Archive for May, 2017

Hillary Clinton condemns ‘racist abuse’ in Portland attack – The Hill (blog)

Former Secretary of State Hillary ClintonHillary Rodham ClintonGraham: Comey should be held accountable for acting on bad intel Hillary Clinton condemns 'racist abuse' in Portland attack Clinton returns to election night convention hall to talk about her new book MORE called a racism-motivated incident in Portland on Saturday "heartbreaking."

Clinton tweeted her condolences after two men were stabbed to death by a white supremacist in Portland, Oregon, when they tried to stop the man's racist tirade.

"Heartbreaking. No one should have to endure this racist abuse," Clinton tweeted Saturday night. "No one should have to give their life to stop it."

Heartbreaking. No one should have to endure this racist abuse. No one should have to give their life to stop it.https://t.co/CpmQcHI8gi

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Police arrested 35-year-old Jeremy Joseph Christian early Saturday morning after he allegedly stabbed three men who tried to stop him from berating two Muslim women on a Portland MAX train. Two of the men died, while a third received injuries that were not life-threatening.

"In the midst of his ranting and raving, some people approached him and appeared to try to intervene with his behavior and some of the people that he was yelling at," Portland police spokesman Sgt. Pete Simpson said. "They were attacked viciously."

The Muslim holy month of Ramadan began on Friday at sundown.

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Hillary Clinton condemns 'racist abuse' in Portland attack - The Hill (blog)

As Clinton emerges from the woods, what will her role be? – ABC News

Forty-eight years after she gave her first commencement address at Wellesley College, Hillary Clinton returns on Friday to offer another and once again, she's at a crossroads in her life.

The first time, she was 21 years old and eager to take on life's adventures, a graduating senior whose bold speech delighted her classmates, dismayed the school's president, and made it into Life magazine. The Hillary who will speak this year on Severance Green Lawn is the battle-scarred politician who came agonizingly close to becoming the first female president of the United States.

Half a year after her stunning loss to Donald Trump in November a loss that left her devastated and heartbroken, those close to her say Clinton has professed herself "ready to come out of the woods," a winking reference to the viral photo of her in the woods near her home days after the election.

But what will coming out of the woods look like? And how will Clinton, long seen as a master at redefining herself over three decades in the limelight define her role in the Trump era? Some have even speculated she might run for elected office again a possibility she hasn't flat-out denied, but has said she doesn't expect to happen. Friends say it's unlikely.

"I think she's basically closed the door on ever running again," says Melanne Verveer, Clinton's longtime friend and chief of staff from her first lady years who also worked with her at the State Department. But she adds emphatically: "She's not going to recede. You're going to continue to see her engaged on issues that she is passionate about and has played a leadership role in. She will be out there ... but not as that public candidate. So it's a new place."

After remaining largely out of public view for a few months after the election, Clinton has stepped up the pace of her public appearances. On May 15, she announced the formation of Onward Together, a political group designed to aid progressive causes and oppose the Trump agenda. Its website bears the slogan Clinton has called her new mantra: "Resist, insist, persist and enlist."

She's also working on a book of personal essays, announced with fanfare in February. And she's writing the forward for a book by her friend and Methodist pastor, the Rev. Bill Shillady, that will contain 365 of the devotionals he wrote for Clinton during the campaign, sending them by email early each morning to bolster her on the trail.

The former secretary of state is also speaking at events like this week's Children's Health Fund benefit, where she lashed out at Trump's spending plan, saying it showed an "unimaginable level of cruelty."

She's addressed gatherings for Planned Parenthood, for an LGBT group in New York, for the Society of Irish Women in Scranton, Pennsylvania. She presented awards to Colombian peacemakers at Georgetown, and made a surprise appearance at the Tribeca Film Festival to discuss saving endangered elephants from poachers in Africa.

At such events, Clinton has been treated more like a conquering heroine than the loser of an election certainly with more affection and enthusiasm than during the campaign. At the Tribeca event, surprised attendees called out, "Love you, Hillary!" At an event for the Center, an LGBT group, she received repeated standing ovations. At the Women in the World conference, host Samantha Bee introduced her as "Hillary Rodham Beyonce Clinton" and told her: "It should have been you!"

The reception was even more striking at the final performance of "The Color Purple" in January, one of her first public sightings after the election (and one of several Broadway shows she's turned up at.) The audience broke out into sustained cheers, with theatergoers leaning precariously over railings and shouting, "We love you!" At the curtain call, actors pointed to her and touched their hearts.

