Attorney General Jeff Sessions had at least two conversations with a Russian ambassador
prior to the 2016 election.
Here's the thing.
During his confirmation hearing, Jeff Sessions testified under oath that he did not have
any communications with the Russians.
Now, right now the content of those communications is completely irrelevant.
Sessions could have been talking to them about rigging the 2016 election or he could have
been talking about their favorite breed of dog.
It doesn't matter.
What matters is that Jeff Sessions committed perjury by lying under oath during his confirmation
hearing.
Within 12 hours of this news story breaking, Nancy Pelosi was actually calling for Jeff
Sessions to resign, along with about half a million people on Twitter.
Now, this perjury is important for several reasons, the first of which is because Jeff
Sessions himself has said that anybody who lies under oath should be removed from office,
so by his own standards, he should be gone.
I know we have to have a trial.
We have to have investigations.
We have to find out what exactly he was talking to them about.
Was he talking to them as a sitting US senator, as a member of the House Armed Services Committee,
or a Senate Armed Services Committee, or was he speaking to them as somebody who knew he
was going to become attorney general?
That is important there and we need those answers, but honestly that doesn't really
matter.
Again, the content of those conversations is irrelevant.
Sessions said he had no communications with them at all.
"I had no communications with the Russians."
Those were his words, so saying under oath, testifying that he did not have communications
with them when in fact he did is perjury.
Again, content is irrelevant at this point.
Here's what's going to happen.
Most likely nothing.
We've seen this too many times within the Trump administration already in the month
and a half they've been in office, that there's very likely going to be no consequences for
Jeff Sessions unless the Democrats do try to move forward with some kind of investigation
or impeachment proceedings.
I'm not exactly sure what it's called when you remove a sitting attorney general, but
it's a lot like removing a sitting president.
Speaking of that, that brings me to the second point.
During the impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton, Jeff Sessions was one of the
most vocal, calling out President Clinton for lying under oath, telling him that this
was a gross misuse of the office of the president by lying to the American public, and therefore
should be removed from office or at the very least impeached.
Sessions himself is now allegedly guilty of the exact same thing, so will Sessions have
the same kind of vigor in investigating himself?
How can we trust this man?
Again, it doesn't matter who he was talking to on the phone or what they were talking
about.
What matters is that we have a person who is charge of the Department of Justice that
lied to the Senate and to the American people, somebody who has proven that we cannot trust
him.
He needs to go.
It doesn't matter who he spoke to or what they spoke about.
He lied under oath and that's against the law.