She Can T Do A Secretary

She Can T Do A Secretary




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She Can T Do A Secretary
Published September 6, 2022 9:39pm EDT
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Arkansas GOP gubernatorial candidate Sarah Huckabee Sanders sounds off on Hillary Clinton's new gig on 'Jesse Watters Primetime.'
Former first lady Hillary Clinton's new Apple TV+ interview program "Gutsy" is only the latest flailing iteration of the former Democratic presidential nominee's attempt to rebrand herself, Arkansas gubernatorial candidate Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Tuesday.
According to Apple, "Gutsy" will be an eight-part "documentary event" through which Clinton and daughter Chelsea will speak with female artists and activists to celebrate "the gutsy women that inspire them."
Sanders told " Jesse Watters Primetime " she doesn't expect the show to be a hit.
"Hillary just doesn't get it," she said. "First, she gets rejected by the American people, but she's like a bad penny. She just won't go away."

Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks during a press conference
(Abdulhamid Hosbas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images )
"She keeps coming back. The American people didn't want her in the White House and they certainly don't want her on the TVs in their houses."
Sanders suggested Clinton's reemergence is implicit evidence Democrats are desperate for a strong candidate to supplant then-incumbent President Biden in 2024.
"That just tells you how bad things are under the Biden administration. They have allowed absolute and total destruction on everything they have touched, whether it is record inflation, chaos at the border, skyrocketing crime across the country."

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
((Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images))
In terms of how many times Clinton has tried to reinvent herself since she and former President Bill Clinton left the White House in 2001, Sanders quipped she "must be at 4.0 or 5.0 right now."
"And people still aren't buying what she's selling, no matter how many interviews or TV shows Hollywood gives her."
Pointing to recent TV news interviews with Clinton ahead of the Apple program, Sanders said from questions about why the former first lady wears pantsuits — which she said stems from an incident in Brazil — to her take on Trump's Florida estate being raided, the press continues to lob softballs.

