easyt65
Diamond Member
- Aug 4, 2015
- 90,307
- 61,076
- 2,645
Damn, Democrats Love Being the CCP's Paid Traitorous Bitches....
How many politicians are NOT taking mad stacks from the Chinese? Brian McKeon, one of Obama’s lickspittles who once served as the “deputy director for voter protection,” is now a lobbyist for the CCP firm Tencent.
McKeon was first retained by Tencent in August 2020 to lobby on behalf of the company’s WeChat platform, which the Trump administration proposed to ban. McKeon works for the lobbying firm Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck.
The State Department’s Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation regarded Tencent as a “tool of the Chinese government,” stating the company has “no meaningful ability to tell the Chinese Communist Party ‘no’ if officials decide to ask for their assistance.” The nauseatingly progressive group Amnesty International rated Tencent an embarrassing zero out of 100 in five categories on encryption and human rights, noting it hadn’t “stated publicly that they will not grant government requests to the backdoor.” That’s about as commie as a company can be.
No wonder Democrats want to embrace them.
Obama's 'Voter Protection Director' Has a New Gig Lobbying on Behalf of the Chinese Communist Party
Obama, ChiComs, and Dominion Voting How many politicians are NOT taking mad stacks from the Chinese? Brian McKeon, one of Obama’s lickspittles who once served as the “deputy director for v...
pjmedia.com
How many politicians are NOT taking mad stacks from the Chinese? Brian McKeon, one of Obama’s lickspittles who once served as the “deputy director for voter protection,” is now a lobbyist for the CCP firm Tencent.
McKeon was first retained by Tencent in August 2020 to lobby on behalf of the company’s WeChat platform, which the Trump administration proposed to ban. McKeon works for the lobbying firm Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck.
McKeon also worked on the Senate campaigns of Democrats Jeanne Shaheen and Barbara Boxer. That’s some pretty serious Democrat party ties. Also noteworthy, McKeon lobbied for Dominion Voting Systems.
The State Department’s Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation regarded Tencent as a “tool of the Chinese government,” stating the company has “no meaningful ability to tell the Chinese Communist Party ‘no’ if officials decide to ask for their assistance.” The nauseatingly progressive group Amnesty International rated Tencent an embarrassing zero out of 100 in five categories on encryption and human rights, noting it hadn’t “stated publicly that they will not grant government requests to the backdoor.” That’s about as commie as a company can be.
No wonder Democrats want to embrace them.