Thứ Bảy, 25 tháng 11, 2017

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Washington Post Reporter Janell Ross Was Just Caught With George Soros

welcome back to this special edition of Hannity the liberal mainstream media is

once again caught colluding with the left according to a report from the

Washington free beacon quote while co reporter goes rogue gives strategy

briefing to secret dem donor conference the article continues quote Washington

Post reporter Janelle Ross gave a presentation at a secretive california

gathering where democratic politicians liberal activists and their biggest

donors flooded the future of the progressive movement without notifying

her superiors that she would be attending according to a post spokesman

the washington free beacon claims to have obtained a copy of the conference

agenda that lists events and featured guests and according to the agenda

speaking right before Janelle Ross was none other than leftist billionaire

George Soros we reached out to the Washington Post for additional comment

and we were told they have nothing more to share shame all right joining me now

it's reaction is the national spokesman for core conservative commentator niger

anis founder and executive director of turning-point USA at charlie kirk and

from fox news radio todd starnes thank you all so much for being here with me

tonight so the mainstream media often fails to cover democratic scandals do

you think that this report Todd proves that it is more purposeful than just a

simple kind of ignorant of the scandal and not really aware of it oh absolutely

as a matter of fact Kimberly this is an example of not just fake news but

propaganda news where you actually have a reporter from the Washington Post

going into the secret meeting and gathering all this information quite

frankly it is a direct violation of the Society of Professional Journalists code

of ethics Wow that code of ethics says and I want to read this here avoid

conflicts of interest real or perceived and avoid political and other outside

activities that may compromise your integrity well it's very clear this is

exactly what this Washington Post reporter has done yet not sure this is

quite disturbing when you hear this report I mean what were your initial

thoughts you know when you found this out I was not surprised I mean George

Soros is our very own living doctor evil if he

from the comedy films but it's actually deadly serious because he's not only the

foundation if you will of every left-wing group and supporter of every

left-wing politician from Camilla Harris to former President Obama but he also

has an international network of NGOs that he funds to under sometimes openly

undermine governments and counter u.s. foreign policy one of the scandals that

I hope that the media really exposes and investigates

is is something that six US senators have asked Tillerson to look into which

is how our government is actually funding NGOs that are tied to George

Soros they're actually contradicting u.s. foreign policy in places as

far-flung as Macedonia to Zimbabwe that's the real scandal the fact that

the Washington Post is in bed with these folk makes me a little concerned but I

have to say I'm not really all that surprised yeah Charlie you surprised I'm

not but it's important to note George Soros is a big problem but just right

behind him you might have missed the news with all the black friday shopping

but there's a new richest man he's worth a hundred billion dollars Jeff Bezos who

conveniently owns the Washington Post yes in fact he acquired it last year and

he went through a huge purge of anyone that believed in freedom and hired a

bunch of very left-wing journalists and reporters and in fact right after Donald

Trump's surprise victory he hired personally over 50 new journalists and

reporters that went all over Washington to try to find evidence of Russia

collusion so on and so forth so know this is of no surprise the Washington

Post which is one of the most well read newspapers in the country has now become

a political arm of the leftist causes and you see they're invited on the front

and center stage of the secret meeting with George Soros but it's important to

remember Jeff Bezos is just right there with George Soros through the Washington

Post doing this exact same sort of thing you know he's absolutely right Charlie's

absolutely right taught because he has become increasingly more you know

dangerous in terms of his level his reach certainly his financial ability to

influence and corrupt American journalism oh absolutely and and again

consider what happened here you reporter a reporter who was assigned to

cover president Trump inside the secret meeting strategizing with these

progressives and with these leftist and The Washington Post they tell us well we

didn't know anything about it it's it's news to us instead of being horrified

and embarrassed at the fact that one of their reporters was demonstrating a

clear bias by attending that meeting yeah and then seemingly no repercussions

whatsoever total blind ignorance looking the other way nyjah to this situation

instead of actually you know engaging in journalistic ethics and following this

through and doing an investigation and then providing some kind of

accountability can you imagine what would have happened if some Fox News

reporter or some Wall Street Journal reporter had ties to the Koch brothers I

mean this would be on the top of 60 minutes this be the top page of the New

York Times the silence on the left is deafening with this conspiracy on the

left and look there's one thing that I'm hoping in the next three to hopefully

seven years of president Trump's administration that he cleans out the

cobwebs of this international network and and you're right I'm your other

guest all right it's not just George Soros it's the Cabal of left-wing folk

like Bezos and other billionaires that we don't hear from that are behind this

international effort to often undermine and contradict actually stated u.s.

