Hillary contradicts Federal Bureau of Investigation again on emails
“I hope you keep calling it like you see it and holding all of us accountable”.
Both presidential candidates are being questioned on their truthfulness Friday as Hillary Clinton faced reporters and Donald Trump did an about-face on Twitter. “I can speak only about what she said to the Federal Bureau of Investigation”.
“[Donald Trump] can say whatever he wants, but the facts remain he owes the American people his tax returns”, continued Clinton, disregarding the tax shelter address (per the Guardian) she shares with Trump in DE as well as her own inability to produce the transcripts for speeches (per the Washington Times) for which she was generously paid; many suspect because they were not, in fact, speeches, but payments.
She said Friday to a meeting of black and Latino journalists in Washington: “I take it seriously”. Convention organizers said they’d also invited Trump but that he’d declined. But, again, this is why her campaign doesn’t like her to be very accessible to the media.
“It’s been said that when the economy catches a cold, communities of color get pneumonia”, she said.
“What we have here is pretty much what I have been saying throughout this whole year”.
Hovering over the address was the image of Clinton addressing a room full of journalists.
Worth noting, Ed O’Keefe of The Washington Post, gave her an underhanded criticism over how few times she holds a press conference.
Comey said in his testimony last month on Capitol Hill that he did not believe Clinton understood the meaning of the special markings. She seemed to admit a mistake.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton announced that she stands by her remarks to the F.B.I. and the American public at large regarding her use of a private e-mail server while serving as U.S. Secretary of State.
It was typical of Clinton: Not only were her initial statements misleading, so was her attempt to explain those statements.
On “Fox News Sunday” last weekend, Clinton said, “Director Comey said my answers were truthful and what I’ve said is consistent with what I have told the American people”. “That really is the bottom line here”, she said.
The explanation didn’t appease Republicans. His campaign earlier said he meant that he saw television coverage of the hostages, not the cash, leaving an airplane.
Hillary Rodham Clinton still lying about e-mails.
“Were 67 per cent of the people in NY wrong? Were 66 percent of the American public wrong?” There are too many people taking the podium for us to include them all, so we’re only evaluating the most memorable.
During the short question-and-answer session, Clinton also detailed some of her plans should she win the White House, promising to make an overhaul of America’s immigration system a “clear, high priority”.
“There’s nothing like winning to change minds”, she said.
Now, if in retrospect, which is what is behind the 100 number – if in retrospect, some different agency said, but it should have been, although it wasn’t, it should have been, that’s what the debate is about.
The fact-checkers, however, disagreed with Clinton’s talking points. The reporters were quick to ask her about the subject where she’s faced the greatest scrutiny: her emails.