Mike Pompeo lied about NPR interview with Mary Louise Kelly—and there’s proof

It's hard to keep track of every detail of Republican corruption, but Trump-appointed Secretary of State Mike Pompeo got himself into a new scandal when he cut an NPR interview short after journalist Mary Louise Kelly asked him about ousted ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch, screamed at Kelly afterward, and dared her to find Ukraine on a "blank" map he keeps in his office, for some reason (which she did, as Kelly has a master's degree in European studies). He capped off this tour de force by sending out a crass official State Department statement claiming she was lying about all of it.

Among his claims: Kelly had agreed to limit questions only to Iran and was not supposed to ask about anything Ukraine-related. It turns out, because we've heard this song before, that Mike Pompeo was lying through his teeth on that one and The Washington Post was quickly given proof. Once again, Pompeo has used his State Department to lie to the American people.

The Washington Post obtained the email exchanges between NPR and Mike Pompeo's staff. They show that Kelly specifically did not agree to Pompeo's conditions, and specifically said she would also be asking questions about "Ukraine." "I never agree to take anything off the table," Kelly wrote in one email.

Pompeo's office pushed back, asking at least that Iran be the topic for "a healthy portion of the interview," once again signaling Pompeo's months-long aversion to answering any questions whatsoever about the impeachment-causing scandal he is buried in up to his ex-House Republican eyebrows. But Kelly gave only the assurance that her "plan" was to spend a "healthy portion" on Iran, with no promise that other subjects wouldn't come up.

So the secretary of state lied to the American people in an official State Department statement, which is many times worse than the Benghazi scandal House Republican Pompeo attempted to manufacture out of thin air. This is not surprising: He is crooked. He has repeatedly lied. He has been identified as a key figure in Trump's scheme to withhold military aid to Ukraine until a "Biden" investigation was announced.

Former national security adviser John Bolton's unreleased book manuscript alleges that Pompeo personally knew of the smear effort against Ambassador Yovanovitch, and knew that Rudolph Giuliani's claims about her were false, The book says Pompeo expressed a supposition that Giuliani was working to undermine Yovanovitch on behalf of other, unspecified clients. Pompeo is corrupt. He must be removed from office.

Trump's lawyers attack the Bidens during impeachment trial

Trump's lawyers attack the Bidens during impeachment trialAfter much speculation, President Trump's defense team finally reeled the Biden family into the Senate impeachment trial Monday.For the most part, the case against impeachment was focused on poking holes in the Democrats' opposing argument, but former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, who's defending the president, made former Vice President Joe Biden, his son Hunter, and Burisma -- the Ukrainian gas company upon whose board Hunter Biden sat -- the centerpieces of her presentation, as did another Trump attorney, Eric Herschmann.Their point was that Burisma's corruption made Trump's investigation request legitimate, and since the Bidens were connected to the company, they were worth looking into, as well. Bondi described the younger Biden's board membership as "nepotistic at best, nefarious at worst."A few people sensed some hypocrisy in those comments, implying that Trump supporters don't have much ground to stand on when it comes to nepotism accusations.> Pam Bondi is making the case that nepotism involving government officials is bad.> > -- Walter Shaub (@waltshaub) January 27, 2020There were a few other challenges to Bondi's argument, including the idea that, even if Hunter Biden's activities were corrupt, there are other ways to investigate foreign corruption than the Trump administration's methods in this case. > Cut through this smokescreen by corrupt Pam Bondi. There are legal avenues to investigate corruption abroad. NONE of them involve directly the president, much less his private attorney. None of Trump's actions, even if there were grounds to investigate Biden, are appropriate.> > -- Norman Ornstein (@NormOrnstein) January 27, 2020More stories from theweek.com Mike Pompeo is a disgrace Report: GOP Sen. Toomey proposing impeachment trial witness deal Investigators: Kobe Bryant's pilot tried to gain altitude before crash


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Bolton bombshell sets off a whodunit frenzy


The White House and John Bolton’s team agree on this much, at least: It wasn’t us.

As the explosive news of the former national security adviser’s forthcoming book ricochets across Washington — it reportedly accuses the president of tying military aid to Ukraine to investigations of Democrats — each side in the emerging dispute is begging off responsibility for leaking to the New York Times.

Understanding the sourcing behind the story could shine light on whether those who shared information with the Times were motivated to influence the Senate impeachment trial, or — as Republicans suggested on Monday, they were merely trying to juice Bolton’s book sales. And it could clarify whether top White House officials were aware of Bolton’s allegations, with several GOP senators telling reporters they felt blindsided by the story.

Even Mitch McConnell felt compelled to issue a statement through a spokesman who said the Senate majority leader “did not have any advance notice” of Bolton’s manuscript and its contents.

Bolton’s side was the first to play the blame game on Sunday evening, with his lawyer Chuck Cooper sharing a letter he had sent to the White House official in charge of reviewing outside publications for classified information. The letter, dated Dec. 30, asked Ellen Knight of the National Security Council Records Management Division to restrict access to “those career government officials and employees regularly charged with responsibility for such reviews.”