foreign policy and cause domestic mischief yeah well far-reaching

implications and unbelievably you know inappropriate the levels of impropriety

know no bounds meet Charlie what do you do about this in terms of trying to not

just saying hopefully the Trump administration is going to do something

I mean do you have some thoughts about what should be some kind of constructive

framework or plan to try to investigate this and bring about some accountability

and ethics well there should be some accountability netic sand it should

start with the Attorney General should open investigation into the open

societies foundation which is George Soros is nonprofit which by the way he

just transferred 15 billion dollars into they have to give away 5% a year and

think about how much money that is but there's there's good evidence to show

that George Soros has been instrumental in funding grassroots left-wing groups

such as black lives matter in Mt which are now being investigated by the

FBI so you have to follow the money you have to see is he actually funding these

these groups and where are they getting their source of training and their

financial backing and so what can be done we need to get the Attorney General

involved to see if there's any mischief involved in a lot of these domestic

terror groups such as an Tifa but even more than that we have to expose how the

left have become funded by these sent a billionaire's now Jeff Bezos worth a

hundred billion dollars to corrupt our democracy and to change the trajectory

of this country you know really if my targets have so such a serious situation

because the implications are so far-reaching you even think back just to

the campaign and the paid protesters and what was going on they're really trying

to rifle you know democracy and the election

process and now having the tentacles in so far is you know very widely read and

mainstream so to speak in terms of widely available newspapers that can

really impact not just you know American journalism the truth the facts that get

out there but as we've also discussed implications of foreign and domestic

policy what what we have seen here is clear evidence of collusion and it's not

just the Washington Post or remember back in the campaign when you had CNN

asking the DNC to go over to bake questions when you had Donna Brazile

turning over those questions to Hillary Clinton's campaign again this is a very

serious issue and it's important for for all of the viewers to understand they

need to be news consumers as well they need to be good stewards of where they

get their news and it's important for all of us to understand what's really

going on and read with a discerning and critical eye charge to make sure you

know that they're actually getting the truth you should read from multiple

sources not just one especially and I think that you said all you guys you

know follow the money look to see who is behind it who is funding this and who

was trying to fill your mind that's exactly right and the left tries to say

that you know conservatives are the party the rich will eight out of the

well ten wealthiest counties in America voted for Hillary Clinton and now you

have the world's richest man and the fourth richest men in the country

funding left-wing causes trying to disrupt democracy here in this country

and so the left has really been funded by these people that want to create a

one-world government they do not want to see America continue its international

dominance and they want to destabilize capital limit capital

as we know it this is very very dangerous these are people that do not

share our values and now that they have unlimited amounts of money they want

unlimited amounts of power which exactly we know at the left wants and what

viewers have to do is continue continue to pursue good news channels such as Fox

and read The Wall Street Journal and stay away from a lot of these new

sources that are being funded by people that do not share our values or want to

see America succeed you know charlie brings up a great point Nigel is just

the the influence of the intention to corrupt an American you know democracy

and basically mind-control people by putting forward this propaganda and

pretending parlaying it as journalism following ethical standards that's the

real problem here that they've been able to take it this far it's a real crisis

and it's a it's a generational crisis because the biggest impact of this

propaganda that you speak of is on college campuses and in our elite

university institutions all across the country so you have generations being

poisoned and you know we've got an opportunity with this president in

office I applauded I think it was Todd who said that the Attorney General

really needs to investigate this and I hope that Tillerson will take that

letter from six United States senators that USAID needs to stop funding these

George Soros related and far left-wing groups that are oftentimes violent and

kind of like a foreign version of an tyfa that we spoke of earlier this has

got to be world up now we've got the opportunity we ought to break this

network up as quickly as we possibly can okay Todd quick final thought well look

instead of covering these big issues you have people like CNN's April Ryan who's

out there suggesting Sarah Sanders faked baking a pecan pie for Thanksgiving for

goodness sakes this is what we're doing can't even make the stuff you make it up

you can't bake Goodison I don't fake baking pies I just get them at like for

the experts all right thank you guys so much for being with us today

For more infomation >> BREAKING: A Washington Post Reporter Janell Ross Was Just Caught With George Soros(VIDEO)!!! - Duration: 11:01.

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Assessing President Donald Trump's first year in office - Duration: 21:49.

ROBERT COSTA: A year of upheaval. President Trump has rocked American politics, but to

what end? I'm Robert Costa. We assess a transformational year for the Republican Party

and the country, tonight on Washington Week.

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: (From video.) I pledge to every citizen of our land that I will

be president for all Americans.

ROBERT COSTA: On election night, Donald Trump called for unity.

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: (From video.) It is time for us to come together as one united people.

ROBERT COSTA: One year later -

PROTESTERS: (From video.) No Trump! No Trump!

ROBERT COSTA: - President Trump leads a deeply divided country, unemployment is at a

17-year low, the stock market is booming, and Justice Neil Gorsuch sits on the Supreme

Court. But many campaign promises remain unchecked, including a massive border wall,

the repeal of Obamacare, and so far tax cuts.

There are mounting foreign policy challenges, the Russia probe, and the power struggle

between Trump's inner circle and the Republican establishment. What everyone agrees on

is this: President Trump has thoroughly disrupted Washington and his own party. We discuss

the first year and look ahead with Peter Baker of The New York Times, Andrea Mitchell

of NBC News, Michael Duffy of TIME Magazine, and Ann Compton, veteran of ABC News.

ANNOUNCER: Celebrating 50 years, this is Washington Week.

Once again, from Washington, moderator Robert Costa.

ROBERT COSTA: Good evening. Maybe you talked politics around your Thanksgiving table,

or maybe you made sure to avoid it. But here at this table, I'm thankful it's all we do,

and what a year it has been - so much, so fast. And tonight's a little different.

We've gathered respected veteran Washington reporters to talk about it all, the big

picture on what's happened and what's next. Let's start at the beginning.

American carnage, as you remember, was the theme of President Trump's inaugural address,

and executive orders soon followed.

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: (From video.) Mothers and children trapped in poverty in our

inner cities, rusted-out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape.

And the crime, and the gangs, and the drugs.

This American carnage stops right here and stops right now.

ROBERT COSTA: Peter, American carnage, a flurry of executive orders. How has that man on

that stage, President Trump, changed since then? Has he evolved? Has the presidency shifted him?

PETER BAKER: Yeah, it's a great question because he had a very tumultuous start.

Remember, not only did he use this very dystopian vision of America in his inaugural

address, right out of the bat he's coming out with the travel ban, the first version of

it; he's coming out with canceling or withdrawing from the trade pact with Asia; he's

reauthorizing the Keystone Pipeline; all these things meant to show from the very start

he's going to undo a lot of what his predecessor had done, and he's going to set a new

tone. It wasn't all very smooth, though. He had never been in office before, any

office of any kind before, and you got - you saw that for a while. It was - it was chaotic.

At the airports suddenly they are can people come into the country, not come into the

country. Courts are suddenly jumping in. Protests are in the streets. I don't think

you've ever seen a start to a president quite as turbulent as that one was, and no

honeymoon. No honeymoon whatsoever.

ROBERT COSTA: And part of that turbulence, Andrea, was seen within the Cabinet and the

phrase that Steve Bannon, the former strategist, used to use was "deconstruction of the

administrative state." And you've seen it up close at the State Department this year, and

how he's not only dealt with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson but the entire Cabinet.

ANDREA MITCHELL: The entire Cabinet and the intelligence communities.

And I'm thinking as Peter was just talking about day one he goes to the CIA and really

disrespects the intelligence agencies. You can already hear what became his criticisms

of the Russia investigation to come. And also brags about the size of the crowd, which

led to all of the controversy with his press secretary. But the Cabinet was the most disruptive.

Bringing in Rex Tillerson, a non-diplomat, a businessman, looked like a great idea at the

time if you're looking for someone to manage, but the wrong man, arguably, for the wrong

time because he not only wasn't a diplomat, but his mission, he feels, is to downsize and

not appoint. And so now you have vacancies everywhere in the State Department.

You have an absence of real leadership on global policy now in regions around the world.

That really exacerbated by what you saw with different Cabinet secretaries having to step

down, Tom Price. The lack of ethics, the lack of understanding the processes for getting

a nominee to a Cabinet hearing really caused him great disruption, and we're still seeing

it with Jeff Sessions.

The answers that he gave at that initial hearing are haunting him to this day.

ROBERT COSTA: And part of the way he rattled Attorney General Sessions and part of the

way he's rattled Secretary of State Tillerson has been through Twitter.

And you spent 40 years covering the White House. You've seen so many presidents.

But this one's different in how he uses social media, especially with the press too.

ANN COMPTON: Absolutely. It's the attitude toward the press.

