest said.





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Monday, March 9, 2015

White House scrambles to answer when they learned of Clinton email habits







Clinton damage control task force dubbed 'Benghazi group' 

What did the White House know and when did they know it? 

That timeline got murkier on Friday as the White House struggled to respond to mounting questions over Hillary Clinton's private email use. The heat was turned up after Politico reported that top White House officials knew back in August that Clinton was conducting official business on personal email.  

White House spokesman Josh Earnest, when asked about what the White House knew, said senior officials were emailing Clinton while she was secretary of state and a few noticed she wasn't using a .gov email address. However, he did not say when they noticed it and whether red flags were raised. 

He also said he had no idea when President Obama first found out and claimed he wouldn't be surprised if Obama only learned about it from "newspapers." 





Meanwhile, in an interview with Bloomberg News Friday morning, Obama senior adviser Valerie Jarrett said she never received email from Clinton's private address, and didn't know whether anyone at the White House, including the president, had either. 

"That I do not know," she said when pressed by the reporters. 

As for herself, "I did not receive email from Secretary Clinton," she said, adding that "the president has a very firm policy that emails should be kept on government systems, he believes in transparency and I know that the State Department is working with the National Archives to make sure that Secretary Hillary Clinton's emails are captured." 

According to Politico, the White House, State Department and Clinton's personal office knew in August that the former secretary of state had used a private email to conduct official business. The State Department became aware while the agency was preparing a batch of 15,000 emails requested by House Republicans in the Benghazi investigation. 

"State Department officials noticed that some of the 15,000 pages of documents included a personal email address for Clinton, and State and White House officials conferred on how to handle the revelation," Politico wrote. "But those involved deferred to Clinton's aides, and they decided not to respond." 

While it is not clear who in the White House did the conferring, Jamal Ware, spokesman for the Republican-led Select Committee on Benghazi, confirmed that committee staff first noticed Clinton was included on messages at the address hdr22@clintonemail.com when going through the State Department documents in "late summer," and then on more documents supplied by the agency in February. 

However, Ware told The Associated Press on Thursday that it wasn't until Feb. 28, just days before the scandal broke, that the State Department acknowledged Clinton only used personal email while in office. After that, the committee, chaired by Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., announced it has subpoenaed all of Clinton's emails relating to Benghazi – including any communications from her personal email and server, as well as texts, attachments and pictures. 

The Associated Press earlier this week quoted an anonymous source saying the White House counsel's office was also not aware of Clinton's exclusive use of personal email during her tenure, and only found out as part of the congressional investigation. 

Observers say the White House is in the difficult position of defending the former Cabinet secretary and likely Democratic 2016 presidential candidate, while being careful not to get caught up in the mess itself. According to the AP, top White House aides have been "in contact" Clinton's people "to clarify specific facts that the White House is likely to be asked about" and have advised them about what the White House had planned to say. 

"It's almost impossible for the White House to give firm answers because there's just too much you don't know," said Ari Fleischer, President George W. Bush's former press secretary. "It's an extraordinarily delicate dance they have to do to not throw someone overboard, but not get anyone in the White House in deeper trouble." 





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Friday, March 6, 2015

A heart to heart conversation




On a tip from my brother Gary


It's like Rush said...Netanyahu is everything Obama isn't.









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Thursday, March 5, 2015

What if Obama were president in 1941





On a tip from Ed Kilbane

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