Of course, these events were in Clinton territory, and at organizations that strongly supported her. Still, many note she seems in loss to have touched a chord with her base particularly younger women that she hadn't before.

"There was such an expectation that she would win," says Debbie Walsh, of the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University, "that people never envisioned a world where the alternative was true and didn't appreciate what the world would be like. I don't want to call it buyer's remorse because I don't think these people voted for Trump, but maybe they weren't the enthusiastic supporters that they could have been."

Shillady, the Methodist pastor, says that when he had Christmas Eve dinner with Clinton, the crowd in the restaurant stood up and cheered. "People came over to the table in tears," he says. "It's almost as if people were feeling like they personally had let her down."

"I think she finds comfort in it, and it's energized her to come out of the woods," he adds. "She's coming out to speak more fully and with more freedom. She doesn't have to be politically correct."

Of course, not all the feedback has been flattering not with one of the most polarizing figures in American political history.

"I never thought she was a great candidate," Joe Biden was recently quoted as saying. "I thought I was a great candidate."

And former Clinton campaign officials took to Twitter to push back against a portrayal, in the book "Shattered" by journalists Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes, of a dysfunctional campaign beset by infighting and an out-of-touch candidate.

Clinton also got flak for saying, in an interview with Christiane Amanpour, that she'd be president now if not for the late-October announcement by FBI head James Comey that the agency was again reviewing her emails. Critics among them David Axelrod, chief strategist for the Barack Obama campaigns suggested she wasn't taking enough responsibility for her loss.

Rutgers' Walsh feels that Clinton could play a crucial role in getting a new generation of women, who are responding to her now as they perhaps never did, to enter politics.

"Hillary Clinton has put gender front and center more than anyone," Walsh says. "She's the one who can say, 'I pushed the boundaries, and now we need you.'"

Not everyone feels that Clinton needs to do anything at all.

"Hillary Clinton should be free to do anything she wants," feminist author and leader Gloria Steinem wrote in an email, including "walking in the woods with her grandchildren."

"I think she owes us nothing and we owe her everything especially gratitude, respect and the right to be free."

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As Clinton emerges from the woods, what will her role be? - ABC News

In commencement address, Hillary Clinton remembers fallout from Nixon, makes subtle jab at President Trump – Los Angeles Times

Hillary Clinton delivered a subtle dig at President Trump on Friday, offering some parallels between his presidency and that of former President Nixon.

While delivering a commencement address at her alma mater, Wellesley College, a private womens liberal arts school in Massachusetts, Clinton, without naming Trump, recalled how many youngpeople in the 1970s reacted to Nixon's reelection and later battles with the Justice Department.

We were furious about the past presidential election of a man whose presidency would eventually end in disgrace with his impeachment for obstruction of justice," she said, pausing to note she was referring to Nixon.

Actually, Nixon was not impeached, though many in Congress, including members of his own party, called for it. Clintonsaid Nixon's resignation came after he fired the person heading the investigation into him at the Department of Justice.

In 1973, Nixon ordered Justice Department officials to fire a special prosecutor who was looking into taped conversations recorded in the Oval Office as part of the Watergate investigation. A year later, in August 1974, Nixon resigned.

Some political observers mostly Democrats -- have compared Trumps recent firing of FBI Director James B. Comey, who was overseeing an investigation of possible collusion between Russians and Trumps campaign, to Nixons actions. Last week, Rep. Al Green (D-Texas) called for Trump to be impeached.

Clinton, who has made few public appearances since Trump defeated her in last years presidential election, also assailed the Republicans new budget proposal.

She called the budget, which proposescuts to education and Medicaid, "an attack of unimaginable cruelty on the most vulnerable among us the youngest, the oldest, the poorestand hard-working people who need a little help to gain or hang on to a decent, middle-class life."

In a statement, the Republican National Committee said Clinton was lashing out after her election loss.

Clinton graduated from Wellesley in 1969 and last delivered a commencement address at the school in 1992.

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In commencement address, Hillary Clinton remembers fallout from Nixon, makes subtle jab at President Trump - Los Angeles Times

Here’s What Hillary Clinton Thought About James Comey’s Firing – HuffPost

A new profile of Secretary of StateHillary Clintonpublished Friday reveals her initial reaction to President Donald Trumps firing of FBI Director James Comey earlier this month.