At least presidents before him held some respect for the idea that journalism is part of

my job here and I've got - Jimmy Carter started having news conferences every two weeks,

saying it's part of my job, I've got to do it. Ronald Reagan had his own version of

Twitter. He had - he invented the Saturday radio address. He had five minutes live

from the Oval Office. He could say anything he wants, and the networks would carry it.

So every president has had kind of the technology, but Donald Trump ran a campaign of

busting up the furniture and shouting out on Twitter.

I don't think we can be surprised that that unconventional candidacy gave us an

unconventional presidency, where Twitter is a policy tool.

And I don't think we can look for that to change.

ROBERT COSTA: It's really changed the briefing room.

ANN COMPTON: Well, the briefing room has changed. And over the years, when - well,

Mike, when we were first at the White House, the briefing room was a lobby.

It was leather sofas and literally Currier and Ives - you don't even know who Currier and

Ives are - (laughter) - on the wall because none of the briefings were televised.

Now there's such a fascination with it. They were never made to be one-hour dramas

with a climax and a nice ending. It's not a productive time in that briefing room.

MICHAEL DUFFY: I'm struck by a couple things in his - in his first year.

One is that he clearly didn't fully understand what the presidency was, and he's learned

that it has checks and balances, and that Congress gets a big say. The courts have a big say.

And you sometimes get the impression - and you get it often enough that you can believe

it - that he thought it would be a little bit like running a family business, that what

he said would go. And anyone who has studied the presidency or has even watched the

news knows that's just not true. You get some of the calls, but you certainly don't

get all of them, and you don't even get a majority of them.

That seems like a surprise, so much so that last Friday he even went out of his way to

say, you know, I don't really have a lot of control or influence over the Justice

Department. And you can - he was clear he just learned that. So we want that independent.

That's been the way for a long time. So he didn't - he didn't quite really get that.

He also has learned, I think, that the job is a little bit of a mousetrap, as you were

saying. You know, if you don't follow certain procedures and you don't do certain

things right, it'll bite you. There are little hidden springs in the presidency

that will trigger - (snaps fingers) - and suddenly you have an investigation on

your hand(s), and by agencies you probably have never heard of.

And the third thing, I think, that he's discovered - and this is maybe something he's

gotten right - is that there's a part of being president that's just the performance part

of the job - you have to just act it to be it. Ronald Reagan was excellent at this,

others not so much. And he has his own - you may not like the nature of his performance,

but it's different. And he's created it, as you were saying, kind of for a new era.

ANDREA MITCHELL: I actually think he does that part rather well. He does it at

summits, he does it around the world, and I think he enjoys that. That's the

Celebrity Apprentice Donald Trump. He's also learned that he can reverse something -

the Fish and Wildlife elephant designation that he reversed, which brought him

great acclaim from different sectors that he never expected to be praised by.

That said, I think ignoring some of the ethics rules, firing James Comey - just think

back, if you could re-rack it, reel it back.

If he had not fired James Comey, what - of all of these other unintended consequences

that flow from that decision, including an investigation that is going into whether that

is obstruction of justice or there are pieces of it that are, that was really a major

event that he thought was just something he could do. And -

PETER BAKER: I think the other politicians who become president come in with a certain

experience set that has automatic warning bells when they get too close to the stove,

right? In other words, they are the cat who touched the stove before they - and they

understand that you don't touch it when it's hot.

And he's never been a politician, he's never been a public officeholder, so the things

that a senator, a governor, congressman would know instinctively - you know, you fire an

FBI director and then you admit that you were thinking about the investigation into your

campaign when you were doing it, warning, warning, warning.

You know, most politicians would say that's not a good idea, you just don't do it.

Bill Clinton hated his FBI director, would have loved to have fired Louis Freeh,

understood that it would have been politically a huge backlash if he did.

ROBERT COSTA: You say he's not a politician, and Ann, he's certainly not a politician, a

traditional one. He's also really not the kind of Republican who often comes into the

White House. And so often this year we were asking: What's guiding President Trump's

decisions? Is it an ideology? Is it the Republican creed? Or is it more his

own performance, as Andrea was saying? And that's impacted his relationship on

Capitol Hill, with Leader McConnell in the Senate, Speaker Ryan. They're not always sure,

it seems, where the president wants to go, and will he go in the traditional GOP direction?

ANN COMPTON: Alliances are something that this town is built on.

And I don't know what it's like to be a New York developer, where you're always

negotiating to get the best position, but to pull people together and make them work in

the same direction, or help them to work in the same direction, is a real skill.

And of recent presidents, most have been governors, which means they have worked with the

legislature, which is often under another party's control. And they have tried to

build coalitions. You look back at Ronald Reagan. First thing he did was go to the

Democratic conservatives in the House to get them on board for his tax and spending cuts.

Donald Trump doesn't have that. And he hasn't surrounded himself with people who will give him that.

ROBERT COSTA: He's tried, though. You look at Chuck and Nancy, the deal he cut on the

debt ceiling. Michael, he did try to wade into bipartisanship, but it's never really worked.

He's struggled on health care with Republicans early on, still trying to get tax cuts.

What to make of his experience with Congress?

MICHAEL DUFFY: Well, I always felt that - by the way, the entente with Pelosi and

Schumer came in September. So it was after another - a few other things had been tried.

You got the sense, watching that, he did it as much to hurt his fellow Republican

partners as he did to actually make a deal with the Democrats.

And the actual fruit of that deal with Pelosi and Schumer hasn't totally been clear yet.

You know, I'm struck as we - first years of first-time presidencies are often rocky,

avert your eyes affairs. I mean, George W. Bush's wasn't great. Bill Clinton's was

certainly not great. You can go back. JFK's wasn't great. But as Barbara Bush once said

of the Clintons: Don't worry, they'll learn. And presumably, they will get smarter at this.

Although we can't be sure, as I usually am, that past is prologue here - that isn't past.

And so it's quite possible that they aren't going to figure this out the way other

presidents have in the second year. I was struck by one other human factor thing that

I think is unique to this. For the first six or eight months, he's alone in that

White House at night. And I'm not saying that's a big issue. I'm just staying that

most people have a partner who's there, they can talk to. And I'm struck by the very

small universe of advisors this president has, outside of the people he works with.

ANDREA MITCHELL: The other thing I'm struck by, and I think it's really telling in

foreign policy, is how much he enjoys flattery. Now, we all enjoy flattery, but he -

he goes to Riyadh as his first summit, and on this most recent Asian trip, and they -

the foreign leaders know now what they have to do, whether it's Vladimir Putin or

President Xi or, you know, Prime Minister Abe, just flatter him. He will love that.

