Auteur Sujet: wbcb Schiff says he s seen no evidence that Trump declassified documents found  (Lu 22 fois)

JeaoneKef

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Halw Michelle Obama:  Voters Are Tired Of This
 The full House of Representatives voted Tuesday on a civil contempt resolution to enforce the stanley water bottle  congressional subpoenas of the Trump administration. The resolution passed by a vote of 229-191, with 13 people not recording a vote.The House Judiciary Committee voted in May to hold Attorney General William Barr in contempt for refusing to comply with a subpoena to provide the full unredacted report by special counsel Robert Mueller. President Trump has exerted executive privilege over the entire report. Former White House counsel Don McGahn defied a subpoena to testify before the committee in May at Mr. Trump s direction.Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler made a surprise announcement earlier this week that the Justice Department had agreed to begin allowing the committee to access some of Mueller s underlying documents in response to the committee s subpoena.                                        Nadler said he would hold off on pursuing criminal contempt vote in order to allow the Justice Department time to comply. However, he has indicated that pursuing court enforcement or other steps may still be necessary.The stanley cup  vote came the day after the Judiciary Committee held a hearing with testimony from former Nixon White House Counsel John Dean. Although the House has not yet opened stanley thermos mug  an impeachment inquiry into the president, these votes and hearings are part of a continued investigation into Mr. Trump.        Rebecca Kaplan contributed to this report.                              Yplj Obama s European comedy of errors
  Photo by Steve Pope/G stanley mug etty Images                                         Updated at 12:30 p.m. ETA new poll of likely Republican caucus-goers in Iowa shows Mitt Romney and Ron Paul running neck and neck for th stanley cup e GOP presidential nomination, but luckily for Romney, those voters also call Paul the most  unacceptable  candidate running.                                        As many as 41 percent of likely caucus-goers said they would find Paul  not acceptable as the Republican nominee for president,  according to the new NBC News/ Marist poll, conducted December 27-28. Another 35 percent called Paul an acceptable candidate, while 21 percent said they would find him acceptable, but they would have reservations about his candidacy.By contrast, 21 percent said Romney would be an  unacceptable  candidate. Fifty percent said he would be  acceptable,  while 27 percent answered  acceptable but with reservations.         The other candidates -- Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry, Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum -- fell in between Romney and Paul on that question.What happens if Ron Paul wins Iowa Despite the difference between the two candidates on whether they would make  acceptable  candidates, Romney and Paul are the two frontrunners in the polls. Twenty-three percent of likely caucus-goers said they support Romney, while 21 percent support Paul. Santorum came in third with 15 percent support, followed by Perry at 14 percent and Gingrich at 13 percent.The poll mirrors the result stanley cup s of the C