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'The View' co-host admits she was 'wrong' for calling Trump an 'illegitimate president' after 2016 election — and the show's far-left co-hosts are not happy



"The View" co-host Sunny Hostin on Wednesday admitted she was "wrong" for calling former President Donald Trump an "illegitimate president" after he triumphed over Democrat nominee Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election, which led to visible anger from far-left panelists Whoopi Goldberg and Joy Behar.

What are the details?

The panel of "The View" discussed Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy confronting White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on her past claims that the 2016 election was "stolen" — particularly in the light of the fact that Democrats and President Joe Biden have tied election denial to "fascism." Jean-Pierre called Doocy's comparison "ridiculous."

Goldberg defended Jean-Pierre's response to Doocy.

"She was part of moveon.org, she was not an elected official. She was doing her part as an American citizen saying how she felt about an election," Goldberg said, adding that "this is apples and basketballs ... there's no comparison here."

Hostin chimed in saying she isn't a fan of "whataboutism" and turned the focus on her own misconceptions after Trump was elected.

"I will say that when Trump became president, I think people were so very shocked, even considering the Electoral College and that sort of thing. The assumption was — at least mine, I’ll speak for myself — that Russia must have been involved because we knew that from the Mueller report that Russia had some involvement, Russia thought that it could benefit from a Trump presidency — which it did by the way. But I remember calling him an illegitimate president, and that was wrong," Hostin said. "I should not have said that."

"Why?" one of the other co-hosts asked.

"Because he was not an illegitimate president," Hostin replied.

Goldberg growled back that Hostin had "every right" to call the former president "illegitimate" because "that's the way you felt."

Then — seemingly as if emphasize to her co-hosts and audience members that she's in no way pro-Trump — Hostin slipped in a quick blasting of the Republican.

"However, he remains a twice-impeached, disgraced, one-term president," Hostin added, as the audience cheered and applauded. "All that is true."

Anything else?

After Behar insisted there was "good reason" to investigate Russia's involvement in the 2016 election, Hostin pushed back a bit saying that the Trump campaign "did not coordinate with the Russians, and that's where I think I was wrong, and I think that's where other people were wrong."

Behar seemed outraged at Hostin's retort: "You don't know that! ... you don't know that he wasn't talking to Putin!"

Hostin was unmoved: "There was an investigation, and we have to believe that when the FBI and the Department of Justice conducts investigations, we have to believe that that is another tenet of our democracy."

Dual citizen charged with illegally acting as a Russian spy in US, allegedly had contact with Putin himself



Federal prosecutors have charged a dual citizen of the United States and Russia for illegally acting as a Russian agent in the U.S., according to a Department of Justice news release issued Tuesday.

Elena Branson, also known as "Elena Chernykh," spent nearly a decade in the U.S. working "to spread Russia interests, including through the lobbying of U.S. Government officials in favor of Russian policy positions," prosecutors noted in a criminal complaint unsealed in federal court in New York this week.

In the complaint, prosecutors alleged that the 61-year-old willfully failed to register as a foreign agent in violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act, conspired to commit visa fraud, and made false statements to the FBI during her time in the U.S.

Branson has since fled the country and remains at large.

Beginning in 2011, the alleged spy worked on behalf of the Russian government by coordinating meetings for Russian officials to lobby U.S. political officials and businesspersons and by operating organizations in the country to promote Russian governmental policies.

In 2012, she allegedly launched the Russia Center New York in Manhattan — a propaganda machine for the Kremlin — with funding and authorization from "the highest levels of the Russian government." Branson is alleged to have had contact with Russian President Vladimir Putin himself as part of the effort.

According to prosecutors, Branson’s promotional outreach involving the center included hosting an annual youth forum, which was "designed to consolidate the Russian-speaking youth community in the United States."

While living in the U.S., Branson also served as the chairperson of the Russian Community Council of the USA, under which she coordinated an "I Love Russia" campaign that reportedly "focused on the promotion of Russian history and culture to American youths."

Among other things, Branson attempted to arrange meetings between Russian lobbyists or government officials and U.S. government officials, including New York lawmakers.