And the Saudis are the greatest beneficiaries of this, because they changed the whole

policy of the region just because they knew that they had Donald Trump and Jared

Kushner's support for a new policy, even one that was not endorsed by Defense Secretary

Mattis or Secretary Tillerson. But this policy against Qatar, this whole ramp up against

Iran, is not something that Tillerson wanted or welcomed. But if you flatter this

president - he came back and he talked for 25 minutes about the red carpets.

ROBERT COSTA: Peter, have we seen this nationalism take hold, that American carnage, the

nationalist speech on inaugural day? Has that become the defining issue in foreign policy?

PETER BAKER: I mean, to some extent, yes. What's interesting about this president is

he comes to office not fully formed on a lot of issues. He doesn't really have a strong

ideology. One reason he doesn't get along necessarily so well with Mitch McConnell and

Paul Ryan is because he hasn't actually been in the trenches fighting for conservative

policies for all these years. And to the extent that he does have one sort of very

consistent belief set - that goes back all the way to the '80s, if you watch the tapes,

and so forth, of his interviews back then - is this idea that America is getting shafted

somehow - is getting shafted by our allies, which are taking advantage of us.

It's getting shafted by our trade partners which are getting the better of us.

It's getting shafted by our adversaries who don't respect us and who are laughing at us.

That underlies so much of what he has done this year. It underlies the whole idea of

America first. It underlies this idea that he's not going to put up with nonsense from

North Korea the way Barack Obama did and the way George W. Bush did. And it defines

where his trade policies are with NAFTA, with Asia, with Korea, and so forth.

So, you know, to the extent that you want to understand where he might come out on

national security policy, it seems to be seen through that lens.

ROBERT COSTA: Well, what do you make, Ann? As I recall, you were with President

George W. Bush on 9/11. I mean, what a way to see a president up close.

And what about President Trump, when it's come to his own challenges with the hurricanes

that hit Florida and Houston and Puerto Rico, and the Las Vegas massacre?

The unexpected often hits you in the presidency.

ANN COMPTON: The first year for any presidency is a vulnerable time. For a president -

for a president who has never governed before - he's management, never governed - it's

particularly vulnerable. And when 9/11 hit for President George W. Bush, he had had

nine months to figure out who the real enemies were. He had ordered a report asking:

What could - what could al-Qaida do in the United States? Every president has had

kind of a fundamental working understanding of the fact that - I think history judges

presidents not by that laundry list of ideas that they bring in with them, but what

they do in the face of terrible, terrible crisis, and that nobody saw coming.

And I think the president, when he - kind of the mixed reaction to do you go to the site

of a natural disaster, do you stay back because you've still got - they're still pulling

bodies out of the rubble? What do you do in terms of some of the foreign threats? He didn't

have a structure or an understanding of exactly how that kind of governing could be.

MICHAEL DUFFY: I'm struck by, when you think about what his best and worse moments were,

you know, that it's hard for me to put my finger on the best.

The question of what's the worst is - it's a richer buffet.

And so, I think, you know, Charlottesville was a moment that was particularly tough,

where he didn't quite know how to respond and when he did he was all wrong.

And I'm struck by, though, he talks about, you know, America getting the shaft.

He spends a lot of time relitigating that past.

And it always comes down - you know, he spent a lot of time overturning and repudiating

the previous president - an unusual amount of time for a sitting president to be so

obsessed with his predecessor, who left office after two terms and in fairly good

standing. And relitigating the election, particularly with respect to Hillary Clinton

who is, for him, just a powerful, unifying symbol for his base.

ANDREA MITCHELL: And getting to what you've discussed on the trade issues, in

particular, he's not fact based. And that is so galling to allies and adversaries

alike, I mean, because when he talks about some of these trade deals, he's really

hurting America with some of the things he's retreated from. When he talks about

negotiating 27 bilateral trade deals instead of having one deal that we would get preferential

tariffs under. So the fact that he doesn't study and doesn't try to make up for what

he did not know coming in is really very glaring on some of these policy issues.

And is - he doesn't seem to be studying or trying to take in the briefings in any kind of

meaningful way. I don't know -

PETER BAKER: We do see - it's interesting. You know, the question is does he learn,

has he changed, has he evolved? Obviously, in some ways, he's always going to be the

same. He's 71 years old. People tend not to change after a long career in which

they feel like they've been very successful. Why would they change? They got to

where they are doing the thing they're doing. You people want me to change because

you don't think - you don't agree with me. Understood. But there is some differences.

I mean, for instance, he did fire Jim Comey in May. And while he may want to fire

Jeff Sessions, he may want to fire Bob Mueller, he hasn't. He's been talked out of

it repeatedly. He may want to take on Bob Mueller. His initial instinct was to

attack Bob Mueller. His lawyers have said: Don't do that. That's a mistake.

It's counterproductive. And for the most part, he's abided by that. So it's not that

he can't restrain himself or exercise discipline or do things differently than

he did before. He just chooses to do so in some cases and not in others.

ROBERT COSTA: And that Mueller probe is the asterisk on this first year, because we're

not really sure yet where these grand jury investigations will go, where the special

counsel will go.

ANN COMPTON: They take years. It takes months. They are - they are living, dynamic

creatures that will - that can consume and overshadow just about anything else a

president wants to do.

ROBERT COSTA: And when you look at Alabama coming up, the special election on December

12th, it's a microcosm of the Republican civil war that continues to erupt day by day.

MICHAEL DUFFY: Right. Well, this is a party that is literally cracking open in the

president's first year, over everything from trade, to taxes, to spending, to

foreign policy, and who should be in the Republican Party and who should lead it.

They're fighting about all of that. And for President Trump, who used to be a

Democrat, you know, to be sort of presiding and - now, he didn't start this war.

It started five or six years ago. But he stoked it. And he stoked it in the campaign.

And that just constantly is a - reduces the influence of all the Republican institutions

while they fight about this. So that's just a weight on his ankles. And I don't

think that goes away anytime soon, and it will probably get worse - probably get worse.

PETER BAKER: It's corrosive in any White House too. I mean, they literally - I

talk to White House people and they say: You know, I'm afraid the guy sitting next

to me at the table is wearing a wire, you know? I mean, how do you have a meeting

in which you are sitting and wondering -

ROBERT COSTA: It's that tense.

PETER BAKER: It's that tense. The people in the same room with you, who has a

lawyer, who's been to the grand jury - or, not the grand jury - who's been talking

to Bob Mueller at this point? Who hasn't? What have they said? George Papadopoulos,

who pleaded guilty of lying to the FBI, had been a cooperating witness for the

special counsel for two months without anybody in the White House knowing about it.

That is a scary thing to any White House. And that just hovers over you at all times.