The profile, written by New York Magazines Rebecca Traister, contains the first major interview the 2016 Democratic nominee has given since her narrow loss to Trump in November.

I am less surprised than I am worried, Clinton said of Comeys firing. Not that he shouldnt have been disciplined. And certainly the Trump campaign relished everything that was done to me in July and then particularly in October.

Having said that, I think whats going on now is an effort to derail and bury the Russia inquiry, and I think thats terrible for our country, she added.

She also said she hopes this abrupt and distressing action will raise enough questions in the minds of Republicans for them to conclude that it is worthy of careful attention, because left unchecked this will not just bite Democrats, or me; this will undermine our electoral system.

Traister interviewed Clinton just one day after Trump fired Comey. Since then, multiple revelations have emerged during the FBIs ongoing investigation into whether Trump associates actively colluded with Russian officials to sway the outcome of the election, including that Trump allegedly asked Comey to end the probe.

Clinton referenced those revelations during a commencement speech she gave at her alma mater, Wellesley College, on Friday. During her remarks, she spoke about the mood on campus when Richard Nixon was elected president, in an apparent jab at Trump.

We were furious about the past presidential election of a man whose presidency would eventually end in disgrace with his impeachment for obstruction of justice, after firing the person running the investigation into him at the Department of Justice, she said.

While many of her former staffers had a lot to say about Comeys firing, Clinton herself has largely stayed out of the ensuing debate.

Under Comeys leadership, the FBI investigated Clintons use of a private email server during her tenure at the State Department. In July, Comey announced he would not recommend charges against Clinton. But in October, less than two weeks before the election, Comey sent a letter informing Congress that the bureau was considering reopening its investigation after finding additional emails.

The FBI was eventually able to review those emails before the election and found that they didnt change Comeys previous recommendation against charges. However, many, including Clinton herself, felt Comeys letter was partially to blame for her narrow loss to Trump.

In a memo explaining why he recommended terminating Comey,Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said the handling of Clintons emails had caused substantial damage to the FBIs reputation and credibility.

I cannot defend the Directors handling of the conclusion of the investigation of Secretary Clintons emails, and I do not understand his refusal to accept the nearly universal judgment that he was mistaken, Rosenstein wrote. Almost everyone agrees that the Director made serious mistakes; it is one of the few issues that unites people of diverse perspectives.

However, Trump later told NBCs Lester Holt that the decision to fire Comey was his own, and that he considered this Russia thing while assessing Comeys future at the Justice Department.

Comey addressed his handling of the Clinton investigation during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearingon May 3.

It makes me mildly nauseous to think that we might have had some impact on the election, but honestly, it wouldnt change the decision, he testified.

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Here's What Hillary Clinton Thought About James Comey's Firing - HuffPost

Michael Flynn Invokes Fifth Amendment While Subpoenas Stack Up – WhoWhatWhy / RealNewsProject (blog)

Michael Flynn testifies before the House Armed Services Sub-Committee on Intelligence, Emerging Threats, and CapabilitiesPhoto credit:DIA

Michael Flynn had what amounts to the shortest tenure of any national security adviser in US history. He had not held the position for even one full month before being forced to resign on Feb. 13, 2017, after it was revealed that he gave incomplete information on the extent of his contact with Sergei Kislyak, the Russian Ambassador to the United States.

On May 10, the Senate Intelligence Committee ordered a subpoena for documents relating to the ongoing Russia investigation. Flynn responded on May 22 by invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, but this hasnt stopped the subpoenas from piling up.

On Wednesday, the committee followed up by issuing subpoenas to Flynns Virginia-based businesses.

In 2015, Flynn received payments from a Kremlin-funded media outlet, RT (formerly Russia Today), through his company, Flynn Intel. What makes the most recent round of subpoenas more difficult for Flynn to evade is that businesses arent protected under the Fifth Amendment.

According to Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), the House Intelligence Committee is preparing subpoenas of its own.

Pleading the Fifth can only offer so much protection for Flynn, who unsuccessfully sought immunity in earlier months in exchange for his testimony. He now runs the risk of being held in contempt of court, though it is unclear if Congress wishes to pursue such action.

These videos provide an overview of recent events as well as a refresher on the history and purpose of the Fifth Amendment.

Related front page panorama photo credit: Adapted by WhoWhatWhy from Michael Flynn (DIA)

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Michael Flynn Invokes Fifth Amendment While Subpoenas Stack Up - WhoWhatWhy / RealNewsProject (blog)