Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Review of bill hemmer fox news::What Time Is the Xfactor on Tonight







Review of bill hemmer fox news::What Time Is the Xfactor on Tonight








When               Attorney               General               Eric               Holder               appears               before               Congress               today,               one               of               the               questions               he's               going               to               be               asked               is               why               he               didn't               appoint               a               special               prosecutor               to               investigate               why               the               White               House               tried               to               lure               away               Joe               Sestak               from               competition               with               beleaguered               Senator               Arlen               Specter               in               the               Pennsylvania               primary               of               May               18th.

It               was               Sestak               who               first               announced               the               White               House               attempt               at               dissuading               him               from               running               against               Specter,               by               the               offer               of               a               high-profile               federal               job               in               exchange               for               quitting               the               Democrat               primary               campaign               in               Pennsylvania.

How               does               this               differ               from               standard               backroom               political               deals?

The               "F"               word,               in               short.

F-E-L-O-N-Y               convictions               may               arise               from               actions               designed               to               interfere               with               the               outcome               of               federal               elections.

If               it's               true               that               the               White               House               tried               to               ensure               that               Arlen               Specter               was               the               only               person               running               for               Senate               under               the               Democrat's               banner,               then               the               rights               of               Pennsylvania               citizens               to               vote               has               been               suborned.
               The               rumor               had               circulated               political               blogs               before               Sestak               confirmed               it               in               an               interview               with               Fox               News               Martha               McCallum               in               February               of               this               year.
               "I               was               asked               a               direct               question               yesterday               and               I               answered               it               honestly,"said               Sestak,               referring               to               the               White               House               job               offer.
               Sestak               declined               to               provide               further               details,               saying               there               was               "nothing               more               to               go               into"               aside               from               confirming               the               job               offer.

In               a               February               18th               2o10               interview               with               long               time               Philadelphia               reporter               Larry               Kane,               Sestak               answered               "Yes"               to               Kane's               question               as               to               whether               he'd               been               offered               a               high               profile               job               by               the               White               House,               but               he               refused               to               comment               on               whether               that               job               was               as               Navy               Secretary.
               White               House               press               secretary               Robert               Gibbs               has               been               asked               numerous               times               about               the               Sestak               bribe               allegation               but               consistently               sidesteps               the               question.

Gibbs               does               acknowledge               that               some               sort               of               discussions               which               took               place               between               the               White               House               and               Sestak               but               there               was               "nothing               problematic"               about               that.

"Nothing               problematic"               for               Gibbs,               perhaps,               but               for               Republican               House               Oversight               and               Reform               Committee               ranking               member,               Darrell               Issa               of               California,               there               is               a               language               problem.
               Fox               News               reporter               Bill               Hemmer               spoke               to               Representative               Issa               in               March               and               Issa               told               Hemmer               that               Sestak's               allegation               of               a               felony               bribe               must               be               investigated,               even               if               Sestak               had               "gone               quiet."               Issa               told               Fox               News               that               his               questions               to               the               White               House               had               gone               unanswered               and               that               an               appointment               of               a               special               prosecutor               to               investigate               Sestak's               assertion               was               therefore               appropriate.

Issa               says               he               checked               all               the               dictionaries,               including               Black's               Law               (Dictionary)               and               could               not               find               "not               problematic"               as               a               legal               term.






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