Clinton calls Trump Jr.’s explanation of Russian Federation meeting ‘an absurd lie’
Months after the election, the Democratic Party hasn’t overcome the heated primary battles between Clinton and her former Democratic opponent, Senator Bernie Sanders, let alone processed Clinton’s subsequent loss to Donald Trump in an election that, polls showed, was hers for the taking.
She wasn’t entirely clear on what she meant about different standards. “But when they step into the arena and say, ‘Wait a minute, I think I could do the job, I would like to have that opportunity, ‘ their favorabilities goes down”.
The president who tweeted shortly before 11 p.m. on Wednesday said Clinton lost the election debates and lost her direction.
But she stopped short of claiming that President Trump or his associates colluded with Russian Federation to influence the election.
There have also been reports of poor sales. But Trump won the Electoral College, a body of 538 members who select the president based on the popular vote in each state, meaning the person who gets the most votes nationally doesn’t necessarily win the election.
The meeting is now under investigation by multiple congressional committees and special counsel Robert Mueller. Donald Trump, meanwhile, was “filled with emotion” in Todd’s analysis, as Danielle Paquette noted at the Washington Post. It left her stunned and dumbfounded, she said, and she said it cut her lead in half in a crucial part of the swing state of Pennsylvania. Asked outright on NBC if she believed Trump’s campaign coordinated with the Kremlin, she said “I can’t say that”. The White House and those connected with the Trump campaign have insisted that there was no coordination between the president’s team and the Kremlin’s efforts to meddle in last year’s election. She paired a cerulean open sweater with white trim at the cuffs over an all-black shirt and trouser combo. “And I had a lot of angst”, she said. Twenty-one percent (21%) said Russian interference in the USA election was the most likely reason for Clinton’s defeat, but almost as many (19%) blamed so-called “fake news” sites on the internet.