Archive for October, 2020

Hillary Clinton: ‘Black Lives Matter’ is ‘very profoundly …

Former Secretary of State Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonRepublican COVID-19 outbreak rocks the 2020 race Testing positive: Will Trump's presidency be a casualty of COVID-19? GOP anxiety grows over Trump political roller coaster MORE says in a new episode of her podcast that she views "Black Lives Matter," the rallying cry used by thousands of protesters demanding changes in the way Black Americans are treated by police, as a "theological" statement.

In the episode released Tuesday featuring a conversation between Clinton and the Rev. William J. Barber, a supporter of the "Black Lives Matter" movement and co-chair of the Poor People's Campaign, Clinton explained her thoughts on the phrase.

"When you think about the veryconcerted effort by one specific political party to basically own Christianity ... it overlooks the role of the African American church, it overlooks, as you say, a lot of theology, a lot of history, it also overlooks this moment in time," Clinton said.

" 'Black Lives Matter,' I view as, you know, very profoundly a theological statement," she added.

The 2016 Democratic presidential nominee's comments come amid nationwide protests against police brutality and racism, which began in late May following the policekillingof George Floyd.

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Hillary Clinton: 'Black Lives Matter' is 'very profoundly ...

Hillary Clinton To Produce Voting Rights Drama The Womans Hour In Works At the CW From Amblin TV – Deadline

The CW has put in development The Womans Hour, a seasonal anthology drama series based on Elaine Weiss critically praised book The Womans Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote, from former Secretary of State, first lady and Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Rodham Clinton, Amblin Television and Warner Bros. TV. Angelina Burnett (Halt and Catch Fire) is attached as writer, executive producer and showrunner.

The prospective first season will shed light on the ferocious battle to ratify the 19th Amendment, the 100th anniversary of which was commemorated in August 2020. Each season of the series will celebrate those who changed history and have strong contemporary reverberations, appealing to todays rising tide of young, politically active audiences.

Clinton, Weiss, and Burnett executive produce with Amblin TV co-presidents Darryl Frank and Justin Falvey. Warner Bros. TV is the studio.

Rights for the book were optioned by Amblin Television in 2018, after Clinton brought the project to longtime supporter and Amblin Chairman Steven Spielberg. Clinton first discovered the book after Weiss made it her mission to get the novel to the former Secretary of State, after realizing the striking parallels between the womens suffrage movement and the 2016 presidential election between Clinton and Donald Trump.

The project marks Clintons first role as executive producer.

TV writer/producer and community organizer Burnett most recently served as co-executive producer on AMCs Halt and Catch Fire. She previously worked on Amblin TVs The Americans and has also held producing and writing roles for Genius, Hannibal and Boss. After volunteering as an organizer during the 2008 primary election, Burnett was hired to run the Nevada Border State program for the 2008 general election. She has been organizing ever since.

Clinton is repped by Robert Barnett and Michael OConnor at Williams & Connolly LLP and Steven Burkow at Ziffren Brittenham. Weiss is repped by WME. Burnett is repped by Manage-Ment.

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Hillary Clinton To Produce Voting Rights Drama The Womans Hour In Works At the CW From Amblin TV - Deadline

Intel chief releases Russian disinfo on Hillary Clinton that was rejected by bipartisan Senate panel – POLITICO

And several former senior intelligence officials described Ratcliffes move as incendiary and irresponsible, given the manner in which he was publicly releasing unverified information that originated from a foreign adversary.

The assessment claims that Hillary Clinton, then a Democratic candidate for president, personally approved an effort to stir up a scandal against U.S. Presidential candidate Donald Trump by tying him to Putin and the Russians' hacking of the Democratic National Committee. But in his letter to Graham, Ratcliffe noted that the U.S. intelligence community does not know the accuracy of this allegation or the extent to which the Russian intelligence analysis may reflect exaggeration or fabrication.

The Senate Intelligence Committee issued five reports on Russias sweeping effort to meddle in the 2016 election to boost Trump, ranging across thousands of pages. The panel was made aware of that allegation early on in its investigation, and quickly dismissed it, the sources said.

