Saturday, November 5, 2016

What happens to email scandal if Clinton wins?

Soon to be Mrs Bill Clinton President Elect?

No matter which political party people favor, one thing is clear: everyone is so ready for this election to end. Judging from the headlines out there, it seems like plenty of folks are abandoning any hope of electing President Trump, and instead, moving on to plan for another impeachment of another President Clinton.
Let’s just get something straight about impeachment, right from the start: it has a specific purpose. That purpose is to remedy official wrongdoing, not to turn over an election to Congress.  I spoke with University of North Carolina Law Professor Michael Gerhardt, the leading expert on impeachment, whose expertise was relied upon by the House of Representatives during the impeachment of President Bill Clinton. He was was clear: “impeachment is not supposed to be an opportunity to re-litigate an election.”
  • First some background on how impeachment generally works
Under Article II, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution, impeachment is permitted, although not quite defined:
“The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other High crimes and Misdemeanors.”
The Constitution sets out impeachment as an enumerated power of the legislature, in which the House may bring formal charges against a federal official much the same that a prosecutor may bring an indictment against an ordinary citizen.  Although the word “impeach” is often misused colloquially, it really just means that a person was charged with wrongdoing.  The impeachment next moves to the Senate, which acts as the trier of fact, and ultimately decides whether to convict the federal official on the charges asserted. Although the outcome of an impeachment proceeding is described in the same terms that a criminal trial would be, the two are not the same.  If convicted on an impeachment, a federal official is automatically removed from office (and may be barred from holding future office as well); there is no part of the impeachment process that is analogous to sentencing in a criminal trial. Following an impeachment case, the federal official may be subject to criminal prosecution; if that prosecution proceeds, the President may pardon the person convicted.  However, no pardon is available for an official convicted after impeachment, because pardons only relate to criminal convictions.
  • Would it even be legally possible to impeach Clinton after she were elected? Can Clinton be impeached for her actions prior to taking office?
But — here is the big question. Would it even be legally possible to impeach Clinton after she were elected? It’s not totally clear either way, but there is a real chance that impeachment wouldn’t even be available as a tool to boot a President Hillary Clinton from office.
Impeachment is a remedy meant to address misconduct of an official while that official is in office. While there are a great many things to say about Emailgate, the fact that we’re saying them now unequivocally demonstrates that whatever misconduct occurred did so prior to Clinton’s presidency. There’s no statute that definitively lays out the founding fathers’ rules regarding impeachment timelines, and it’s not an issue that has come up enough times for a clear rule to have developed; the closest thing we have is a statement from the House Judiciary Committee from 1873.
At the time, the House was considering impeachment of Vice President Schuyler Colfax for having taken part in some shady railroad dealings. The Committee said that under the Constitution, impeachment “should only be applied to high crimes and misdemeanors committed while in office and which alone affect the officer in discharge of his duties as such, whatever may have been their effect upon him as a man, for impeachment touches the office only and qualifications for the office, and not the man himself.” So, at least at that time, impeachment was understood as a sort of employment remedy, done by public officials to public officials when they’ve committed professional wrongdoing.
However, there is a tiny little precedent for the concept of impeaching someone for wrongdoing that preceded the person’s federal service – and it’s much more recent than 1873. Meaning Republicans might be in luck. That case involved the 2010 impeachment and conviction of District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana Judge Thomas Porteous. Judge Porteous was removed from the bench after Congress concluded that he had been involved in corruption, committed perjury, accepted bribes from lawyers practicing in his court, and attempted to conceal his sordid past during the confirmation process. During those impeachment proceedings, the timing of Porteous’ wrongdoing never surfaced as any true obstacle.
There’s certainly an argument to be made that if the timing of Judge Porteous’ crimes didn’t thwart his impeachment, then the timing of President Clinton’s shouldn’t prevent hers.   However, from a procedural standpoint, a Clinton/Porteous comparison doesn’t quite work. Clearly, Judge Porteous’ misconduct related directly to his service on the bench, and presented an ongoing problem. His confirmation process itself was also tainted by his having committed fraud. By contrast, Secretary Clinton’s mishandling of classified information is far more separable from what would become her presidency. It took place during a time period completely removed from her administration, does not directly involve her presidency, and has been a highly public news story for her entire presidential campaign. However serious one may feel about Clinton’s email practices, there is no rational basis for a position that the scandal is, with respect to timing, similar to Porteous’ fraud.
