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Recession is when your neighbor loses his job.
Depression is when you lose yours.
Recovery is when Obama and the Democrats lose theirs.
State Department to release all Clinton schedules before election
Published September 01, 2016
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The State Department agreed Thursday to turn over all the planning schedules
from Hillary Clinton's time serving as secretary of state to The Associated
Press by mid-October in an abrupt reversal from U.S. government lawyers'
warning last week that hundreds of pages would not be released until after
the presidential election.
The decision will make available all of Clinton's minute-by-minute schedules
before the presidential election.
Those planning documents offer a detailed look at Clinton's daily routine
during her four-year tenure as secretary of state between 2009 and 2013.
The State Department provided the AP some of the Democratic presidential
nominee's official calendars from her time at the department, but some of
those calendars had been edited after her events and, in some cases, names
of those who met with her had been omitted.
The department has so far released about half of her more complete daily
schedules.
"As stated in today’s court filing, the Department had no objection to
shifting its resources as long as its overall processing burden was not
increased," State Department Spokesperson John Kirby said in a statement. "
Consequently, the Department plans to complete its production of former
Secretary Clinton’s schedules not later than October 17.”
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The new agreement Thursday was drawn up after government lawyers told the AP
last week that the department expected to release the last of the detailed
daily schedules around Dec. 30, weeks after the election. The AP had
objected to the delays.
The daily schedules drew attention last week after the AP reviewed the two
years of schedules released so far, plus Clinton's official calendars. From
those, the AP determined that more than half the people who Clinton met or
spoke with — outside of members of the U.S. or foreign governments — had
donated to the Clinton Foundation either personally or through companies or
groups.
The AP's review focused on Clinton's discretionary contacts with outside
interests and excluded her meetings or calls with federal officials or
foreign government representatives, because those contacts were part of her
regular diplomatic obligations.
Clinton has said the AP's analysis was flawed because it did not account
fully for all meetings and phone calls during her entire term as secretary.
She also said the analysis should have included meetings with federal
employees and foreign diplomats.
The State Department's decision Thursday to turn over all of the more-
detailed daily schedules by Oct. 17 means it will have to triple its pace of
producing 600 pages a month. That production schedule was ordered last
January by U.S. District Court Judge Richard Leon.
The AP first asked for all Clinton's calendars in 2010 and again in 2013
under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, but the State Department did not
release them. After further delays, the AP sued the State Department in
federal court in March 2015 to obtain the planning materials and other
records, leading to Leon's order. |
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