Posted on 04/20/2017 1:36:12 PM PDT by COUNTrecount
Rep. Jason Chaffetz, who announced he will not seek re-election in 2018, now says he might leave Congress even before his term ends, it was reported Thursday.
Chaffetz, who heads the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, told the Wall Street Journal that hes still mulling over the timing of when he would leave Washington, DC.
My future plans are not yet finalized but I havent ruled out the possibility of leaving early, the Utah Republican told the newspaper. In the meantime, I still have a job to do and I have no plans to take my foot off the gas.
Chaffetz, who launched investigations into Hillary Clinton for her handling of the deadly attacks on Americans in Benghazi, Libya, while she was secretary of state, wrote about his intentions Wednesday on Facebook.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
Chaffetz saying not resigning tomrrow
Actually no difference between him and mcmuffin, I was hoping for someone a bit MORE conservative, if something BAD comes out about him we could lose the seat!!!
Mcmuffin is worse.and yes we could lose the seat.
If you want laugh...read whAt Kissinger said about kushner for time magazine...especially the line about close to the sun...that blurb is an professor type non recommendation
I thought he wanted Hatch’s seat.
Before you leave....can you give us an update
On Comeys Hillary Bengahzi perjury ?
Of course not. Like a fart in the wind.
Please do!
: )
Must be pretty bad if he can’t/won’t say why.
Who has what on this oh so proper mormon
BOYS R us ??
And that would not be an embarrassment to announce. In fact he has denied he is ill
That makes more sense.
But he doesn't seem much like governor material.
Sorry, but he looks more like a governor's kid brother.
A Reflective Perspective on Jason Chaffetz Announcement To Leave Congress
Posted on April 19, 2017 by sundance
The time-frame was 2011 the Tea Party had just crushed a republican Utah senator named Bob Bennett a year earlier. Massive push-back against growth of government including TARP, Auto Bailouts and now ObamaCare was fueling the grassroots movement; the Professional Republican Party hierarchy, the GOPe, was furious; the Tea Party represented a risk to the establishment republican authority.
The GOPe were in the midst of formulating a push-back plan against the Tea Party through the use of the SCOTUS decision Citizens United. Establishment Republicans were organizing tens of millions into Super-PAC constructs to crush Tea Party insurgents.
The time-frame was 2011 Utah Senator Orrin Hatch was up for reelection in 12 and the Tea Party wave was pushing House Republican Jason Chaffetz to challenge Hatch for the Senate seat. The GOPe knew if Chaffetz challenged Hatch their tenured statesman would be lost (just like Bennett before him).
GOPe corrupt Senate leadership (McConnell, Portman, Cornyn, Corker, Blunt, Burr, Crapo et al) were assembling all resources to kill the Tea Party uprising. They reached out to like-minded colleague John Boehner, Speaker of the House for support. Hatch must be protected from the challenge.
Speaker Boehner, Paul Ryan, Eric Cantor and Kevin McCarthy (influence agents) told Jason Chaffetz to back away from the primary challenge and he would be rewarded with a bigger office, cushy career advancement, and the Chairmanship of an important and powerful committee.
The GOPe warned Chaffetz it would be in his long-term best interests to turn away from the Tea Party because the GOPe were going to go nuclear against the rebellion. There was also a 2012 Presidential race on the horizon and all efforts would be expended to destroy the opposition to their previously selected candidate, Mitt Romney.
Jason Chaffetz agreed to walk away from the grassroots movement and embrace the GOPe along with all their promises. It was a decision point, a critical decision point, and Chaffetz chose the establishment.
The grassroots movement would never forget. It was far too consequential a moment to be dispatched and/or understood. This was a matter of principal, and was logged in the memory banks of many including a billionaire Tea Party supporter named Donald Trump.
Jason Chaffetz could never again be trusted.
In the years that followed, Chaffetz was indeed elevated in House status and was indeed given the Committee Chairmanship promised as part of the deal. However, one of the future promises made to Chaffetz was for the 2018 senate seat when Hatch was anticipated to retire (Hatch would be 84).
No-one needs to rehash the time period between 2011 and 2016 as it relates to the Tea Party objectives and the DC professional apparatus endeavors to crush the groups. Everything is a matter of clear record showcasing the UniParty lies, schemes and intransigent corruption within the swamp.
Understanding the attack (this was now a UniParty in DC), the Tea Party necessarily changed tactics from direct confrontation, to insurgency. The UniParty meant there was only one political perspective in DC, we needed to create a second. In 2016 the successful election of Donald Trump was the culmination of that insurgent endeavor.
So, here it is, 2017, the year before the 2018 election for Senator Orrin Hatchs seat. Jason Chaffetz expecting a continuation of a political promise toward a specific outcome; but those logged insurgent memory banks are also remembering. Remember, trust, once lost, is impossible to regain.
Now the Peoples President Donald Trump, the tip-of-the-spear for the insurgency, tells Senator Orrin Hatch not to retire, to run for re-election.
And today, after two weeks of calls and evaluating his position, Jason Chaffetz calls it quits:
The moral of the story is several fold: First, dont chose alliances with a group of one-legged men, or you too will end up limping. And never, never ever, think President Donald Trump doesnt fully understand the swamp world of Machiavellian politics.
Thanks. That’s the first thing about this that makes sense. So right about trust too. I don’t know about impossible to regain, maybe in politics it is, but in our personal lives it can be re-earned but there too it’s very difficult.
Trust is a funny thing eh. Both fragile as glass and the hardest element known to man all at the same time.
Works out ok. His replacement gets to be incumbent in 2018. Chaffetz has been a letdown anyway after high hopes when he came on the scene.
Cancer?..
See # 32
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