  • Could the election affect Congress’ right to impeach?
Timing isn’t the only speed bump on the road to a second Clinton impeachment. There’s also the possibility that impeachment proceedings could not (or should not) proceed, because an election itself gives rise to legal consequences. In our democracy, elections are meant to be sacred events in which American citizens speak as a group. Given the amount of media coverage devoted to the email scandal, there’s a logical inference to be made that a Clinton victory is the electorate’s way of waiving any right to punish Hillary for known wrongdoing. Voters on every portion of the political spectrum are aware of Hillary Clinton and her emails. The topic was brought up at every possible opportunity. There’s not a voter out there saying, “emails? What emails?”  Accordingly, the election itself could be deemed a collective ratification of Secretary Clinton’s behavior with regard to confidential data.
So wait, someone commits a crime, and then because that person manages to get elected, she is absolved from accountability? I admit that at first blush, that doesn’t sound quite right. But it’s important to remember that the impeachment process is not a criminal prosecution. Impeachment is a hybrid political/legal tool that is quasi-criminal in basis, and highly political in practice.   For starters, a constitutional basis for impeachment is the commission of “high crimes and misdemeanors” – but no clear definition exists for what that even means.  Alexander Hamilton’s Federalist No. 65 described impeachable offenses as those that “proceed from the misconduct of public men … from the abuse or violation of some public trust” – but that’s not really much help.
Impeachment is not a court proceeding from which an accused may appeal, and is not conducted by the judiciary branch. It does not result from the secret convening of a grand jury, or culminate in closed-door deliberations. Instead, Congress becomes the prosecutor, judge, and jury, as it holds open hearings for both the impeachment and the conviction process. Such a system inextricably ties Senators’ votes at the conviction phase to that Senator’s political livelihood. If constituents believe their representatives voted inappropriately during a presidential impeachment proceeding, they can vote those representatives out at the next opportunity.   In such a context, the presidential election would have to to matter.
Professor Gerhardt explained,
“for one thing, there is a tendency to treat elections, at least sometimes, as ratifying some arguable misconduct or at least signaling that the “misconduct” in question was not disqualifying, since, after all, the official was elected to office and the public was aware of the arguable “misconduct” at the time of the election.”
Whether the election as proof of ratification would halt an entire impeachment proceeding outright, or would affect it in some lesser way remains to be seen. As much as impeachment is a political process, it’s also one that transcends politics. Impeachment requires the Senate to sit in place of a court and effect justice. I’d like to think that our Senate could at least be called on to exercise the same kind of impartiality and fair-mindedness that we ask everyday jurors to exercise in courtroom. That obligation means that a Senator could not (or at least should not) vote to convict a president simply because the two are political opponents.
Procedural questions about whether impeachment is an appropriate tool to use against Hilary Clinton, or about how such an impeachment would proceed are important and complex. It doesn’t help that there’s not even a clear answer to the question, “who answers these questions?” Professor Gerhard’s take on the lack of clear arbiter was:
“The issue would be resolved outside the courts. The conventional wisdom is that the issue would be resolved in the federal political process. Keep in mind she would still be subject to reelection and thus would have a chance for the American people to decide the issue.”
While Hillary-hating members of the House may be drafting their Articles of Impeachment now, their efforts are probably a bit premature. Even if Congress ultimately deems impeachment the correct course of action to pursue against Hillary Clinton, it must proceed with caution. Without clear statutory guidance, future Congresses will certainly look to an impeachment of the next President Clinton as precedent.  We must, in turn, demand that our Congress approaches any impeachment with responsible standards for our government, instead of with the knee-jerk immaturity of political expediency.
  • What would happen if Congress gets around all the road blocks and impeached Hillary Clinton after she became president?
In the land of so much uncertainty, this one is pretty clear.
Article II, Section 1 of the United States Constitution provides that:
“In case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President … until the disability be removed, or a President elected.”
Should Hillary Clinton be removed from office via impeachment and conviction, her Vice President would take over for the remainder of the term.

