During an appearance on MSNBC Monday night, former first lady and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton advocated for …

Virginia's Public Square
Virginia's Public Square
During an appearance on MSNBC Monday night, former first lady and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton advocated for …
Just how badly is the trial of Michael Sussman damaging the reputation of Hillary Clinton? Look …
Former President Donald Trump has long held that the infamous Steele dossier was a Clinton-funded smear campaign full …
From federal investigations, to wonky deals with Chinese investors, to allegedly seeing the Khashoggi assassination, Terry McAuliffe may have to answer a barrage of odd questions when he officially announces his presidential run.
Former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe said he was “obviously looking at” a 2020 presidential run during a Sunday morning appearance on CNN’s State of the Union.
“I’m not going to announce right now. I’m obviously looking at it,” said McAuliffe to host Dana Bash, who remarked he sounded like a candidate during an earlier part of the segment criticizing President Trump.
“I’ve got time. I’ve got a lot of great relationships. I have 40 years of working for this party. I have plenty of friends in many states, so I don’t have to rush into this.”
As a close ally of Bill and Hillary Clinton, McAuliffe was considered a top contender to become Hillary’s running mate for Vice President, before she ultimately selected Virginia Senator Tim Kaine.
Following Clinton’s defeat in 2016, McAuliffe became the subject of widespread speculation that he might inherit much of Clinton’s donor network, national allies and campaign infrastructure. As a close Clinton confidant, observers noted that McAuliffe was well-positioned to win the support of a network he helped create.
McAuliffe served as co-chairman of Bill Clinton’s 1996 campaign and chairman of Hillary Clinton’s 2008 campaign. During that time, he raised hundreds of millions of dollars for the Clintons, and ultimately faced an ethical controversy when he personally guaranteed the couple’s $1.35 million mortgage for the home they bought in Chappaqua, New York, following Bill’s departure from the White House.
In 2004, McAuliffe became one of five board members of the Clinton foundation.
McAuliffe also used the interview to criticize President Trump, calling him an “angry, emotional, unstable man” and remarking that the president’s criticism of Democratic leaders for the deaths of two children at the southern border was “the lowest act I’ve ever seen any president [sic] in the history of our country.”
If McAuliffe announces his candidacy, he would join a crowded field of more than a dozen declared or potential candidates.
An investigative report from The Hill outlines a new reality inside the Russian investigation. It tells the tale of a decade-old FBI operation that involved Mueller’s FBI, a secret Iranian mission, and a Russian billionaire, presenting a possible conflict of interest.
The media failed to report on a lawsuit filed in a D.C. district court that has now exposed an $84 million money laundering conspiracy by Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee (DNC) during the 2016 presidential election.
Allegations of voter intimidation and a corrupt electoral process as led Richmond City Democratic Party’s chairman, J.J. Minor, to be thrown out.
August testimony from Fusion GPS founder Glenn Simpson, taken by the Senate Judiciary Committee, shows that the FBI may have paid for anti-Trump dossier.