In 2016, she is alleged to have twice attempted to get then-President Donald Trump to attend events where Russian lobbyists would presumably engage him or his inner circle. But in both cases, there was no indication that Trump attended the events, the filing said.

"As alleged, Branson engaged in a wide-ranging influence and lobbying scheme with funding and direction from the Russian government — all while deliberately leaving the American people in the dark," assistant attorney general Matthew G. Olsen said in a statement. "The department will continue to expose these serious crimes and shine a light on foreign malign influence."

The FBI interviewed Branson on Sept. 29, 2020, during which she allegedly denied acting on behalf of the Russian government. That same day, agents searched her RCNY office and found 34 electronic devices, including 11 cell phones.

In an Oct. 15 interview on state-controlled RT, Branson recalled leaving the U.S. for Moscow approximately one month after the interview because she was "scared" and thought the "probability was very high" that she would be arrested if she stayed in the country, prosecutors noted.

New Strzok texts suggest the FBI was investigating Trump before the Crossfire Hurricane investigation officially started



Senate Republicans on Thursday released a new batch of declassified internal FBI messages from Peter Strzok, the disgraced former FBI official who was involved in the counterintelligence investigation into President Donald Trump and his alleged collusion with Russian agents.

The declassified documents, first reported by the Daily Caller, appear to show that the FBI began investigating Trump sometime before its Crossfire Hurricane investigation was opened. The FBI has previously claimed its counterintelligence investigation into Trump began on July 31, 2016, after receiving information that George Papadopoulos obtained "dirt" on Hillary Clinton from Russia involving "thousands of emails."

But the Federalist's Sean Davis pointed out that newly declassified text message conversations between Strozk and his alleged mistress FBI special counsel Lisa Page reveal there were open counterintelligence investigations "relating to Trump's Russian connections" as early as July 28, 2016.

The timeline here suggests the FBI was not honest when it claimed anti-Trump investigations began on July 31, and o… https://t.co/95ybOnwY3d
— Sean Davis (@Sean Davis)1608221426.0

The text messages raise questions about how honest the FBI was to the American public and to investigators probing the origins of Crossfire Hurricane.

These documents were declassified by request of Republican Sens. Ron Johnson (Wis.) and Chuck Grassley (Iowa) to Attorney General William Barr and FBI Director Christopher Wray as the senators lead an investigation into the origins of the Crossfire Hurricane probe.

President Trump and his Republican allies have long claimed that the Russia probe was a politically biased effort by the outgoing Obama administration, the Hillary Clinton campaign for president, and the Democratic National Committee to spy on the Trump campaign and collect information Democrats would later use as part of an impeachment effort against President Trump. They have leveled fierce criticism at the FBI, accusing the agency of presenting a Clinton campaign-funded opposition research document compromised by Russian disinformation — otherwise known as the "Steele Dossier" — to a FISA court judge to obtain warrants to surveil members of the Trump campaign.

Amid the controversy over the investigation, Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz last year released a report on the origins of the Crossfire Hurricane probe. While he did not find evidence of political bias in the decision to open investigations into the Trump campaign, he raised serious concerns about how the FBI obtained a FISA warrant.

His report said FBI employees "fell far short" of bureau policy that requires they "ensure that all factual statements in a FISA application are 'scrupulously accurate.'" In fact, the FISA court applications contained "numerous serious factual errors and omissions in the applications." Additionally, the Horowitz report highlighted several instances of procedural errors on the part of the FBI officials involved in the investigation.

Attorney General Barr in October appointed U.S. Attorney John Durham as a special counsel to continue investigating the origins of Crossfire Hurricane under President-elect Biden's incoming administration. Earlier this week reports said Durham is adding additional prosecutors to his probe, suggesting that his investigation is expanding and making "excellent progress."

DOJ says Trump tweets on Trump-Russia declassification were not declassification orders

The Justice Department told a federal court that President Trump’s recent tweets about the declassification of Trump-Russia investigation documents did not actually constitute formal declassification orders as the DOJ opposed a motion to release more information connected to former special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation.
Win McNamee/Getty Images

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