This is an opinion piece. The views expressed here are just those of the author.
Follow Elura on Twitter @elurananos

Colin Powell warned Clinton aide 'not to get me' into email scandal

Love Lost ?

Love Gained?
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell issued an unmistakable warning last year to senior Hillary Clinton aides not to drag him into the burgeoning scandal involving her use of a private email server, according to an email released Friday by WikiLeaks.
“Cheryl, Good talking to you. See link. You really don't want to get me into this. I haven't been asked nor said a word about HRC and won't unless you all start it,” Powell wrote to Clinton’s personal attorney Cheryl Mills.
Mills then forwarded the March 7, 2015 email to Clinton's now-Campaign Chairman John Podesta and other associates with a suggestion to “see below as reminder of early conversation.”
The email, hacked from Podesta's personal account, included a link to a Breitbart report on attempts to protect Clinton by stoking an email scandal for Republican Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. The article noted it is a “trick attempted with carping about former Secretary of State Colin Powell” and his use of a personal email account when he was secretary of state.
The warning from Powell came at a time when the Clinton campaign and State Department were struggling to respond to the revelation that Clinton had used a private server in her residence for official business.
Clinton would make her first formal comments on the scandal in a March 10, 2015 press conference at the United Nations.
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A day later, Powell declined to comment on the Clinton controversy, telling ABC News’ George Stephanopolous that it “would be inappropriate.”
Campaign Manager Robby Mook noted that same morning that Powell’s no comment “strengthens our case.”
While the Powell warning note had not been published before, it is no secret he did not want the Clinton campaign to drag him into the email controversy by equating his use of personal email with her use of a special private server.
The Intercept previously reported that in an Aug. 28, 2016 email, Powell wrote to a friend that Clinton “could have killed this two years ago by merely telling everyone honestly what she had done and not tie me to it.”
“I told her staff three times not to try that gambit. I had to throw a mini tantrum at a Hampton’s [sic] party to get their attention. She keeps tripping into these ‘character’ minefields,” Powell added.
Powell had previously accused Clinton of trying to “pin” the scandal on him after Clinton told authorities in July that Powell had detailed to her his email practices as secretary of state under George W. Bush, according to a New York Times report in August.
The paper cited a passage from a book about Bill Clinton’s post-presidency that read, "Powell told her to use her own email, as he had done, except for classified communications, which he had sent and received via a State Department computer."
But Powell did not have a private server -- and officials would later find hundreds of emails with classified material from Clinton's server.
Despite the tensions between them, Powell nevertheless endorsed Clinton in October. (Idiot)

Washington state elector says he won't vote for Clinton

A picture is worth a thousand words :-)

A picture is worth a thousand words :-)
A Democratic elector in Washington state said Friday that he would not cast his Electoral College vote for Hillary Clinton if, as is likely, she wins the state in Tuesday's election.
Robert Satiacum, a member of the Puyallup Tribe, supported Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary, which the Vermont senator won by approximately a 3-to-1 margin. He said he believes Clinton is a "criminal" who doesn't care enough about American Indians and "she's done nothing but flip back and forth."
He said he has wrestled with what to do, but feels that neither Clinton nor Republican Donald Trump can lead the country.
"She will not get my vote, period," he said in a phone interview with The Associated Press.
Satiacum said he believes Sanders did a better job of reaching out to Native Americans. "She doesn't care about my land or my air or my fire or my water," he said of Clinton.
Americans vote for the president on Election Day, but they're really casting votes for each state's electors, who will decide the next president on Dec. 19.
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In all but two states (Maine and Nebraska), the winner of the state's popular vote gets all of the state's electors. There's nothing in the Constitution that says the electors are required to vote for a particular candidate, but some states have penalties for so-called "faithless electors." Satiacum faces a $1,000 fine in Washington if he doesn't vote for Clinton, but he said he doesn't care.
"I hope it comes down to a swing vote and it’s me,” he told The Seattle Times. "Good. She ain’t getting it. Maybe it’ll wake this country up."

