Nostra
Diamond Member
- Oct 7, 2019
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Dimwingers are busted being ginormous hypocrites yet again.

McConnell hit for impeachment coordination with Trump – but Dems did the same with Clinton
But whether or not Senate leaders should be coordinating with the White House, McConnell is appearing to follow a precedent set during the 1999 Clinton impeachment.
According to then-Washington Post reporter Peter Baker’s book, “The Breach: Inside the Impeachment and Trial of William Jefferson Clinton,” Senate Democrats coordinated with the White House on a number of impeachment-related issues behind the scenes.
According to Baker, one of those arrangements involved White House Counsel Charles Ruff arranging a “secret signal” with Democratic leadership. If Ruff wanted to rebut anything from the Republican House managers, something rules didn’t allow for, he pre-arranged with then-Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle’s aides for a senator to submit a question to then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist asking the White House to respond.
Aides reportedly would "fill in the name" of one of several "default senators" -- such as Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and then-Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn. -- who had agreed to allow themselves to "be used in this way."
The book also detailed how then-Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, spoke with Clinton and helped organize a pressure campaign in defeating Sen. Susan Collins’, R-Maine., attempt to adopt “findings of fact” by which the Senate could take a majority vote on whether Clinton lied under oath and impeded discovery of evidence even if the chamber failed to convict him. Baker described how Clinton “tracked down Harkin in the Democratic cloakroom during a break in the trial to vent his outrage" at what Collins was cooking up.
“Harkin needed no convincing,” Baker wrote. “He had immediately recognized the pernicious effects of the findings plan and set about trying to destroy it before it got too far.”
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“The Breach” outlined how Daschle recruited “a crew of Democratic lawyers to help puncture holes in the [pro-impeachment] case.” The Democratic leader also warned the White House against submitting a motion to dismiss the case entirely.
Baker also described how the biggest debate in Daschle’s office centered on whether to direct questions to House managers at all.
“Instead, the Democrats decided it was better to concentrate on sending softball questions to the White House lawyers so they could score rhetorical points,” he said.
McConnell hit for impeachment coordination with Trump – but Dems did the same with Clinton

McConnell hit for impeachment coordination with Trump – but Dems did the same with Clinton
But whether or not Senate leaders should be coordinating with the White House, McConnell is appearing to follow a precedent set during the 1999 Clinton impeachment.
According to then-Washington Post reporter Peter Baker’s book, “The Breach: Inside the Impeachment and Trial of William Jefferson Clinton,” Senate Democrats coordinated with the White House on a number of impeachment-related issues behind the scenes.
According to Baker, one of those arrangements involved White House Counsel Charles Ruff arranging a “secret signal” with Democratic leadership. If Ruff wanted to rebut anything from the Republican House managers, something rules didn’t allow for, he pre-arranged with then-Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle’s aides for a senator to submit a question to then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist asking the White House to respond.
Aides reportedly would "fill in the name" of one of several "default senators" -- such as Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and then-Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn. -- who had agreed to allow themselves to "be used in this way."
The book also detailed how then-Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, spoke with Clinton and helped organize a pressure campaign in defeating Sen. Susan Collins’, R-Maine., attempt to adopt “findings of fact” by which the Senate could take a majority vote on whether Clinton lied under oath and impeded discovery of evidence even if the chamber failed to convict him. Baker described how Clinton “tracked down Harkin in the Democratic cloakroom during a break in the trial to vent his outrage" at what Collins was cooking up.
“Harkin needed no convincing,” Baker wrote. “He had immediately recognized the pernicious effects of the findings plan and set about trying to destroy it before it got too far.”
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
“The Breach” outlined how Daschle recruited “a crew of Democratic lawyers to help puncture holes in the [pro-impeachment] case.” The Democratic leader also warned the White House against submitting a motion to dismiss the case entirely.
Baker also described how the biggest debate in Daschle’s office centered on whether to direct questions to House managers at all.
“Instead, the Democrats decided it was better to concentrate on sending softball questions to the White House lawyers so they could score rhetorical points,” he said.
McConnell hit for impeachment coordination with Trump – but Dems did the same with Clinton