ANDREA MITCHELL: I do think that Twitter is another really defining difference.

You touched on it earlier, but the fact that he can strike out at the UCLA basketball

player's father and say, we should have left them in China, these four young players.

Those kinds of responses, when we talk to Trump voters in red states, all of our polling

is that that is the one thing - they might still vote for him, they still support him,

but they just think he's not presidential. They don't like the - they don't like him

on Twitter. They don't like the attitude. They don't like him lashing out at people.

ROBERT COSTA: It always comes down to these questions of norms and what is presidential

when people talk about President Trump. And you've seen presidents up close.

ANN COMPTON: And every president has a sense of respect for opponents, for challengers,

for a political - but they - and for the press.

ROBERT COSTA: Right. Well, we're going to have to leave it there.

I could talk with you all night. I appreciate you all coming here.

And thanks, everybody, for this conversation. We leave you a few minutes early

to give you the chance to support your local PBS station, which in turns supports us.

Our conversation about the president's first year will continue on the Washington Week

Extra, where we'll talk more about the culture of power and social changes in the time of

President Trump. You can find that later tonight and all weekend long at our website,

PBS.org/WashingtonWeek. I'm Robert Costa. Have a wonderful weekend.

For more infomation >> Assessing President Donald Trump's first year in office - Duration: 21:49.

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Staff shakeups, rallying the base, the Russia probe: Looking at Donald Trump's presidency - Duration: 21:49.

ROBERT COSTA: Hello, I'm Robert Costa. And this is a special edition of the Washington

Week Extra, a conversation among veteran reporters about the presidency and the country, next.

ANNOUNCER: Celebrating 50 years, this is Washington Week.

Once again, from Washington, moderator Robert Costa.

ROBERT COSTA: Welcome to a special Thanksgiving week edition of the Washington Week

Extra. Tonight, we have a stellar roundtable of journalists to discuss the first year

of the Trump administration. Joining me around the table, Peter Baker of The New York

Times; Andrea Mitchell of NBC News; Michael Duffy of TIME Magazine; and Ann Compton,

veteran of ABC News. Michael, starting with you, I was peeling open your book the

other day, "The President's Club." And what a book it is, because it tells about

the chummy relationship many presidents have had over the years.

And it makes me wonder, where does President Trump fit in that club?

MICHAEL DUFFY: Well, he doesn't fit in yet.

You know, this is a great tradition where presidents like Truman relied on President

Hoover, Johnson and Kennedy relied on Ike, Bill Clinton relied on Dick Nixon.

But so far, rather than actually turning to his predecessors for advice, President Obama

(sic; Trump) has sort of trashed President Obama at every turn.

He's become like kind of almost an obsession.

Not with Obama's sort of wisdom and advice that he could impart to the current president,

but all the mistakes that Trump feels he made and decisions that need to be overturned.

So to have a conversation between presidents current and past, you have to have some

basic respect for the office and the experience that people who have sat in the chair

have had, and the lessons they've learned, and the bruises they've picked up along the

way, because they can maybe save you from taking on some of your own.

He doesn't have that. I'm guessing that probably never comes.

And in fact, what we have instead is an interesting conversation between some of the

former presidents, including president - both Presidents Bush, who are gently but firmly,

clearly, trying to, you know, push - not - they've given up on Trump.

But they are trying to push the conversation politically in a more moderate direction.

ROBERT COSTA: Well, if he's not talking to former presidents, Peter, who is he talking

to inside of the White House, in the residence late at night, or inside of the Oval Office?

PETER BAKER: Yeah, it's a great question. He has a small circle of advisors he really trusts.

And then there's a sort of like interesting layers of - and you know this better than

anybody, Bob - but layers of people who have been part of his world for a while, who have

been in his world, out of his world, back in his world. There's never a complete

excommunication from Trump world. People who are fired sometimes manage to work their

way back into his trust. And it's not a conventional group. He's not talking to senators.

He's not talking to congressmen or former presidents or governors. He's talking to

people that he feels comfortable with, who ratify his worldview to some extent.

And they don't always agree. You do have the Bannon types versus his own son-in-law,

Jared Kushner, who have very different points of view.

But it's not a conventional Washington point of view, which is why there is such a

reaction to him from the professional class, both Republican and Democrat here.

ROBERT COSTA: And you covered Secretary Clinton so closely, Andrea, when she was in the

State Department and on the campaign trail. And sometimes with President Trump it

seems not so much about who's in his ear, but what's driving him.

And he still seems haunted at times by Secretary Clinton and that 2016 campaign.

ANDREA MITCHELL: Well, and I think he plays that to effect, because he knows it works

with the base. It really energizes his base, the Trump base, which is different from

the traditional Republican establishment base. But they get so angry about Hillary

Clinton. She's been demonized through the campaign, and now since the campaign.

And this continues to be his best play in terms of getting people to rally around him

against her, because a lot of people who voted for him say that

they weren't so much voting for him as against her.

MICHAEL DUFFY: And that became very transparent last week when he actually said: I wish

she would run again - (laughter) - so he could have her to kick around some more.

PETER BAKER: And part of it, though, I think is a resentment at this investigation,

because the investigation challenges his very legitimacy. It says: You didn't win fair

and square. And he's trying to say, yeah, I did. She was a terrible candidate.

I beat her fair and square. Stop questioning my win.

So in some ways, it is partly a defensive mechanism.

ANDREA MITCHELL: And, for instance, bringing up this whole fraud commission, which

itself is really a fraud -

ROBERT COSTA: Talking about voter fraud.

ANDREA MITCHELL: - to say that there was so much voter fraud.

He just really can't get over the fact that she got more popular votes than he did.

ROBERT COSTA: How much a burden has this Russia probe been, you think, on the Trump

presidency, Ann, compared to past presidents and how they've

dealt with challenges in their first year?

ANN COMPTON: Well, I think the president in this case - most presidents really are

haunted by them, and certainly their staff around them. But President Trump has so

many opportunities to go talking about other things. Where you really see his

vulnerability, the raw spot for him, is when he begins to tweet or attack.

And this is a guy who always needs an enemy out there, not only demonizing Hillary Clinton

and some of the political world, demonizing the enemies of the American people.

He says that the mainstream White House press. But he needs to have an enemy

out there. He pushes back against an enemy. But this thing will take on a life -

has taken on a life of its own. And it's impossible for him to really push back on it.

ROBERT COSTA: Michael, when we step back - we're covering it so up close in Washington -

it's really the voters who have to decide whether they like what's happened or whether

they don't like what's happened. And when you look at the recent elections in

Virginia, the gubernatorial race there, a Democrat won, same in New Jersey. And also in

local elections in Pennsylvania and other states, suburban voters - some of who may

have voted for President Trump last year - they seem to be turning. There's a turn toward

the Democrats. Maybe an uneasiness about either the agenda of the temperament of the president.

