This coming April 23rd will mark the first anniversary of the U.S. Senate's 56-43 vote to confirm Loretta Lynch as Attorney General.
By so doing, Lynch, a former U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, followed Eric Holder's historic tenure as the first black man to hold the position by becoming the first black woman to serve as America's top law enforcement official.
But with reports from Washington last week indicating that the FBI will soon interview former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and several of her former aides regarding the seemingly never-ending classified email scandal, Lynch could make history yet again if she decides to indict the Democratic presidential front-runner.
RELATED: Loretta Lynch Wins Confirmation as Attorney General
Some who are reading this post may be thinking "not this e-mail mess again." But until the matter is resolved one way or another, the investigation, and Lynch's looming decision, hover like a shadow over this year's race. Republicans will keep this going imho for the 8 years of Hillary's presidency
By so doing, Lynch, a former U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, followed Eric Holder's historic tenure as the first black man to hold the position by becoming the first black woman to serve as America's top law enforcement official.
But with reports from Washington last week indicating that the FBI will soon interview former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and several of her former aides regarding the seemingly never-ending classified email scandal, Lynch could make history yet again if she decides to indict the Democratic presidential front-runner.
RELATED: Loretta Lynch Wins Confirmation as Attorney General
Some who are reading this post may be thinking "not this e-mail mess again." But until the matter is resolved one way or another, the investigation, and Lynch's looming decision, hover like a shadow over this year's race. Republicans will keep this going imho for the 8 years of Hillary's presidency