Im very, very proud of the bipartisan work of the Intelligence Committee three and a half years, five volumes and that work speaks for itself, Warner said.

According to Ratcliffe, former CIA Director John Brennan briefed former President Barack Obama on the Russian assessment, which included the allegation that Clinton approved the plan to tie Trump to the hack of the DNC after it was proposed by one of her foreign policy advisers.

Asked about Ratcliffes claims, Nick Merrill, a spokesperson for Clinton, said in a text message that the allegations were baseless bullshit.

Nick Shapiro, Brennans former deputy chief of staff at the CIA, said Ratcliffe should be ashamed of his blatant politicization of his position.

After receiving pushback against the declassified material, Ratcliffe said in a statement: To be clear, this is not Russian disinformation and has not been assessed as such by the Intelligence Community. Ill be briefing Congress on the sensitive sources and methods by which it was obtained in the coming days.

Graham responded to his critics later Tuesday, saying that the veracity of the Russian intelligence assessment was irrelevant.

Im not saying whether its true or not, Graham told reporters. Im asking Democrats, do you give a damn whether the FBI investigated it, or do you just care only about investigating Trump?

When pressed on why he released the information even though it was unverified, Graham called it the ultimate double standard.

They took the whole damn country through hell for two and a half years and is it far-fetched to believe that the Clinton campaign would do something like this after Christopher Steele? Graham said referring to the author of an unverified dossier of claims about Trumps connections to Russia.

A former senior intelligence official said it was a surprising choice to release this information that is not new and that seems unconfirmed now and in an unclassified letter, adding: I dont know what good purpose is served.

It has long been known that the Russians were trying to stir up false narratives about Clinton through similar avenues.

Another former senior intelligence official said Brennan would frequently brief Obama on Russias actions regardless of whether it was about Trump or Clinton, adding that Brennan also wanted to demonstrate the extent of the U.S. intelligence communitys ability to collect against Russia.

In recent days, Trumps allies have been dripping out several disclosures related to the FBIs investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, and other information aimed at denigrating Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

Grahams committee will hear from former FBI Director James Comey on Wednesday as part of that sweeping GOP-led probe. Graham also announced on Tuesday that former Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe will testify before the panel next week. McCabe agreed to appear voluntarily, according to an aide. McCabes lawyer said earlier Tuesday that he was being denied access to his old files that he says are necessary for him to prepare for his testimony.

The presidents eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., was among those on the right who spotlighted Tuesdays disclosure, writing on Twitter: The Russia hoax was Hillarys plan, and the Obama-Biden White House was briefed on it.

Natasha Bertrand contributed to this report.

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Intel chief releases Russian disinfo on Hillary Clinton that was rejected by bipartisan Senate panel - POLITICO

‘You have no idea’: Hillary Clinton admits she wanted to tell Trump to ‘shut up,’ too – USA TODAY

After a presidential debaterife with outbursts and attacks, Hillary Clinton confirmed shewished she could have told President Donald Trump to "shut up" when the pair debated in 2016.

The former nominee's confession came after feminist writer Jill Filipovic tweeted that former Vice President Joe Biden's off-the-cuff remark of "Will you shut up, man?" was "the line of the night."

Filipovic lateradded, "I so feel for Hillary right now, because I'm positive she wanted to say that and couldn't."

"You have no idea," Clinton replied.

Clinton was the first female major-party nominee for president when she faced Trump four years ago.In her first debate versus Trump, he interrupted her 51 times, according to a county by Vox.

She, in turn, interrupted himjust 17 times.And unlike Biden, she resisted the urge to tell him to "shut up."

Prior to the debate, Clinton told MSNBC's Rachel Maddowthat she would be watching the debate with "real interest, and a certain level of expectation."

"Unlike four years ago, Donald Trump now has a record," she explained. "Everyone has seen what he has done to our country, what he has failed to do."

After laudingBiden for his "toughness" and "humanity," Clinton saidshe was "looking forward to the debate."

Clinton told Maddow thatTrump has lost "his big advantage" of reality television stardom.

