I’m not in favor of exposing personal information when it’s legitimately private. But I seriously want exposed the dirty dealing that has been going on. Insider trading. Bribery. Pay for play. All of it.
This also will freeze the Dems from communicating with each other and donors. They have to be looking over their collective shoulder and wonder what is next.. Hearing footsteps.
Nancy knew it was coming.
Washington ()Amid reports that the hack of the Democratic National Committee was even broader than had been made public, the highest-ranking Democrat in Congress is calling the incident an “electronic Watergate.”
Speaking to reporters on Thursday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi compared the hack to the infamous break-in of DNC offices at the Watergate complex that was tied back to President Richard Nixon and the White House.
“Let me just say this in terms of the presidential campaign: This is an electronic Watergate,” Pelosi said. “This is a break in.”
Pelosi was responding to a report late Wednesday by The New York Times that the scope of the hack of the DNC was broader than had been known. Citing sources familiar with the investigation, the Times reported that hackers compromised the private email accounts of over 100 party officials and groups, including officials in the campaign of Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Governors Association — though a Democratic source said that the DGA inclusion was incorrect.
The cyberattacks did include a breach of private email accounts of a number of Democratic party officials, some with direct ties to the Clinton campaign, a US official familiar with the investigation confirmed to CNN. The official said investigators believe they now have a sense of how wide the attack reached.
The Clinton campaign has not been told by the FBI that their data was affected, according to an aide. The campaign has met with the FBI about the hack, though, the aide said, and the FBI told them phishing attempts had been directed at the campaign. The campaign said it had been aware of those attempts.
Also on Thursday, sources confirmed the Senate and House intelligence committees had been briefed on the matter. Neither revealed details of the contents of the meeting.