Ed Morrissey @ Hot Air:
Via the Daily Caller, Newt Gingrich thinks that the Benghazi scandal might blow wide open over the next two days, thanks to e-mails that he claims two networks now possess from the office of the National Security Advisor, Tom Donilon. According to a “reliable Senator” who tipped him to the information, Gingrich says that the e-mails came in response to the request to aid the consulate in Benghazi after the attack began, and asserted that the attack wasn’t a terrorist action and therefore didn’t need a response:
“There is a rumor — I want to be clear, it’s a rumor — that at least two networks have emails from the National Security Adviser’s office telling a counterterrorism group to stand down,” Gingrich said. “But they were a group in real-time trying to mobilize marines and C-130s and the fighter aircraft, and they were told explicitly by the White House stand down and do nothing. This is not a terrorist action. If that is true, and I’ve been told this by a fairly reliable U.S. senator, if that is true and comes out, I think it raises enormous questions about the president’s role, and Tom Donilon, the National Security Adviser’s role, the Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, who has taken it on his own shoulders, that he said don’t go. And that is, I think, very dubious, given that the president said he had instructions they are supposed to do everything they could to secure American personnel.”
That may not be the only scandal that Gingrich thinks will go prime time this week, either:
After noting that the rumor, if true, would have a substantial impact on the presidential election, Gingrich pointed to another possible “October surprise” in the coming days.
“The other big story, I think, that is going to break is on corruption and extraordinary waste in the solar power grants and direct involvement by the Obama White House, including the president, in the solar panel grants involving billions of dollars, and I suspect that’s going to break Wednesday and Thursday of this week,” Gingrich added.
Well, why won’t the “reliable Senator” speak up about the e-mails directly? I’d guess that the e-mails have been kept close to the vest at the White House end, but that someone on the other end in the intel community gave them to the “reliable Senator” either simultaneously as they were sent to the two networks, or the “reliable Senator” passed them along himself. It’s all about plausible deniability on the leak, especially since we won’t see any action in the Senate on Benghazi until after the election — not because it’s Democratic-controlled, but because they’re all back home with Congress out of session for the election.
Gingrich could be fishing, but specifying that two networks have the e-mails makes it sound like Gingrich got some inside dope. If these e-mails surface, it will create a huge headache for Barack Obama and the White House, which insisted that it didn’t deny assistance to Benghazi during the attack. Donilon works in the White House, directly answering to Obama himself. While Donilon would probably fall on his sword (or have an underling do so) if these e-mails say what Gingrich claims, there’s little chance that anyone will buy that Donilon or his staff took that decision on their own shoulders.
Apparently the republican team now consists of Romney, Ryan, and Rumor.
No, I’d say more like Romney, Ryan and reality.
M.O.R.O.N
ol’
@Greg
You are no doubt a liberal. It is obvious by the problem you have with the truth.
Opinion: Here comes the (REPUBLICAN) landslide (Parenthesis and content added)
By Dick Morris – 10/30/12 06:33 PM ET
“… As we stripped away Obama’s yearlong campaign of vilification, all the president offered us was more servings of negative ads — ads we had already dismissed as not credible. He kept doing the same thing even as it stopped working. …”
http://thehill.com/opinion/columnists/dick-morris/264935-here-comes-the-landslide
Vote Romney/Ryan for America.
@AdrianS, #3:
You might not want to bet any money on that outcome. The Real Clear Politics poll average is now dead even, and Obama has a small lead in most of the critical undecided states. Nobody really ought to be predicting a landslide for anybody at this point.
Now we’re dealing in rumors. Oh well, there’s nothing that ultra-conservative-right-wing extremists like better than a good rumor.
@Liberal1 (Objectivity):
Cleanup on Aisle 78
@Greg:
Ummmm greg, the fact you think RCP is a reliable indicator tells me you are as blind as you seem.
I will say Romney by five % in PV. Of course he will win in the EC votes too.
Two points, Greg.
1. RCP averages polls where Likely Voters are included along with polls of Registered Voters and polls of Adults.
Obama almost always ”wins” polls that are simply popularity contests (aDULTS).
2. Of the polls of either the Likely and/or the Registered Voters many polls use higher numbers of Democrats in their total than were present in Exit Polls in 2008!
This despite the enthusiasm gap in Dems since then.
This despite the greater enthusiasm in Republicans since 2008!
Some examples of swing state polls over-sampling Democrats:
Colorado 2008 exit poll: 30 percent. ARG: 33 percent. Purple Strategies: 34 percent. PPP: 37 percent. NBC/WSJ/Marist: 45 percent (with leaners, 34 percent without).
Florida 2008 exit poll: 37 percent. Survey USA: 42 percent. PPP: 43 percent.
Iowa 2008 exit poll: 34 percent. Gravis Polls: 41 percent. NBC/WSJ/Marist: 45 percent (with leaners, 34 percent without).
Michigan 2008 exit poll: 41 percent. EPIC-MRA: 42 percent.
Minnesota 2008 exit poll: 40 percent. Survey USA: 45 percent.
Nevada 2008 exit poll: 38 percent. Survey USA: 43 percent. NBC/WSJ/Marist: 39 percent. Gravis Polls: 45 percent. PPP: 42 percent.
New Hampshire 2008 exit poll: 29 percent. PPP: 30 percent. University of New Hampshire: 45.6 percent.
North Carolina 2008 exit poll: 42 percent. Elon University: 47.9 percent (with leaners, 38 percent without). PPP: 46 percent (10/25) PPP:45 percent (10/31).
Ohio 2008 exit poll: 39 percent. PPP: 43 percent.(10/28) PPP:45 percent (10/30) Gravis Polls: 40 percent.
Pennsylvania 2008 exit poll: 44 percent. Gravis Polls: 45 percent. Muhlenberg College: 46 percent. PPP: 48 percent. Quinnipiac: 39 percent.
Virginia 2008 exit poll: 39 percent. Gravis Polls: 41 percent.
Awwww Nan, I was going to let him walk into that one. I do love playing whack-a-lib.
Anyway, I would love to see the e-mails. I hope they don’t hold onto them to protect obama.