Donald Trump, right, debates Hillary Clinton in St. Louis on Oct. 9, 2016.(Photo: PAUL J. RICHARDS, AFP via Getty Images)

"I think his series is about to be cancelled," she joked. "It'sjust the same story over and over again: lying with impunity, attacking when you have nothing to say, unable to give an answer that is frankly coherent."

For his part, Trump mentioned Clinton once during the debate, reprising the moniker "Crooked Hillary Clinton" and accusing Democrats of attempting a "coup."

After the heated debate, Chasten Buttigieg the husband of former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, who made a run at the Democratic nomination took to Twitter to express his sympathy for Clinton, too.

"Has anyone checked in on @HillaryClinton?" he wrote. "Girl Im so sorry."

"Thanks, Im fine," she replied. "But everyone better vote."

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'You have no idea': Hillary Clinton admits she wanted to tell Trump to 'shut up,' too - USA TODAY

Hillary Clinton Warned Us We Had to Get Serious About the Supreme Court – The Nation

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton walks off the stage after speaking in New York, November 9, 2016. (AP Photo / Matt Rourke)

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Hillary Clinton warned us.Ad Policy

Four years ago, as she was bidding for the Democratic nomination for the presidency, she delivered the strongest speech of her campaign, on the subject of the United States Supreme Court. The address she presented was not a reflexive response to the news of the day. It was not a set of talking points repackaged to fill a passing news cycle. It was a major policy addresscomprehensive in scope and character, ambitious in its goals, yet nuanced in its recognition of the challenges facing her party and her country. I was in the room when Clinton delivered her remarks and, as someone who was often critical of the former secretary of state, I wrote that Clintons speech on the importance of filling Supreme Court vacancies, and on the values and ideals that should guide judicial nominations, was a deep and detailed discussion of a fundamental responsibility of presidents.

Yet I also noted that the speech was largely neglected, observing, In this absurd campaign season, when media outlets devote hours of time to arguments about which Republican candidate insulted which wife, about violent and irresponsible campaign aides, about whatever soap-opera scenario comes to mind, thoughtful discussions of issues get little attention. And deep and detailed discussions of issues get even less coverage. Indeed, to the extent that the speech was covered at all, it was in reference to what the Democratic contender had to say about the race for the Republican nomination, especially Clintons observation, What the Republicans have sown with their extremist tactics, they are now reaping with Donald Trumps candidacy.

That neglect of the substance of Clintons comments on the courts was unsettling at the time, and it remains unsettling, because of what it says about the challenge of making judicial selection a campaign issue. We face that challenge again, in the midst of another campaign and an even more pitched battle over the courts future. President Trumps nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to fill the high court vacancy created by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has put this country at a critical juncture where a Republican president and his Senate allies are rushing to reconfigure the Supreme Court before the voters deprive them of the power to do so. Yet, much of the media is already on to the next story: Trumps tax troubles, Trumps outrageous tweeting, Trumps latest outburst. MORE FROM John Nichols

We did not pause, as Clinton asked us to do in 2016, to consider the crisis that was emerging with regard to the courts. And I fear that we will not pause sufficiently this fall. It was with this in mind that I revisited Clintons speech, which remains as salient today as it was when she delivered it on March 28, 2016.

Clinton spoke that day as a Yale Law School graduate, the author of scholarly articles on children and the law, a former law school instructor, and a former board chair of the Legal Services Corporation, with a long history of engagement with legal issues and the judicial-nomination process. She recognized that the Court shapes virtually every aspect of life in the United Statesfrom whether you can marry the person you love, to whether you can get healthcare, to whether your classmates can carry guns around this campus. And that If were serious about fighting for progressive causes, we need to focus on the Court: who sits on it, how we choose them, and how much we let politicspartisan politicsdominate that process.

What stood out was the way in which Clinton put the 2016 debate over judicial nominations into historical, political, and legal context. She delivered a compelling response to the question of how and when to fill the Supreme Court vacancy that had been created with the February 13, 2016, deathbefore either party had nominated its presidential candidates and long before the fall campaignof Justice Antonin Scalia. But she also observed, correctly, that this battle is bigger than just one empty seat on the Court.Current Issue

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By Election Day, two justices will be more than 80 years oldpast the Courts average retirement age. The next president could end up nominating multiple justices, she explained, after presciently referencing Justices Ginsburg and Anthony Kennedy. That means whoever America elects this fall will help determine the future of the Court for decades to come.

