Hillary Clinton must be used to being treated like royalty by the press because she appeared to be caught off-guard when a reporter finally grilled her over one of her worst misdeeds.
While one could come up with any number of individual indiscretions committed by Hillary, few are as infamous as her sending thousands of emails, many of which contained classified information, over her private server. Despite the clear risk posed to our national security by such behavior, the mainstream media has written off concern about the matter as a distraction and even a “conspiracy theory” to keep Clinton from winning the election.
But in the eyes of Fox News host Chris Wallace, the missing 30,000 emails are most certainly not a distraction. Indeed, the veteran reporter went out of his way to confront Hillary on the fact that she repeatedly lied about her handling of them.
Watch Wallace confront Hillary about the emails on the next page:
Just 4
we the people demand that congress IMPEACH BARACK OBAMA
How can she ever bounce back from this?
Professional liar.
she knows if she keeps lying it will all go away
liar
Never crooked hillary
Only four??????
It was stated that regular email is more secure than Hillary’s PRIVATE SERVER.http://www.breitbart.com/video/2016/07/07/comey-hillarys-servers-were-less-secure-than-a-gmail-account/
Scott Wilson , Add this to the pie !!! I could give you 46 years of them, but there is not enough space & FB would block my efforts too !!————————————————————————–>Duties of the Secretary of State
Hillary is guilty by dereliction of NOT saving American citizens & her personnel Ambassador Stevens & Military personnel !! Read LINE #8.!! This is off the Govt Web Page too !!!——————————–>Duties of the Secretary of State
January 20, 2009
Under the Constitution, the President of the United States determines U.S. foreign policy. The Secretary of State, appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, is the President’s chief foreign affairs adviser. The Secretary carries out the President’s foreign policies through the State Department and the Foreign Service of the United States.
Created in 1789 by the Congress as the successor to the Department of Foreign Affairs, the Department of State is the senior executive Department of the U.S. Government. The Secretary of State’s duties relating to foreign affairs have not changed significantly since then, but they have become far more complex as international commitments multiplied. These duties — the activities and responsibilities of the State Department — include the following:
Serves as the President’s principal adviser on U.S. foreign policy;
Conducts negotiations relating to U.S. foreign affairs;
Grants and issues passports to American citizens and exequaturs to foreign consuls in the United States;
Advises the President on the appointment of U.S. ambassadors, ministers, consuls, and other diplomatic representatives;
Advises the President regarding the acceptance, recall, and dismissal of the representatives of foreign governments;
Personally participates in or directs U.S. representatives to international conferences, organizations, and agencies;
Negotiates, interprets, and terminates treaties and agreements;
# 8…Ensures the protection of the U.S. Government to American citizens, property, and interests in foreign countries;
Supervises the administration of U.S. immigration laws abroad;
Provides information to American citizens regarding the political, economic, social, cultural, and humanitarian conditions in foreign countries;
Informs the Congress and American citizens on the conduct of U.S. foreign relations;
Promotes beneficial economic$#%&!@*between the United States and other countries;
Administers the Department of State;
Supervises the Foreign Service of the United States.
In addition, the Secretary of State retains domestic responsibilities that Congress entrusted to the State Department in 1789. These include the custody of the Great Seal of the United States, the preparation of certain presidential proclamations, the publication of treaties and international acts as well as the official record of the foreign relations of the United States, and the custody of certain original treaties and international agreements. The Secretary also serves as the channel of communication between the Federal Government and the States on the extradition of fugitives to or from foreign countries.