Satiacum is one of 12 Democratic electors in Washington, which has 12 electoral votes and has not gone for a Republican presidential candidate since Ronald Reagan in 1984.
Satiacum said he has gotten a lot of criticism since he told media outlets last month that he might not vote for Clinton. But he said he has also heard from electors in other states who thanked him for speaking out. He said he hopes some of those electors follow his lead.
At the time of of Satiacum's initial statements, the Puyallup Tribal Council issued a statement saying that he had pledged to support the winner of the state's popular vote Nov. 8 and "risks dishonoring himself" if he does not do so.
According to the National Archives, 99 percent of electors through U.S. history have voted for their party's candidate, and none of the dissenters has ever changed the result of an election.

Clinton sent daughter material that was later classified


The State Department on Friday released a 2009 email chain that shows then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton forwarding to her daughter material that the department classified last year.

At issue is a December 2009 email that President Barack Obama's trade adviser, Michael Froman, sent to senior White House and State Department staff members. After it made its way up to Clinton, she sent it to "Diane Reynolds," an email pseudonym for Chelsea Clinton.
"See below," Clinton told her daughter. The entire email chain has been blacked out on confidential grounds, the lowest level of classification.
The chain was among the State Department's last release of documents from Clinton's private server before Tuesday's presidential election.
The department classified portions of two other emails released Friday.
They concerned phone calls Clinton had planned in November 2010 with the United Arab Emirates' crown prince and Afghan President Hamid Karzai. At the time, WikiLeaks' release of hundreds of thousands of diplomatic cables was roiling U.S. relations with governments around the world.
The emails were written by Clinton's deputy chief of staff, Huma Abedin. The department designated portions of each "confidential." State Department spokesman Mark Toner said neither document was marked classified when it was sent.
Friday's release, four days before Election Day, included 74 emails totaling 285 pages. The FBI provided the emails to the State Department after uncovering them as part of its investigation of Clinton's email practices.
Many emails are near duplicates of documents the department released after receiving 55,000 pages from Clinton in 2014.
Some reflect minor additions, such as Clinton asking an aide to print out the exchange on paper.

Newt Gingrich: Bigger than Hillary -- The establishment cesspool of dishonesty and corruption