Clinton thenin a move 2020 Democratic nominees Joe Biden and Kamala Harris would do well to emulateworked her way through the Courts 2016 docket:

The Court is reviewing how public-sector unions collect the fees they use to do their work. The economic security of millions of teachers, social workers, and first responders is at stake. This is something the people of Wisconsin know all too well, because your governor has repeatedly attacked and bullied public-sector unions, and working families have paid the price. I think thats wrong, and it should stop.

The Court is reviewing a Texas law imposing unnecessary, expensive requirements on doctors who perform abortions. If that law is allowed to stand, there will only be 10 or so health centers left where women can get safe, legal abortions in the whole state of Texas, a state with about 5.4 million women of reproductive age. So it will effectively end the legal right to choose for millions of women.

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The Court is also reviewing whether Texas should have to exclude non-voters when drawing its electoral map. That would leave out, among others, legal residents, people with felony convictions, and children. The fair representation of everyone in our societyincluding 75 million childrenhangs in the balance.

And on top of all that, the Court is reviewing affirmative action and President Obamas executive actions on immigration, which called for halting the deportation of DREAMers and undocumented parents of citizens and legal residents. Its also put a hold on the presidents clean-power plan. Either America can limit how much carbon pollution we produce, or we cant. And if we cant, then our ability to work with other nations to meet the threat of climate change under the Paris agreement is greatly diminished.

In short, said Clinton, in a single term, the Supreme Court could demolish pillars of the progressive movement. And as someone who has worked on every single one of these issues for decades, I see this as a make-or-break moment. If you care about the fairness of elections, the future of unions, racial disparities in universities, the rights of women, or the future of our planet, you should care about who wins the presidency and appoints the next Supreme Court justices.

Finally, Clinton took on the Courts biggest failureaddressing an issue that her rival for the Democratic nomination, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, had made central to his campaign.

Describing the dangerous turn the Court has taken in recent years toward protecting the rights of corporations over those of people, she decried the 2010 Citizens United ruling that knocked down barriers to corporate influence on elections.

If the Court doesnt overturn Citizens United, I will fight for a constitutional amendment to limit the influence of money in elections, she said. It is dangerous to our country and poisonous to our politics.The Nominee

But, to her credit, Clinton did not stop with Citizens United. This Court has voted on the side of corporationsagainst the interests of workers, unions, consumers and the general publicin case after case, said Clinton, who explained that the Court has made it harder for consumers to band together to sue a corporation, even if they are collectively suffering from corporate behavior. So 2 million Comcast subscribers in Philadelphia were told they each had to hire a lawyer if they wanted to sue for fairer prices. One-and-a-half million women working at Walmart each had to hire a lawyer if they wanted to sue for sex discrimination. Thats a burden that the vast majority of people cannot afford.

Clinton closed by putting the arguments that Democrats always make about the Supreme Court into political perspectiveand into language that should have resonated far beyond legal circles.

The Court used toin the 20th century anywayprotect the little guy against the rich and powerful. More and more, its doing the oppositeprotecting the rich and powerful against the little guy, said the former secretary of state. If Im fortunate enough to be president, I will appoint justices who will make sure the scales of justice are not tipped away from individuals toward corporations and special interests; who will protect the constitutional principles of liberty and equality for all, regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation or political viewpoint; who will protect a womans right to choose, rather than billionaires right to buy elections; and who will see the Constitution as a blueprint for progress, not a barrier to it.

What Hillary Clinton said in 2016 was right. Its even more right now.

Democrats should make a deep and determined discussion of the Supreme Court, the Constitution, and the future of the rule of law central to the 2020 campaignso central that it cannot be neglected by the media or by the voters.

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Hillary Clinton Warned Us We Had to Get Serious About the Supreme Court - The Nation