MICHAEL DUFFY: Yes, possibly. I think it's best measured if you were to probably

take a poll of Republicans in terms of how they feel next year's elections are

going to go. They have gone from being fairly optimistic in the first half of this

year to being fairly pessimistic now. They are concerned about losing one if not

two houses in the Congress. That's a year off. A lot can change. But it's also

true that we shouldn't extrapolate from some Democratic wins here in the first year

of the Trump administration anything about next year, or really anything beyond that.

It's not entirely clear to me that if the election weren't held against today the results

might be too different.

ROBERT COSTA: Why do you say that?

MICHAEL DUFFY: Because if you actually put Donald Trump against Hillary Clinton, are we

sure - are we sure the election would be different? I'm not so sure. Partly because

of the reason you mentioned. This remains a very unpopular candidate on both sides.

So I don't think we know by looking back what could happen in the future.

I think what's interesting is that the Democrats have gotten themselves together

organizationally, and they have gotten themselves together at the grassroots level.

But they're not ideologically any more cogent than the Republicans at the moment.

PETER BAKER: Oh, I think the best thing that's happened for the Democrats in their own

civil war is there's a Republican civil war at the same time, and that's overshadowed it

because it involves this president. The Democrats have a real issue finding a coherent

message that they all can wrap themselves around, and a leadership.

They don't really - they have a - they have a leadership in Congress and in terms of Joe

Biden and Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren - all of whom are in

their 70s, basically. And they don't have a next generation who has come along and

captivated them the way, say, Barack Obama did in the 2006, 2007 -

ROBERT COSTA: Speaking of the Democrats, who stepped up this year, in terms of the

Democratic side, to be a counter to President Trump? Or is it yet to be seen?

ANN COMPTON: I don't think it's been seen yet. And I think you can look at statehouses

or mayors, the idea that some mayors have big-city backing, and they've got a solid -

ROBERT COSTA: Eric Garcetti of Los Angeles, Rahm Emanuel in Chicago.

ANN COMPTON: And any of them could put out their credentials as having governed a small

city - or, a large city. But you're absolutely right. The Democrats for many years

had kind of all these possible horses. And it's become an old crowd. Republicans had

all the Howard Baker, Bob Dole era. And they kind of ran out of steam.

And by the fact that you had so many voters who, anecdotally, would say, in Virginia and

in New Jersey, I'm voting for this candidate because I want to send Donald Trump a - what

does that say to the idea that - the massive - the overall American populace is looking for

something - the party value. The value of that party affiliation has really, really crumbled.

ANDREA MITCHELL: I think the value of both party affiliations, as you pointed out, has

crumbled. And you've got some people - Cory Booker, Kamala Harris - some people who

have stepped up at these hearings, the investigating committees. (Laughs.) Ironically,

Al Franken. But at the same time, no one really has punched through.

That's why we're talking about Joe Biden. A lot of people are talking about Joe Biden.

Joe Biden's talking about Joe Biden. (Laughter.)

MICHAEL DUFFY: Which isn't a change.

ANDREA MITCHELL: Which is not a change. (Laughter.) But I think what one of the

potential hopefuls said to me - a Democratic senator who's been talked about in this

realm - said: You know, none of us have a message. We can't - we tried to articulate it.

Hillary Clinton tried to talk about the economy and tried to appeal to red state

Democrats. And none of us can really do this because he is a reality television

president, and we can't compete on that stage.

ROBERT COSTA: Michael, that's such an important point, because a lot of Democrats I talk

to say they'd like to run against President Trump as a tax-cutting, Wall Street-friendly

Republican. But so often, he's consumed by grievance politics and he plays to the

culture - whether it's criticizing NFL players over kneeling during the national

anthem or other issues. He's a different kind of opponent if you're a Democrat.

MICHAEL DUFFY: Right. He's a walking, talking basket of grievances, speaking directly

to people's own grievances, which he's very clever about sparking.

And Democrats who think they can go to an election and talk about policy against Donald

Trump need to go back and watch the 2016 movie again, because in that reality show he was

playing a completely different game. They were playing football, he's playing basketball.

So that's the game that will be played next time. And they either have to -

regardless of who it is, they have to play on that playing field if they hope to win.

ROBERT COSTA: Next time, though. It's a difficult culture as well, Ann, because

if you think about the sexual harassment debate we're having right now in this country.

It is tragic to hear the stories of all these women and what they've gone through.

Last year, when President Trump was running, he was able to escape the Access Hollywood

controversy and numerous accusations from different women.

Now it seems like we're perhaps in a different time.

ANN COMPTON: Well, there's certainly - there has been a watershed moment.

And 2016 - this is 2017. But there's also something about timing. The accusations in

the Access Hollywood tape came very, very late. What if it had been early in the primaries?

When you look at presidents - and there have been presidents in our history who've had

everything from illegitimate children to war hero records but the mistress on the side -

there are any number who have faced accusations. And Bill Clinton faced impeachment

over the tangle of his - of his second term. So there's something special that protects

a president. And I'm not sure what it is, but it's not a level playing field.

ANDREA MITCHELL: Well, and I would also point out that the Access Hollywood tape

happened. And then an hour later, WikiLeaks dropped. And so those, you know, people

in the Clinton camp would say that they could not get past that, because all of those

emails were released - and they believe it was deliberate, after the Access Hollywood

tape. And then a couple of days later, Donald Trump brought all of Bill Clinton's

former accusers to the debate.

ROBERT COSTA: What do you think of the culture change, Andrea? I mean, on one hand

the president's paying to his base. Grievance politics is at the fore of our national

discussion. But there's more accountability now when it comes to things like

sexual harassment. Both things are happening at the same time.

ANDREA MITCHELL: I don't think that the president's past and the Access Hollywood tape

and all of that - I think that's all factored it. You know, they've discounted that,

his supporters. So if he can get past 37, 38 percent, and if there is a three-way race

again where there were some other independent candidates who took away enough in those

critical states from Hillary Clinton, you don't know what the mix is going to be in 2020.

I just believe that his behaviors are all discounted. It was when he was a celebrity.

It wasn't when he was in the Oval Office.

And I don't think that he is going to have to pay a price for that.

MICHAEL DUFFY: But I do think that his behavior is driving some of the reaction now.

Not entirely, I just think it's a piece of the culture because having - for I think a lot

of people, having missed the chance to get that one - to make him accountable in a way

they now think he should have been. And these - and the context changes constantly.

I think there is some of the reaction that is going on now that is directly tied to

remorse over having not held Trump more accountable.