WikiLeaks documents expose media collusion with Clinton camp

Crooked Hillary

She should be in Jail. 
The only precedent in American history for the mess we will be in if Secretary Hillary Clinton wins on November 8 is the election, investigation, and resignation of President Richard Nixon.
The parallels struck me when Callista and I visited the Nixon Presidential Library two weeks ago. We were signing our new books (Treason by me and Hail to the Chief by Callista).
The Nixon Library has undergone a remarkable renovation. Touring it is a powerful educational experience. Since my first congressional race was in 1974 as Nixon was forced from office, the Library brought back many memories. (I lost that year in a Republican collapse over the scandal.)
The process of investigating Watergate and within 21 months of his reelection forcing President Nixon to resign (August 9, 1974) is the only precedent for the problem we will face if Secretary Clinton wins.
In some ways this is an unfair comparison.
Unlike Clinton, Nixon had a great foreign policy record. Working with Henry Kissinger as National Security Adviser and Secretary of State, President Nixon opened up our relationship with China and balanced our relationship with the Soviet Union. His diplomacy with Beijing was an astonishing and totally unexpected breakthrough.
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Nixon entered office with millions of Americans bitterly opposed to President Lyndon Johnson's handling of the Vietnam War. Nixon and Kissinger developed a policy to free South Vietnam and establish peace in the region. They ensured the return of several American prisoners of war including John McCain.
Domestically, President Nixon worked hard to achieve a sweeping reelection victory in 1972. He learned from 1960, when he lost so narrowly that only vote theft in Illinois and Texas enabled Kennedy to win.  Nixon won very narrowly eight years later in 1968, in a three way race with Vice President Hubert Humphrey and Governor George Wallace.
In 1972, Nixon carried 49 states. That number has only been equaled in modern times by President Ronald Reagan's 1984 reelection. What most Americans don't realize is that President Nixon actually won reelection by a greater margin than Reagan (60.7 percent for Nixon compared to 58.8 percent for Reagan).
After the massive victory in 1972, Nixon might have expected a very successful conclusion to his then 26-year career in public life as a Congressman, Senator, Vice President and President.
Yet the overwhelming victory was not enough to protect him from the mistakes of his team and himself.
Looking back, the Watergate scandal was about a burglary of the Democratic Party headquarters located in the Watergate Building. This was one of the most self-destructive acts in American history. Nixon was going to win by a landslide. There was no point in breaking into the Democratic headquarters.
Nixon should have repudiated the burglary.  If he had allowed the burglars and their immediate bosses to pay for their enthusiastic stupidity everything would have ended. Nixon would have served out his four years and history would have been very different.
However, Nixon's loyalty to his team and his deep paranoia about his political enemies, including the news media, led him to obstruct justice.
America is a hard country in which to sustain dishonesty and corruption because there are simply too many people with consciences that compel them to report illegality and the betrayal of the rule of law. By lying to government officials and plotting to hide the truth, Nixon placed himself at the center of much bigger scandal than the original break in.
Nixon found himself drawn deeper and deeper into a cover up. It was discovered that he had maintained an audio taping system in the Oval Office. Then it was discovered that 18 and a half minutes had been deleted. The tapes are available today at the National Archives (they are public property just like Clinton's emails).
For 18 months the American government was increasingly paralyzed by what Nixon's own former White House counsel, John Dean, called “a cancer on the Presidency.”  It was clear that Nixon would be impeached and he chose to resign rather than face a bitter fight for survival.
Ironically Hillary Clinton knows this history well because as a young lawyer she served on the House Judiciary Committee as it established the groundwork for impeaching President Nixon.
Why did she ignore it? Why has she ignored it for virtually her entire public career going back to Arkansas over 30 years ago?
Lord Acton warned nearly 200 years ago that power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
More than two thousand years ago the Greeks warned that hubris preceded Nemesis. Greeks believed hubris occurred when someone was too proud and that the goddess Nemesis would punish them for their arrogance.
From Whitewater to 33,000 deleted emails to the corruption of the Clinton Foundation to all the problems exposed by Wikileaks, the Clintons personify the Greek model of hubris and Lord Acton's warning that power corrupts.
Now Nemesis may be intervening in Hillary Clinton's career.
We now know that the FBI has stumbled on to some 650,000 emails on the Abedin-Weiner computer.
This must be something like the intervention of a Greek goddess. Who else could imagine that former Congressman Anthony Weiner's sexting a 15-year-old girl in North Carolina would lead the FBI to a computer that may have over 650,000 emails from Hillary's closest aide, Huma Abedin (Weiner's wife).
As a novelist, I wouldn't have the nerve to suggest such a wild plot.
Now the FBI has reopened the email case.
The FBI also has five field offices looking into the corruption of the Clinton Foundation. The memo by Bill Clinton’s closest aide, Doug Band (written to convince Chelsea he was making money for her parents), has been described as the Rosetta Stone of the Clinton criminal operation.
Andy McCarthy, the former federal prosecutor who tried the 1993 World Trade Center bombing case, has suggested the Clinton system is a classic RICO crime case. Mayor Rudy Giuliani, himself a very successful federal prosecutor before becoming mayor, has outlined count after count in a variety of federal statutes which he believes would prove criminal behavior by the Clintons.
President Obama sent a clear signal when Josh Earnest, his spokesman, said the President retained great confidence in FBI Director Jim Comey.  This endorsement of Comey directly undercut the Clinton campaign’s effort to undermine and delegitimize him. It may be the first sign that continuing disclosures about the Clintons are forcing Obama to distance himself from a very flawed candidate.
The Nixon precedent is very sobering and relevant.
If carrying 49 states and getting 60.7 percent of the vote couldn't protect Nixon from an 18-month ordeal leading to his resignation, what defense would a narrowly elected Hillary Clinton have?
Compare Nixon's 18 and a half minute tape gap with 33,000 deleted emails.
Remember that for Nixon there were no charges of personal corruption, personal enrichment, or conspiracy to exploit public office for financial gain.
On every level, the Clintons have greater vulnerabilities, greater exposure to investigation, and greater legal liabilities than Nixon.
Will Americans really vote to send a criminal family to the White House?
Will Americans vote to have a presidency drowning in investigations and crippled with constant legal assaults?
How could a President Clinton ever achieve anything with her time and energy focused on legal survival?
Why would the Congress cooperate with someone it thought was a liar and a crook?
Why would the anti-Clinton half of America ever cooperate with a president they believed should be in jail and not in the White House?
These are very serious concerns and this is why voting for Hillary Rodham Clinton is a vote for four years of corruption, investigation, and gridlock.
Newt Gingrich, a Republican, was speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1995 to 1999. He is the author of the new novel "Treason" (Center Street, October 11) and co-author, with his wife Callista Gingrich, of "Rediscovering God in America: Reflections on the Role of Faith in Our Nation's History and Future" (Center Street, May 17, 2016).

