Supreme Court Just Delivered Devastating News for Dems in Their Redistricting Fight
Texas Supreme Court Ends Abbott's Push to Expel Lawmakers Who Fled the State...
Texas to House the Nation's First Detransitioner Clinic
The AP Wants to Ban Guns Not Being Used; NBC News Frets a...
In the UK, Offensive Words Are Now an Offense Punishable by Death
Wait Until California Taxpayers Hear About yet Another Newsom Spending Debacle
Senator Bernie Moreno Sounds the Alarm on Chinese Vehicles Entering the US
Venezuela Opposition Leader Refuses to Take the Bait As CNN Presses Her on...
The UAE Has a Plan to Circumvent Iran and the Strait of Hormuz...
Abortion by Mail Must Stop
Iraqi Terror Commander Arrested for Plotting Nearly 20 Attacks in U.S. and Europe
Lottery Scammer Pushed 73-Year-Old to Sell Her Home for a Prize That Never...
Virginia's New Gun Ban Faces Immediate Legal Challenge From Second Amendment Groups
Former Labor Dept. Employee Pleads Guilty to Stealing $46K in Pandemic Unemployment Funds
Michigan Nurse Convicted in $1.6M Medicare Fraud Scheme Using Stolen Patient Records
Tipsheet

Perez Again Dodges Questions on Clinton's Special DNC Deal

Perez Again Dodges Questions on Clinton's Special DNC Deal

Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chairman Tom Perez was given three opportunities to address criticisms leveled against former DNC leadership that the Democratic primary was rigged in favor of Hillary Clinton. Three times Perez dodged the questions.

Advertisement

Each time Kevin Cirilli of Bloomberg asked Perez for his thoughts on how the DNC operated last year, Perez avoided the heart of the issue. Perez stated the issue was irrelevant to the elections occurring now, attempted to explain that a special deal between the DNC and Hillary Clinton was normal, and claimed the same arrangement was extended to Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-VT).

Perez stated:

"The memorandum that you refer to also has a very explicit clause that says this only applies to the general election and it will not affect anything in the primary."

That answer, in part, shows why the once undisclosed deal is turning heads. An agreement was reached between a party and candidate before it was certain who the nominee would be.

Instead of addressing the perceived problem, Perez explained what the DNC needs to do to keep its support.

We have to build trust in the process and in everything we do. I accept responsibility for that and have taken responsibility for that - make that the process is fair and that people feel like voters are being heard and people feel like every candidate has a fair shake. That's what our North Star is, and has been, and will continue to be under my leadership.

Advertisement

Related:

DNC HILLARY CLINTON

That trust has been, unquestionably, damaged.

When asked if it was fair for the memorandum to be signed in the first place, and if this will be allowed to happen again in 2020, Perez dodged a third time. Dismissing the first half of the question, Perez says that in the future, any opportunity offered to one candidate will be extended to others.

This isn't the first time that Perez has faced questions regarding the DNC-Clinton agreement. As reported by Timothy on Sunday, MSNBC's Chuck Todd grilled the DNC chairman on "Meet the Press."

Watch part of the Bloomberg interview below.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement