November 23, 2019
Barack Obama was the King of quid pro quo, according to this Washington Times article.
Green Biz, in March of 2011, ran this: "Barack Obama, Clean Tech and the Political Quid Pro Quo.â€
The piece goes on to recount how the Center for Public Integrity published "a long, in-depth look at how some of the Obama campaign’s most prolific fundraisers have gotten loans, grants and special access to [his] administration,†to include a "deep look at how [Steve] Westly, former California state controller and venture capitalist … landed intimate access to the Obama administration.â€
The Westly Group funded, among other companies, Tesla Motors. And all the while he was visiting the White House, serving as a member of the Obama administration’s advisory board on energy policy, and so forth and so on, he was raking in half a billion dollars in loans, grants and stimulus bucks for his green companies. That was money from the Obama Energy Department to Westly, the guy who wined and dined with Obama et al with eyebrow-raising frequency. Corruption? Quid pro quo?
As Green Biz put it, such intertwining of politics and business is "about the most commonplace form of political quid pro quo that exists.â€
[...]
But then there’s this.
"Barack Obama’s Ambassador Legacy: Plum Postings for Big Donors,†Public Integrity wrote, in a January, 2017, headline.
Legacy, indeed. Obama, according to Public Integrity, gave cushy ambassador posts to 31 campaign faithfuls who pulled in at least $50,000 for his reelection. He also doled out second-term ambassador slots to 39 who gave generously to his campaign, either in the form or money or political capital — or both.
The Washington Post made a whole map out of Obama’s campaign-cash-cows-for-ambassador-posts coincidences. Why not? Have some fun with it.
"This very telling map shows which U.S. ambassadors were campaign bundlers,†The Post wrote back in February 2014.
Quid pro quo?
Another headline above a September 2017 YouTube video asks the same question, different arena: "President Obama and Wall Street Quid Pro Quo?â€
And then there was this, from the Wall Street Journal in August of 2016: "President Barack Obama on Thursday defended his decision to authorize a $400 million cash payment to Iran that coincided with the country’s release of American prisoners in January.â€
[...]
"[The] Obama administration insists there was no quid pro quo,†The Wall Street Journal wrote in a separate piece in August, 2016.
This article makes it plain the Democrats are trying to impeach Trump over things that their man was actually guilty of - and was no big deal back then. Do read it all.
Posted by: Timothy Birdnow at
10:15 AM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
Post contains 444 words, total size 5 kb.
Posted by: Wilson at November 23, 2019 10:30 PM (Q1V2u)
Posted by: Kroger Feedback at November 23, 2019 10:31 PM (Q1V2u)
37 queries taking 0.8091 seconds, 174 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.