ANDREA MITCHELL: And not held Bill Clinton more accountable.

MICHAEL DUFFY: Yes. And that's true too.

ROBERT COSTA: You know, the interesting debate about Bill Clinton is, I mean, why is he

keeping his head low? Because, in fact, he doesn't want to be part of this conversation.

You see Juanita Broaddrick, and you see Kathleen Willey, and Paula Jones, you know,

coming back and having their day. Saying: Well, wait a second, when you say me too,

when you say you must believe them, why didn't you believe us?

And you see not just conservatives cackling over that - which you can imagine them

saying, ha, we told you so, but you see liberals saying: Maybe we should rethink what

we said or thought about in the 1990s. Maybe we shouldn't have been so quick to defend

him, simply because he's from our party and he agrees with the things that we agree with.

Most prominently Kirsten Gillibrand, who may herself want to run in 2020, senator from

New York, Senate seat held by Hillary Clinton, campaigned with the help of Bill and

Hillary Clinton, say that she thinks now - at least in the light of hindsight - that Bill

Clinton should have resigned in 1998 when the Monica Lewinsky scandal happened.

ROBERT COSTA: Ann, when I was talking to some White House officials about our discussion

they said, oh, the markets are up. And we got Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.

And we filled lower courts with many conservative nominations.

We're so frustrated, they told me, that they're not getting enough credit for that.

And I said, well, most presidents struggle to get their achievements to be at the front

and center of national politics, because there's controversy and scandal and other

political dramas. It's not unusual for a White House to be frustrated like that.

ANN COMPTON: Well, and every White House is frustrated with a press corps which always

goes for the negative. And we really are the only smoke alarm out there that's going

to tell you when the smoke is smoldering and it's going to turn into a bonfire.

And presidents are frustrated by that. And we do report the economic news.

We did report on Neil Gorsuch. We did - when things - when some of the relief began

flowing for hurricanes, I think the administration got some credit for that.

But let's face it, any president is going to have to answer for what doesn't work.

ROBERT COSTA: How do we look at the staff shakeups? Reince Priebus, chief of staff,

gone. Steve Bannon, chief strategist, gone. Sean Spicer, the first press secretary,

he's now left the White House. John Kelly, the general, is in there at the president's

side as a confidant, but a lot of tumult in this first year.

ANDREA MITCHELL: Really unprecedented. I mean, there have been staff changes.

And certainly I covered the Clinton White House in those first years, and it was one

thing after another. But you had not had so many gone. And it shows a lack of both

respect and understanding of the process. And we sound like, you know, Washington

insiders, which we are, but there is a certain knowledge base that you need to

come in and be the chief of staff.

ROBERT COSTA: Has Kelly steadied the scene inside of the White House?

ANDREA MITCHELL: Well, you would know this better than any of us.

ROBERT COSTA: No, you would - what's your take? (Laughter.)

You know the Cabinet. You know them all.

ANDREA MITCHELL: I think he's had some missteps. And certainly his performance in

the briefing room and his refusal to apologize for misunderstanding the relationship

between that Florida congresswoman and that Gold Star family - which was a

longstanding relationship. She was part of the family. They were on their way to

the burial. And he should have better understood that.

PETER BAKER: Yeah. I think it was striking that he did that, because he stepped

out of the normal chief of staff role, where you're there to, you know, advance the

president's agenda, but not to be a political actor, per se. And there he seemed like

a political actor. Having said that, I do think that the operations below the level

of the president is running more, you know, professionally than it did.

I mean, there - this is small stuff, but they're just getting - you know, they're getting

fact sheets out. They're rolling out their policies in a better way. They're bringing

people in for briefings. There's less of a fight in the briefing room every day - do

we have the cameras on, do we not have the cameras on?

You know, people are not able to walk into the Oval Office anytime they want -

ANDREA MITCHELL: That may be the biggest change.

PETER BAKER: That's a big change. And there's a structure to it. That doesn't mean it's

working perfectly, by any stretch, but it's certainly different than the first few months.

MICHAEL DUFFY: The overhanging - ROBERT COSTA: Ann -

MICHAEL DUFFY: Go ahead.

ROBERT COSTA: Sorry. No, I was just curious, is Bannon stronger on the outside or

was he stronger when he was in the White House?

MICHAEL DUFFY: Oh, I would say no less strong, and probably stronger. He has a

freer hand, because he doesn't have half the White House staff trying to hem him in.

So I would say stronger. And the Republican Party, you know, civil war, about

establishment versus anti-establishment, is going every bit as strong as when he left.

I think the overhang of the staff churn goes - I mean, you just can't leave out, you

know, the departure of the NSC advisor, you know, General Flynn, which it will have legal

implications, it seems, from every estimation for the president going forward.

So there are - there were questions of just sort of the confusion and the tumult, but

then there are real, legal implications of some of those original choices that the

president made that now seem unwise.

ANDREA MITCHELL: And in fact, the fact that they were warned against Michael Flynn.

MICHAEL DUFFY: They were, yeah.

ANDREA MITCHELL: They had plenty of warning from the intelligence probes.

MICHAEL DUFFY: Obama had fired him.

ANDREA MITCHELL: And there was all sorts of information about Michael Flynn.

Bringing him into the National Security Council, bringing him into the White House with

the top clearance that he had is perhaps, when we look back, in addition to the Comey

firing, the biggest single mistake, because he potentially compromised national security

in profound ways, in unethical ways.

He was representing Turkey at the time, and taking money that he had not disclosed.

And who knows what other secrets giving - being given to foreign agents.

MICHAEL DUFFY: Right. That looks like an original sin that's even more formidable than the Comey -

ROBERT COSTA: What about the choice of General Mattis to run the Defense Department,

Ann? And you think about that you have General Kelly in there, National Security

Adviser General H.R. McMaster. There seems to be a strong military

contingent inside of this administration that has some influence.

ANN COMPTON: Which brings some order and structure, but it doesn't bring their own kind

of policy history. They don't come out of a political field. And the people I've

spoken to say they kind of like the fact that there's a stability and at least men

in those positions who believe in the effectiveness and the positive nature of

governing. And from that, that's been kind of a stabilizing force.

MICHAEL DUFFY: It's probably also something of a relief, given the uncertainty about

President Trump's foreign policy, to have, you know, a handful of, you know, three-,

four-star generals who actually have been around the world and know the territory.

It's interesting that Trump, who went to military academy as a kid, is so enamored of

generals. Typically, we like our civilians to be in charge of the government.

And we've got a lot of retired and active duty guys at the front lines.

ROBERT COSTA: Peter, to close us out, I mean, we think about the president at the

inaugural address - this outsider, defiant, populist. Now it's the end of the year.

