Home Front: Politix |
New State Department Documents Reveal Last-Minute Efforts by Obama State Department to Undermine President Trump |
2019-09-12 |
[JUDICIALWATCH.ORG] Judicial Watch today released 90 pages of heavily redacted U.S. Department of State documents showing Obama State Department officials’ efforts to disseminate classified information to multiple U.S. Senators immediately prior to President Donald Trump ...The tack in the backside of the Democratic Party... ’s inauguration. The information, which included raw intelligence, purported to show "malign" Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. Among the senators receiving the classified documents were Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA), Sen. Ben Cardin (D-MD), and Sen. Robert Corker (R-TN). Judicial Watch obtained the documents through a June 2018 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit filed against the State Department after it failed to respond to a February 2018 request seeking records of the Obama State Department’s last-minute efforts to share classified information about Russia election interference issues with Democratic Senator Ben Cardin (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:18-cv-01381)). A January 13, 2017, email from Hera Abbasi, a former congressional advisor in the State Department’s Bureau of Legislative Affairs, suggests that the intelligence community was providing "raw intel" to Sen. Warner. Such an exchange almost certainly would have been coordinated by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI): "Yes, that is correct. Warner/raw intel stuff is going thru IC channels." (Abbasi previously worked in Speaker Nancy San Fran NanPelosi ![]() ’s office and was a 2017 Next Generation National Security Fellow at the liberal Center for a New American Security. Abbasi donated $725 to the Clinton campaign and Act Blue during the 2016 election cycle.) The documents uncovered by Judicial Watch show early in the process of gathering and clearing classified information ‐ beginning a day after Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) formally asked Attorney General John F. I was in Vietnam, you knowKerry Former Senator-for-Life from Massachussetts, self-defined war hero, speaker of French, owner of a lucky hat,conqueror of Cambodia, unsuccessful presidential candidate, and utterly failed Secretary of State... for "intelligence products" and "raw intelligence" on Russian involvement in the 2016 election ‐ Assistant Secretary of State Julia Frifield brings Senior Advisor and Investigations Counsel Zachary Schram into the loop in a January 5, 2017, email chain, in which she says Schram would help "figure out the best way to get these to the Hill." Frifield was an Obama appointee who previously served as Maryland Democratic Senator Barbara Mikulski’s Chief of Staff. (Frifield contributed $2,700 to the 2016 Clinton campaign.) On January 11, 2017, former State Department Senior Congressional Advisor Katherine Harris sends an email to Abbasi; Naz Durakoglu, who was a senior advisor to the Assistant Secretary for Europe ...the land mass occupying the space between the English Channel and the Urals, also known as Moslem Lebensraum... an and Eurasian Affairs; Kathleen Kavalec, and others: "If we are not going through our standard CDP [Collection Due Process] process, others in H need to weigh in on how to move these to the Hill." In emails written on January 10 and 11, 2017, from Abbasi to Durakoglu and Kavalec, Abassi expresses the need to get the documents cleared "as soon as possible (ASAP)." |
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Home Front: Politix | |
Soros-Backed Group Helped Elect 11 Secretaries Of State To Oversee Elections Battleground States | |
2011-06-24 | |
A small tax-exempt political group with ties to wealthy liberals like billionaire financier George Soros has quietly helped elect 11 reform-minded progressive Democrats as secretaries of state to oversee the election process in battleground states and keep Republican "political operatives from deciding who can vote and how those votes are counted."
