Brian Peacock wrote:Forty Two wrote:You asked if they lied. They lied.
pErvin wrote:Did any of the Dems or their staff lie about their meetings?

they lied.

Did Pelosi have personal, private, off-the-books meetings with Ruski Ambassadors,
Did anyone from the Trump campaign have personal, private, off-the-books meetings with the Ruski Ambassador?
Aren't most meetings with Ambassadors "off the books?" Or are books kept about meetings, with transcripts and such? Where is the "book" that logs meetings with ambassadors.
Ambassadors are supposed to talk to people. There is no official channel required to talk to an ambassador. You can pick up the phone and call most embassies, and with some embassies you can get your own meeting with the ambassador to discuss whatever issue you may have.
Also, the meetings Jeff Sessions had were like this:
So what are the two meetings that Sessions had? The first came at a conference on “Global Partners in Diplomacy,” where Sessions was the keynote speaker. Sponsored by the U.S. State Department, The Heritage Foundation, and several other organizations, it was held in Cleveland during the Republican National Convention. The conference was an educational program for ambassadors invited by the Obama State Department to observe the convention. The Obama State Department handled all of the coordination with ambassadors and their staff, of which there were about 100 at the conference.” After the meeting, several ambassadors came up to Sessions, one of which was the Russian Ambassador, and they thanked him for his comments.
Sessions also apparently met with the Russian ambassador in September. But on that occasion, Sessions was acting as a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, not as a surrogate for the Trump campaign. That’s why the meeting was held in his Senate office. His DOJ spokesperson, Sarah Isgur Flores, says they discussed relations between the two countries – not the election.
There was nothing unusual about this: Sessions met with more than two dozen ambassadors during 2016, including the Ukrainian ambassador the day before the meeting with the Russian ambassador.
The only “interference” that we know of was the hacking of the Democratic National Committee’s computer system. The emails purloined in that escapade embarrassed Democratic Party insiders by revealing that its claims of neutrality during the hotly contested Democratic primary were a total sham.
While the DNC may have tipped the scales against Bernie Sanders, there was no actual cyber-interference in the voting process in 2016.
Hans von Spakovsky, formerly with the US Department of Justice - in this opinion piece -
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2017/03/ ... esign.html
Brian Peacock wrote:
or others, or meetings in her capacity as a committee member or in some other official capacity? Have Democrats had, and then lied about, personal, private, off-the-books meetings when asked, or volunteered a lie when not even asked - as Jeff Sessions did?
You seem to want us to think that 'just having a meeting with X,Y or Z' is the issue here -- so that criticising Flynn or Sessions etc, and the investigations into the Trump campaign, become a double standard -- when that isn't the issue at all. The more you push that line the further from the point you travel.
This whole thing is bullshit, because there's nothing wrong with talking to ambassadors. We're not at war with the Russians. There is no official channel that is supposed to be used. There would be nothing wrong with anyone going to the Russian embassy and asking to talk to the Ambassador, and if he was willing to talk to us, there is nothing illegal or criminal about it, even if we're running for office.
Sessions testimony before Congress was referring to discussions concerning the election, and he was not trying to hide the fact that he met the Russian ambassador. The White House helped coordinate his first ever "meeting" with the Ambassador as noted above, and the second meeting was when he was acting on the Senate Arms Services Committee.
So, where are the person, private, off-the-books meetings you referred to?
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar