Dumb move. Now more members of Congress will be interested to learn what you are trying to hide.
Should have masqueraded as a Brietbart reporter, or Roger Stone. I am sure they would have been glad to turn over the list of names then.
How can using taxpayer money to settle PERSONAL transgressions be secret! Those who authorized it should be investigated. They could be aiding and abetting criminality in the House and Senate. There can’t be a confidentiality agreement if their settlements were financed with others money without others consent! No different than ID fraud!
Is the Office of Compliance using government owned hardware and government email addresses? This is not a national security issue – release the data a-holes!
(It must compromise some pretty powerful members, which makes it all the more important that it is public knowledge)
Um, wasn’t this –
Based on that disclosure, the Washington Post reported on Dec. 1 that Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC) had used $150,000 in taxpayer dollars in late 2016 to settle a claim with a former staffer on the House Select Committee on Benghazi, Bradley Podliska, who’d alleged his supervisors had retaliated against him for taking leave to fulfill his service as an Air Force reservist.
– a bogus explanation for Podliska’s firing when he wouldn’t go all in on Gowdy’s Clinton-destruction project? Oh, AP…
That would kill the tax bill vote.
IN fact every vote to eternity for never having minimum amount of people required to do business in the senate after the suicides, retirements, and permanent vacations…