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| You need to cut back on that booze lady. |
PHILADELPHIA – Debbie Wasserman
Schultz announced Sunday she will soon step down as Democratic National
Committee chairwoman, amid the fallout over leaked emails indicating an
anti-Bernie Sanders bias in her operation -- a stunning development just
hours before the start of her party's convention.
In a written statement, the controversial party
leader said she was "privileged to serve as the DNC Chair for five and a
half years."
She said her first priority is serving the people of
her Florida congressional district while stressing the importance of
helping elect Hillary Clinton, adding: "Going forward, the best way for
me to accomplish those goals is to step down as Party Chair at the end
of this convention."
She said she would still "open and close the
convention," which begins Monday in Philadelphia, and address delegates
"about the stakes involved in this election," in her role as party
chair.
She apparently will step down at the end of the
convention. Vice Chairwoman Donna Brazile is slated to take over as
interim chair during the rest of the general election campaign.
The announcement came just hours after reports first
surfaced that Wasserman Schultz may be denied a speaking role at the
convention, and that she would not be presiding -- a decision apparently
made under pressure from the Clinton campaign and the White House.
Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, the former chairwoman of
the Congressional Black Caucus, will instead preside over the Democratic
proceedings as convention chairwoman. On the sidelines, party officials
were already discussing Wasserman Schultz' role as DNC chairwoman.
One Democratic source told Fox News, “Debbie is being forced out sooner than later.”
The rapid-fire set of developments ahead of the
convention kick-off raise immediate questions about whether the party
can unite its battling factions in Philadelphia this week.
Officials were clearly trying to prevent anger over
the email leak controversy and other issues from disrupting proceedings.
The emails only bolstered claims from Sanders – and Republican nominee
Donald Trump – that the system was rigged against the Vermont senator.
Trump tweeted after the DNC news broke:
Sanders himself blasted the DNC and Wasserman Schultz
in interviews earlier Sunday, demanding her resignation as party
chairwoman.
“I think [Wasserman Schultz] should resign. Period.
And I think we need a new chair who is going the lead us in a very
different direction,” Sanders told ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday, hours
before the resignation was announced.
He later issued a statement thanking her for her
service, and saying she made "the right decision for the future of the
Democratic Party."
President Obama and Clinton both issued statements thanking Wasserman Schultz for her service.
"I am grateful to Debbie for getting the Democratic
Party to this year's historic convention in Philadelphia, and I know
that this week's events will be a success thanks to her hard work and
leadership," Clinton said, adding that she will serve as "honorary chair
of my campaign's 50-state program to gain ground and elect Democrats in
every part of the country" and act as a surrogate.
The WikiLeaks document dump, which included emails
from January 2015 to May 2016, purportedly came from the accounts of
seven DNC officials. In a May 5 email, a DNC employee asked a colleague
to collect information on his religious beliefs – claiming it might sway
voters in West Virginia and Kentucky. In that particular email,
Sanders' name was not mentioned, but he was the only other candidate in
the race at that time against Clinton.
DNC chief financial officer Brad Marshall wrote,
“This would make several points difference with my peeps. My Southern
Baptist peeps would draw a big difference between a Jew and an
atheist.”
Others from Wasserman Schultz herself contained very
strong language, raising questions about her status as an ostensibly
neutral party official.
Responding to Sanders’ complaints the party hasn’t
been fair to him, she wrote to a staffer in an April email: “Spoken like
someone who has never been a member of the Democratic Party and has no
understanding of what we do.”
Responding to the same staffer a month later
regarding Sanders campaign manager Jeff Weaver blaming the Nevada state
party for a raucous convention, she wrote, “Damn liar. Particularly
scummy that he barely acknowledges the violent and threatening behavior
that occurred.”