The group's website said it wants to stop Republicans from "manipulating" election results. "Any serious commitment to wresting control of the country from the Republican Party must include removing their political operatives from deciding who can vote and whose votes will count," the group said on its website, accusing some Republican secretaries of state of making "partisan decisions." SOSP has sought donations by describing the contributions as a "modest political investment" to elect "clean candidates" to the secretary of state posts. Named after Section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code, so-called 527 political groups -- such as SOSP -- have no upper limit on contributions and no restrictions on who may contribute in seeking to influence the selection, nomination, election, appointment or defeat of candidates to federal, state or local public office. They generally are not regulated by the Federal Election Commission (FEC), creating a soft-money loophole. While FEC regulations limit individual donations to a maximum of $2,500 per candidate and $5,000 to a PAC, a number of 527 groups have poured tens of millions of unregulated dollars into various political efforts. SOSP has backed 11 winning candidates in 18 races, including such key states as Ohio, Nevada, Iowa, New Mexico and Minnesota. "Supporting secretary of state candidates with integrity is one of the most cost-efficient ways progressives can ensure they have a fair chance of winning elections," SOSP said on its website, adding that "a relatively small influx of money -- often as little as $30,000 to $50,000 -- can change the outcome of a race." SOSP was formed in the wake of the ballot-counting confusion in Florida during the 2000 presidential election and a repeat of that chaos in Ohio in the 2004 presidential election. Democrats accused Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris and Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell, both Republicans, of manipulating the elections in favor of GOP candidates -- charges Mrs. Harris and Mr. Blackwell denied. "Does anyone doubt that these two secretaries of state ... made damaging partisan decisions about purging voter rolls, registration of new voters, voting machine security, the location of precincts, the allocation of voting machines, and dozens of other critical matters?" SOSP asked on its website. SOSP said it raised more than $500,000 in 2006 to help elect five Democratic secretaries of states in seven races. | |
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Home Front: Politix |
Democrat Secretaries of State Project Ready To Steal Close 2012 Elections |
2010-07-12 |
After the Bush Kerry 2004 election, the idea for the Secretary of State Project (SOSP) germinated when the groups Democrat founders blamed Kerrys defeat on then Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell, a Republican who had ruled that Ohio would not count provisional ballots of properly registered voters if they had been submitted at the wrong precinct, according to the discoverthenetworks.org web site. If any election carries a margin of victory less than 120,000, the SOSP swings into action. Still angry over the 2000 Bush win when Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris was in charge of the ballot recount fracas, Democrats gathered relatively small amounts of funding momentum and targeted Secretary of State races in Michigan, Ohio, Colorado, New Mexico, Minnesota, Nevada, and Iowa, according to discoverthenetworks.org. All those Democrats won except in Colorado and Michigan. The U.S, Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit ultimately upheld Blackwells decision, and the U.S. Supreme Court decided for the Bush 2000 win. This same website stresses that very few Americans realize the importance of the SoSP duties. It is this very stealth that wealthy fund raisers such as Democracy Alliance members George Soros and Rob Stein and other Progressives are using to take control of our electoral process. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Keep state's credibility; return Nelson to Senate |
2006-10-09 |
![]() On the first point, it's hard to find any state politician with a wider background. Sen. Nelson spent six years in the state House and 12 years in the U.S. House. He spent six years as the state's insurance commissioner before his election to the Senate six years ago. On the second point, Sen. Nelson has voted with his party on many big issues - against President Bush's tax cuts, against the constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, and against the Part D Medicare prescription drug benefit - but is able to work with Republicans when it benefits Florida. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Harris Wins Fla. GOP Senate Nomination |
2006-09-06 |
![]() With 62 percent of the precincts reporting, Davis led state Sen. Rod Smith 46 percent to 42 percent. The winner will face Florida Attorney General Charlie Crist, who claimed the Republican nomination to replace Bush. Crist had 64 percent of the vote to 34 percent for Tom Gallagher, the state's chief financial officer. Harris had 50 percent of the vote against three relative unknowns. Attorney Will McBride ran second at 30 percent, and retired Navy admiral LeRoy Collins had 15 percent. |
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Home Front: Politix | |||||||
Harris Clarifies Comments on Religion | |||||||
2006-08-28 | |||||||
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Home Front: Politix |
Harris alleges Nelson took illegal money for campaign |
2006-07-08 |