Friday, November 4, 2016

Wikileaks Web Address

https://wikileaks.org/

Self Research into crooked Hillary Clinton before it's to LATE.

Hillary Political Cartoons





Fox News Electoral Scorecard: Key states tilting toward Trump after FBI's October surprise


The FBI’s October surprise appears to have improved Donald Trump’s overall standing in the electoral map, with the latest Fox News Electoral Scorecard showing several states shifting in his favor since last week.
The Fox News Decision Team announced updates to the scorecard Thursday afternoon, reflecting the following changes based on recent polling and other factors:
  • New Hampshire moves from “lean Democrat” to “toss-up”
  • Ohio moves from “toss-up” to “lean Republican”
  • Indiana moves from “lean Republican” to “solid Republican”
  • Missouri moves from “lean Republican” to “solid Republican”
Despite the changes, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton maintains the clear advantage, and Trump’s path to victory remains a tight one.
But the latest ratings show Clinton’s advantage diminishing.
If Clinton were to win all the states leaning toward or solidly in the Democratic column, she’d have 283 electoral votes – more than the 270 needed to win.
See the Fox News 2016 battleground prediction map and make your own election projections. See Predictions Map →
If Trump were to win all the states leaning toward or solidly in the GOP column, he’d be short at 192 electoral votes. But winning all the toss-up states would put him just 15 electoral votes shy of 270.
One more win in North Carolina, Michigan or Pennsylvania could get him to victory.
The updates and fresh polling comes in the wake of the FBI’s decision Friday to revisit the Clinton email investigation after new messages were found on the laptop used by ex-Rep. Anthony Weiner, the estranged husband of Clinton aide Huma Abedin.
The Clinton campaign and its allies have downplayed the significance of the messages while questioning the FBI’s announcement so close to Election Day.
Trump, meanwhile, has seized on the news as well as other developments to press his case in the final stretch.
Speaking Thursday in Jacksonville, Fla., he cited reporting by Fox News that an FBI investigation regarding the Clinton Foundation has become a “high priority.”
He also touted new polls in Ohio and elsewhere showing him ahead.
Clinton and President Obama have, for their part, made an impassioned case to voters to not elect Trump.
“You want a voice who’s bragging about how being famous lets you get away with what would qualify as sexual assault, and calls women pigs, and dogs, and slobs?” Obama warned voters Thursday in Miami. “And when he pays attention to women, it’s because he’s grading them on a scale of one to ten. What kind of message are we sending if that’s our voice?”
In the latest states to shift, Ohio is the most highly sought prize. Trump has been leading there for weeks and his recent national bounce moves the state back into his column. Early ballot requests also suggest a Republican advantage.
The Electoral Scorecard also recently moved Florida and Nevada from “lean Democrat” into the “toss-up” column as well, while North Carolina shifted from “toss-up” to “lean Democrat.”

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