He's pushing for a traditional Republican tax cut. Politically - Ann brought

up the political point - is he more conventional than we may think?

PETER BAKER: Well, look, he tried disruption. And I don't think he's done with

the disruption. Disruption is, you know inimical to his political identity. But, you're

right, this is a more conventional thing. Tax cuts is a bread and butter Republican issue.

And if you can't get tax cuts passed as a Republican president, that's pretty - that's

pretty tough, because giving away money is always the easy part. I think there's

a very good chance they do get a tax cut of some sort through. There's obviously

challenges. There's a lot of possible pitfalls before they get to the end.

But I think that it's very possible they do get that through.

If that goes into the new year with an economy doing pretty well, then he might - you

know, he might take that as not a bad first year, despite everything, if he could then

translate that momentum into something more. The question is whether he can do that.

MICHAEL DUFFY: And what it would be.

PETER BAKER: What it would be. Could it be infrastructure?

Could he actually work with Democrats on something more meaningful on health care?

Could they solve the immigration issue - at least the DACA program, as it allowed younger

immigrants to stay who were brought here by their parents.

ANN COMPTON: Does he have a plan to do it?

PETER BAKER: Does he have a plan?

ANDREA MITCHELL: And will he have the opportunity, or will North Korea or another

adversary change the whole dynamic?

PETER BAKER: That's right.

ROBERT COSTA: Wonderful conversation.

Ann, so great to have you here, all your years of insight and experience.

ANN COMPTON: Thank you.

ROBERT COSTA: Peter, Andrea, Michael, really appreciate the conversation. And thanks,

everybody, for joining us tonight. If you missed the regular show, remember you can

always find that on the Washington Week website Fridays after 10 p.m., and all

weekend long. I'm Robert Costa. Enjoy the rest of your weekend.

And we'll see you on the next edition of the Washington Week Extra.

For more infomation >> Staff shakeups, rallying the base, the Russia probe: Looking at Donald Trump's presidency - Duration: 21:49.

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BUSTED: Washington Post Reporter Caught Plotting with George Soros at Secretive Democratic Meeting - Duration: 3:48.

A Washington Post reporter reportedly discussed strategy at a recent secretive conference

for Democratic leaders and liberal activists, alongside the likes of George Soros and Nancy

Pelosi.

The conference, organized by the group Democracy Alliance, featured a number of Democratic

leaders and experts, all training progressive movement leaders to better organize and accomplish

their political and social goals.

Among the speakers were Soros and Pelosi, as well as Janell Ross, a Washington Post

political reporter who covers the Trump administration for the paper.

Ross participated in a panel teaching liberals the importance of "getting the economic

narrative right" in the media.

According to her bosses, Ross did not notify them that she would be participating.

She did not publicly announce her participation, but conference attendees were well aware of

who she was.

Ross often covers race, gender, and immigration in her Post reporting, and recently discussed

the divide between white voters and the Democratic party.

The Washington Free Beacon, which broke the story, provides more details.

The Democracy Alliance went to great lengths to keep the identities of its members and

guests confidential at its fall investment conference last week at the La Costa Resort,

but the Washington Free Beacon obtained a detailed conference agenda that lists both

events and featured guests.

Among them was Ross, a national reporter who closely covered the 2016 presidential campaign

for the Washington Post and has since continued to cover the Trump administration.

Ross, whose panel was sandwiched by a talk with liberal billionaire George Soros and

a message by Democratic senator Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) on Russian interference in the 2016

election, helped attendees explore questions such as: "What do progressives stand for?"

"In this panel discussion, developed by the DA's Inclusive Economy Fund, we pose

some fundamental questions, including: What do progressives stand for?

How do we grapple with the tough issues?

What story are we trying to tell and how does it play out in communities across the country?

How do we translate what the polls and research tell us into the compelling narratives that

will build the public will to reorient our economy and combat inequality?"

The panel was framed in the agenda as a response to the 2016 election, in which Democrats were

criticized for failing to understand the economic concerns in areas of the country carried by

President Trump.

"Progressives were knocked flat in 2016, but in our scramble to understand and react

to what happened, we run the risk of forcing ourselves into false divides," the agenda

writes.

"We risk losing focus on the deep systemic flaws in our economic and social frameworks

that leave vast numbers of Americans vulnerable and insecure."

Ross told the Washington Free Beacon in a Monday email she was unable to answer questions

on her appearance without clearance from the Washington Post's public relations team,

to whom she reached out.

Ross did not respond to numerous follow-up emails on Tuesday.

The Washington Post said it was unaware Ross was at the Democracy Alliance conference until

the Washington Free Beacon asked whether she had permission to be there.

"We've only now learned about her participation in this event," said a spokesperson.

Ross did not publicly disclose her participation in the conference, where attendees were instructed

not to share any details of the conference on social media or share them with the press.

"Democracy Alliance conference participants are entitled to the expectation that their

conference experience and their identity should remain confidential," it says in participation

guidelines distributed to attendees.

For more infomation >> BUSTED: Washington Post Reporter Caught Plotting with George Soros at Secretive Democratic Meeting - Duration: 3:48.

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Phillis Wheatley Writes a Poem to George Washington Song - Rap Opera for Kids - Duration: 2:34.

NARRATOR By 1775, many who signed Wheatley's letter

of support were no longer alive.

Others were more concerned with the American Revolution than supporting the genius of an

African-American.

Wheatley wrote to the Commander and Chief of the Continental

Army, General George Washington, to gain support for her poetry,

and this is what she wrote...

WHEATLEY Sir, I have taken the freedom to address you

and entreat your acceptance, though I am not insensible

of its inaccuracies.

Your being appointed Chief General of the North American armies together with the fame

of your virtue excite sensations not easy to suppress

Your generosity, I presume, will pardon the attempt.

Wishing Your Excellency all possible success, signed, Phillis Wheatley.

Your humble servant.

Your humble servant.

Your humble servant.

Your humble servant.

Your humble servant.

NARRATOR Even though he was steadily consumed fighting

the war, General George Washington took the time to

send a letter to her door.

On February 28th, 1776, this was his response to Phillis...

WASHINGTON Miss Phillis, your favour of the 26th

of October did not reach me till the middle of December.

I apologize for not providing an answer sooner.

Thank you most sincerely for your polite notice of me

in the elegant lines that you enclosed, and however

undeserving I may be of such praise, the elegant style

and manner are truly those of your talents, exhibiting a striking proof in honour of which

as a tribute, if you should ever come to Cambridge, I shall be happy to see you, a person so favoured

by the muses, and to whom I am, George Washington,

with great respect, Your humble servant.

Your humble servant.

Your humble servant.

Your humble servant.

Your humble servant.

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