“It is clear, regrettably, from The New York Times article published today that the pre-publication review process has been corrupted and that information has been disclosed by persons other than those properly involved in reviewing the manuscript,” Cooper wrote in an accompanying statement.

The letter’s release seemed aimed at deflecting blame from Bolton for leaking, given that the Times story said the former national security adviser had circulated his draft to “close associates” and noted that “multiple people described Mr. Bolton’s account of the Ukraine affair.”


Romney on Bolton testimony: 'It's relevant and therefore I'd like to hear it'


On Monday morning, the White House fired back with a spare statement of its own.

“Ambassador Bolton’s manuscript was submitted to the NSC for pre-publication review and has been under initial review by the NSC,” the council’s spokesman John Ullyot said. “No White House personnel outside NSC have reviewed the manuscript.”

Ullyot did not clarify, however, whether other White House aides had been briefed on its contents, expanding the scope of potential leakers. Nor did he respond to questions about whether White House lawyers were aware of Bolton’s claims as they launched their impeachment defense of the president.

Finally, Bolton’s personal spokesperson said that neither he, nor his publisher or his literary agents had coordinated with the Times to leak the contents of the book as the book went on sale on Amazon.com, which made it available to pre-order on Sunday night — something less, apparently, than a full-throated denial that anyone from Bolton’s side had leaked to the paper.

As online commentators speculated about the Times’ sourcing, Bolton’s friends and associates circulated their own theories.

“I take Bolton and his staff at their word that they did not leak the manuscript to the New York Times,” his former NSC chief of staff, Fred Fleitz, wrote in an op-ed published on FoxNews.com. “But I believe they are still responsible for this leak since Bolton’s explosive book was sent to the leak-prone National Security Council for a security review in December 2019 so the book could be published in the spring of 2020. It also is inexplicable how such a sensitive manuscript could be sent to the NSC in the middle of the impeachment process. Under such circumstances, a leak of the manuscript was all but certain.”

Others said Bolton was leery of getting crosswise with the GOP base, which has steadfastly backed Trump throughout the Ukraine scandal.

“It’s hard to imagine that he wants to assert himself at this moment in a controversial way,” said one person close to Bolton. “He still sees himself as this leader in the party, he wants to be a speaker and a player and it doesn’t seem like he wants to go to war with Trump and the entire base of the Republican Party. It doesn’t seem like that would make sense for him.”

Bolton’s handling of his role in the Ukraine scandal has been a topic of much speculation in Washington.

He declined to share his knowledge of events before the House impeachment inquiry, saying he hoped the federal courts would clarify whether a former White House adviser could be compelled to testify. House Democrats invited him to testify but declined to compel his appearance, wary of a protracted legal fight. Meanwhile, he repeatedly teased his forthcoming book on Twitter, suggesting he had important information to share.

But Bolton then popped up in early January to announce that he was willing to obey a Senate subpoena, setting off a furious round of commentary about his possible motives. The statement also fueled Democrats’ demands that the Senate trial allow witnesses.

Bolton’s former underlings at the White House declined to comment on the manuscript news, including Fiona Hill, the onetime NSC Russia hand who testified last fall that Bolton had said he wanted no part of a “drug deal” cooked up by Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani.

“I have nothing to say about a book I haven’t read,” said Tim Morrison, who succeeded Hill as NSC senior director for Russia and Europe and also testified before House lawmakers.

Asked for his help in deciphering Bolton’s strategy, Morrison replied, “I wish I was that smart.”


Reuel Marc Gerecht, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies who has known Bolton for decades, acknowledged the fortuitous timing for the manuscript’s contents to leak. But he suggested that Bolton is motivated more by his negative view of the president’s conduct than he is by book sales.

“It’s fairly clear now that John certainly was not pleased by the morality of the actions in Ukraine. I think he was deeply disturbed by that,” Gerecht said. “It’s fair and accurate to say that John Bolton is not cracked up with Donald Trump.”

Gerecht declined to speculate on who might have provided information to the Times, and said he had no knowledge of who did.

But he argued that Bolton doesn’t need the money.

“John is not a poor man,” Gerecht said, noting that Bolton had already received a sizable advance. “I think he’s saved up quite a little kitty so I would be cautious about saying that he’s doing this just because of the financial rewards coming from his book.”

Another associate, who served in the Bush administration with Bolton and knows him, noted that despite his age, Bolton still has future ambitions that are “more than just selling books. He'd love to be secretary of state. He'd love to be president one day.”

“Sure, everybody wants history to record that they were awesome and did a great job and were powerful and influential,” this person said, “but I don't think John considers his career to be over.”

If Bolton had indeed leaked to the Times, Gerecht said it would mean, “obviously he wants to testify. He wants to set his version of events. He wants it written in marble.”