![]() Harris, who spoke after a brief presentation by candidates for the Osceola County School Board at the Kissimmee Bay Country Club, stuck to habitual campaign topics -- illegal immigration, drilling off the Florida coast and eminent domain. But after a question from a member of the audience about illegal contributions made to her campaign by a defense contractor in 2004, Harris said that she had not known the $32,000 donation was illegal and she has since donated the money to charity. She then upped the political ante by suggesting Nelson had made a similar mistake. "That actually happened in the past, and it happened to Bill Nelson," Harris said. "The difference is that when I did find out, I donated that money to charity. . . . He received some $80,000 the same way and he never did reimburse. So there is a little bit of difference, and I'm happy to draw attention to that." She never identified the money to which she was referring. Her comments were in response to Nelson's camp, which last month accused Harris of being a "bribe taker." A Nelson spokesman was reprimanded for the comment. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Harris targeting voters in rural areas |
2006-07-04 |
![]() That's not surprising, given how roughly she's been treated by her own party and the media, Smith said. North Florida might just offer her sanctuary from questions about her private dinners and illegal campaign donations from a corrupt defense contractor who bribed another member of Congress. Her appearances and speeches aren't likely to get the same scrutiny and tough analysis from the weekly publications and small newspapers as they would in major media markets, he said. It also makes sense for Harris to target the state's conservative base in preparation for the Republican primary, Smith said. Even though her three opponents are largely unknown, Harris needs to make sure conservative voters aren't tempted to cast ballots for her opponents -- especially since Gov. Jeb Bush was openly courting other Republicans to challenge her. The most threatening of the primary trio appears to be Orlando-area attorney Will McBride, who has family ties to Salem Communications, the Christian radio empire. With support from religious commentators and financial support from conservative backers, McBride could present a serious challenge. |
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Home Front: Culture Wars |
CBS Lets Dixie Chicks Rant about 2003 Threat |
2006-05-13 |
![]() Ostensibly, the purpose of the Chicks' appearance on "60 Minutes" this Sunday is to promote a new album, but the lead of CBS's online promotional piece about the interview focuses entirely on three-year-old threats.There's apparently an effort to "make news" here most likely, but it's so feeble as to be laughable. Any person who cuts even a slightly bigger-than-average public profile has received death threats. Doing a story on them is of questionable value; doing one on threats received in 2003 can only be attributed to the fact that the Dixie Chicks are liberal. Much-reviled conservative women like Linda Tripp or Katherine Harris both received many death threats but were never granted interviews with "60 Minutes" to talk about their experiences in a sympathetic manner. I found this section of the story amusing in its contradictory nature: A recent single the band released, called "Not Ready to Make Nice," speaks to the band's state of mind three years after what they call the "the London incident." In other words, the Dixie Chicks aren't apologizing for making political remarks because they're not political. Makes a lot of sense to me. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Contractor Pleads Guilty to Corruption |
2006-02-26 |
Washington defense contractor Mitchell J. Wade admitted yesterday in federal court that he attempted to illegally influence Defense Department contracting officials and tried to curry favor with two House members, in addition to lavishing more than $1 million in cash, cars, a boat, antiques and other bribes on convicted Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-Calif.). The new admissions, including details that identify Reps. Virgil H. Goode Jr. (R-Va.) and Katherine Harris (R-Fla.) as recipients of illegal campaign contributions, are contained in Wade's agreement to plead guilty to four criminal charges stemming from his role in the Cunningham probe. The congressman resigned after pleading guilty in November to taking $2.4 million in bribes from Wade and others in return for steering federal funds and contracts their way. |
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Home Front: Culture Wars | |
CNN Suspends Novak for Walking Off Set | |
2005-08-05 | |
NEW YORK â CNN suspended commentator Robert Novak indefinitely after he swore and walked off the set Thursday during a debate with Democratic operative James Carville. The exchange during CNN's "Inside Edition" came during a discussion of Florida's Senate campaign. But CNN correspondent Ed Henry noted when it was through that he had been about to ask Novak about his role in the investigation of the leak of a CIA officer's identity. A CNN spokeswoman, Edie Emery, called Novak's behavior "inexcusable and unacceptable." Novak has apologized to CNN, and CNN apologizes to viewers, she said. "We've asked Mr. Novak to take some time off," she said. A telephone message at Novak's office was not immediately returned Thursday. Carville and Novak were both trying to speak while they were handicapping the GOP candidacy of Katherine Harris. Novak said the opposition of the Republican establishment in Florida might not be fatal for her. "Let me just finish, James, please," Novak continued. "I know you hate to hear me, but you have to." Carville, addressing the camera, said: "He's got to show these right wingers that he's got a backbone, you know. It's why the Wall Street Journal editorial page is watching you. Show 'em that you're tough." "Well, I think that's bullââ and I hate that," Novak replied. "Just let it go." As moderator Dan Harris stepped in to ask Carville a question, Novak walked off the set.
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Home Front: WoT |
Ann Coulter : Losing their heads over Gitmo |
2005-06-16 |
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