POMPEO: I'm not going to get into hypotheticals about what someone else said.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Except it's not a hypothetical. The chief of staff confirmed aid was withheld for political investigations.
POMPEO: … ??? … pic.twitter.com/85MihdTa0g
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) October 20, 2019
You can almost hear the felonies in Pompeo’s pregnant pause here. https://t.co/KmVqTNte4t
— The Hoarse Whisperer (@HoarseWisperer) October 20, 2019
The hilarious thing is Pompeo thought a key position in the administration was a career booster for a senate run.
— Schooley (@Rschooley) October 20, 2019
For an administration that prides itself on its macho attitude, this is the biggest bunch of unmanly whiners and snowflakes I've ever seen. I've taught high-school kids who don't complain this much. https://t.co/qbmT08Ly9J
— Tom Nichols (@RadioFreeTom) October 19, 2019
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has become increasingly frustrated in recent weeks by the departure of top State Department officials and claims that he failed to defend the former US Ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, from a smear campaign against her, according to three sources familiar with the situation.
As part of the ongoing impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump, Yovanovitch testified to Congress this week that she was unfairly removed based on false claims pushed by Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani.
One of the sources tell CNN that Pompeo was alerted to internal and external concerns about Giuliani’s effort to push out Yovanovitch, but Pompeo failed to act — he was wary of getting too deeply involved over fears of derailing US-Ukraine policy and potentially sharing the fate of his former colleague John Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser who was fired for not being aligned with the President…
Pompeo’s apparent choice not to put guardrails between State officials and Giuliani has come under scrutiny by House Democrats who are bent on learning as much as they can about what exactly Pompeo knew of Giuliani’s dealings. In recent interviews, Pompeo has declined to answer questions about Giuliani’s entanglement in the administration’s Ukraine policy.
He was however aware of it. In March, Pompeo received a packet from Giuliani containing unfounded claims about Yovanovitch, as well as former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter regarding their dealings in Ukraine…
As the State Department has stopped working with Congress due to orders from the White House, Pompeo himself continues to defend Trump. He has called the Ukraine impeachment inquiry a conspiracy theory to take down the President.
But there will be new questions about conversations regarding quid pro quo in the coming days given the pronouncement by acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney in a news conference Thursday that the US withheld military aid from Ukraine in hopes of securing a promise that the foreign government would look into the possible presence of the physical Democratic National Committee server hacked by the Russians in 2016.
Pompeo, whose department oversees a hefty amount of that assistance to Ukraine, was also asked last month if it would be a problem if there were a quid pro quo arrangement. Pompeo said it is his job to be sure that foreign assistance is “completely appropriate” and that “American taxpayer dollars are used appropriately.”
2032:
Interviewer: You have a gap here on your resume. Where were you working from 2017 through 2019?
Former Trump Official: Meth binge. Just one, big, long meth binge.
Interviewer: . . . .
FTO: [brightly] All better now!
— GetOverHat (@Popehat) October 17, 2019
IMO, “All better now!” should *definitely* be added to the rotating tags list.
Open Thread: Mike Pompeo, “Secretary of Swagger”Post + Comments (34)