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Days after ‘head on a pike’ outrage, Republican warns of ‘repercussions’ for defying Trump

Republican senators were outraged when Rep. Adam Schiff mentioned the report that the White House was threatening Republicans with their “head on a pike” if they voted for witnesses in the impeachment trial of Donald Trump. Outraged! Sen. Susan Collins violated the decorum of the Senate chamber by bursting out with “That's not true.” Sen. Lisa Murkowski claimed that “That’s where he lost me.”

So: no threats to Republicans over their votes on impeachment witnesses, huh? Someone should tell Trump's House allies that.

Rep. Mark Meadows told Norah O’Donnell that “I don't want to speak for my Senate colleagues. But there are always political repercussions for every vote you take.” Yeah, like the kind of political repercussions that Team Trump specializes in dealing out. The kind you might metaphorically call “head on a pike.”

But we’re not exactly dealing with the brain trust here. Rep. Doug Collins had a challenge for Democrats: “The question needs to be flipped. Where is a courageous Democrat who will actually look at the facts and vote in favor of not impeaching this president? ” (Uhh, Doug, he was already impeached.)

Bolton upends Trump impeachment trial 

Former national security adviser John Bolton is adding fresh uncertainty to President Trump’s impeachment trial. Bolton’s accusation, made in a forthcoming memoir, that Trump tied $391 million in aid to Ukraine to the country helping with...
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Impeachment trial resumes with more of Trump’s lie-and-attack defense: Live coverage #4

White House counsel Pat Cipollone, Trump personal lawyer Jay Sekulow, and their whole crew are back to continue the opening arguments in the impeachment defense of Donald Trump. They gave a brief preview on Saturday, which was exactly what you’d expect: lies and attacks. They resume in the wake of reports that former national security adviser John Bolton’s book recounts a conversation with Donald Trump in which Trump explicitly tied military aid to Ukraine investigating his political opponents—exactly what Trump was impeached for—but it’s unlikely that will change the basic lie-and-attack strategy.

Monday, Jan 27, 2020 · 10:10:02 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

We now have WH lawyer Eric Herschmann, who will take us to dinner. He’s picking up with Bondi’s massive Burisma lies and says he’s going to go through “additional evidence.”

Monday, Jan 27, 2020 · 10:11:45 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter Bondi isn’t the first of this crew, btw, to purposely invert the truth about Shokin.  Both Sekulow and Cipollone made similar claims on Saturday, and McCarthy did the same in the House. And now it’ll continue with Hershmann who is also apparently going to try to argue that Ukraine intervened in the 2016 election and Mueller investigation was a Dem witchhunt. Monday, Jan 27, 2020 · 10:14:19 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

This is just amazing. Continuing the nepotism is bad argument which is just mind-blowingly brazen. How much has Ivanka made off of Chinese patents in the last three years?

Monday, Jan 27, 2020 · 10:15:10 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Oh, right, on Shokin. 

x

Monday, Jan 27, 2020 · 10:21:57 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

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Monday, Jan 27, 2020 · 10:22:48 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

The one name we haven’t heard today? John Bolton.

Monday, Jan 27, 2020 · 10:27:56 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

One thing they’re inadvertently confirming here, with this extended rant against the Bidens—Trump’s entire concern with “corruption” in Ukraine was about the Bidens. But we’re supposed to believe this has absolutely nothing to do with 2020 and Trump didn’t blackmail Zelensky over it at all.

Monday, Jan 27, 2020 · 10:33:29 PM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Oh god with the “fake” Schiff “transcript” again. They. Have. Nothing. There’s no defense for Trump, none, so they’re just gonna give us a less yelly version of the House maniacs defense.

CNN’s Jake Tapper Calls Out Trump Lawyers, Fox News for Pretending Bolton Bombshell Doesn’t Exist

CNN’s Jake Tapper Calls Out Trump Lawyers, Fox News for Pretending Bolton Bombshell Doesn’t ExistDuring a break in the Trump impeachment trial Monday afternoon, CNN anchor Jake Tapper tore into both the president’s defense team and a certain other cable news network for ignoring the revelations contained in leaks from former National Security Adviser John Bolton’s forthcoming book The Room Where It Happened. “The president’s defenders—the White House legal team and others—are acting as though senators don’t read the newspaper, senators don’t read the news,” Tapper said. “Now maybe there is a news channel where this John Bolton revelation isn’t being mentioned, even if he’s a former employee, I don’t know.” The CNN anchor was not-so-subtly referring to Fox News, where Bolton served as a paid contributor for years before joining the Trump administration.Tapper went on to ask his guest, Senate Parliamentarian Emeritus Alan Frumin, if there is anything in the Senate rules stating that Senate jurors can only consider evidence collected in the House impeachment hearings as opposed to new information that has come out since. He wanted to know if senators are really supposed to “ignore” news about “John Bolton directly contradicting the case that the president’s team is making.” “The short answer is no,” Frumin answered. While the Bolton bombshells have been discussed on Fox News, the hosts of Fox & Friends spent their morning downplaying his claims and telling viewers—including the president himself—that Bolton’s not to be trusted.  Seth Meyers Exposes ‘Self-Serving Hypocrite’ Fox News Host Ainsley EarhardtRead more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.


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