Sarah Huckabee Sanders. (Photo by Steven Ferdman/Getty Images) 
(Steven Ferdman/Getty Images)
"I don't think that's the pressing issue on most Americans' minds at any given point — certainly not on mine," she said.
"I think people care about whether or not life is going to get better under this administration or worse. And every day they're proving it gets worse."
She added that journalists like CBS' Norah O'Donnell should have skipped the pantsuit discussion and opted to press Clinton on her own alleged mishandling of classified materials while reportedly hosting a private server in her Chappaqua, N.Y., home while secretary of state.
Sanders also said Clinton should not be given a TV show but instead asked for real answers to claims involving her.
"Those are questions I think people would like to hear her answer, not what fashion choices she made and why."
Charles Creitz is a reporter for Fox News Digital. 
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Published: 17:51 BST, 5 September 2022 | Updated: 06:40 BST, 6 September 2022
Home secretary Priti Patel quit tonight just hours after Liz Truss was named the new Tory leader and told MPs to 'shut up' in her final speech as a cabinet minister. 
Ms Patel was widely expected to lose her job to Attorney General Suella Braverman when Ms Truss becomes prime minister and reshuffles the government on Tuesday.
But she made a pre-emptive strike tonight, announcing she would return to the backbenches when her successor is unveiled.
In a letter to Boris Johnson she said it had been 'an honour and a privilege to serve' but she would not seek to stay on. 
And in her final parting speech to the Commons, the Home Secretary took a moment to 'remark on the last three years of Boris Johnson's prime-ministership', before other MPs began murmuring their disapproval. 
Patel resolutely continued in her speech, but not before telling those present in the Commons to 'shut up' amid the clamouring.
The Home Secretary faced a torrent of criticism over the scale of the Channel refugee crisis and the Rwanda deportation scheme, which has yet to take a single migrant to Africa despite Patel's insistance that it is a 'legitimate' policy.
Her resignation came as a slew of other prominent Conservatives handed in their resignations in kind ahead of Ms Truss' inauguration tomorrow. 
Home secretary Priti Patel quit tonight just hours after Liz Truss was named the new Tory leader.
Ms Patel was widely expected to lose her job to Attorney General Suella Braverman when Ms Truss becomes prime minister and reshuffles the government tomorrow.
In a letter to Boris Johnson she said it had been 'an honour and a privilege to serve' but she would not seek to stay on.
Patel resigns as Home Secretary and will return to the backbenches. Patel has served as Home Secretary since 2019.
In a letter to Boris Johnson she said it had been 'an honour and a privilege to serve' but she would not seek to stay on. 
Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries has told friends she will leave the Cabinet as Culture Secretary and return to backbenches.
It is understood she was offered to keep her role but turned this down. Dorries assumed the position last year. 
Ben Elliot, Conservative party Co-Chairman
Elliot , who raised tens of millions of pounds for the party's general election campaign, resigned hours after Liz Truss won.
A close ally of Boris Johnson, Elliot announced he was stepping down from the role – calling it 'a huge honour and privilege'.
Stephen McPartland, Security Minister  
McPartland resigns as Security Minister - a position he had only occupied on an interim basis - and returns to the backbenches.
McPartland wrote to Boris Johnson that he now wants to 'step aside for someone who wants to pursue the role on a more permanent basis'.
Nigel Adams, Minister of State without Portfolio
Adams, a Boris Johnson loyalist, stated his intention to resign from his position as Minister of State, saying he was 'proud to call [Johnson] my friend' and that there was 'never a dull moment along the way'. 
He had occupied the position since 2021. 
'I congratulate Liz Truss on being elected our new leader, and will give her my support as our new prime minister,' her letter to Boris Johnson said.
'It is my choice to continue my public service to the country and the Witham constituency from the backbenches, once Liz formally assumes office and a new home secretary is appointed.'
Ms Patel has told friends she is not interested in taking another job and was expected to return to the backbenches if she was offered a demotion. 
She considered her own run for the top job, chose to stay neutral in the race to avoid splitting the right-wing vote and in the hope that whoever succeeded Boris Johnson would keep her in post.
But she looked set to be replaced by Suella Braverman after several years of failure to deal with migrants crossing the Channel from France. 
At the end of August government figures showed more than 25,000 migrants have crossed the Channel to the UK so far this year. It means 2022 is on course to be a record year for crossings in small boats.
It is more than four months since Ms Patel unveiled plans to send migrants to Rwanda to try to deter people from crossing the Channel.
Since then 19,878 have arrived in the UK after making the journey.
This afternoon Ms Patel faced accusations of overseeing a rise in gun and knife crime as she defended her record.
As the Commons returned from the summer recess, shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper claimed 'successive Conservative home secretaries' are responsible for a 'serious problem' with violent crime.
Ms Patel faced questions about crime rates after several high-profile violent incidents over the summer, including the deaths of nine-year old Olivia Pratt-Korbel in Liverpool and pensioner Thomas O'Halloran, 87, in London.
The Home Secretary said she is 'proud' of her time at the Home Office, which has seen 'some of the biggest reforms on security, migration and public safety'.
Ms Cooper paid tribute to the families of those caught up in violent incidents in recent months and said: 'Stabbings are now 60% higher than in 2015, yet the number of violent criminals caught is at a record low.
'There is a serious problem in this country with gun crime, with gangs, with knife crime.
'Not my words, but those of the incoming prime minister. So why have successive Conservative home secretaries allowed it to get this bad?'
Patel's resignation is one of several from prominent Conservatives including Conservative party co-chairman Ben Elliot, Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries and Security Minister Stephen McPartland (resignation letter pictured)
Ms Patel responded by accusing Labour of not supporting the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act, which she said 'had all the right deterrents in place to go after criminals', while the Government has supported the police 'every single step of the way'.
As Home Office questions began, she had said: 'Before I answer today's questions and start questions, if I may, I'd briefly like to remark on the last three years of Boris Johnson's prime ministership under which I've served as Home Secretary.
'This morning, a written ministerial statement was tabled in my name outlining the work of the Home Office, this department over the last three years on our manifesto commitment and with that, of course, some of the biggest reforms on security, migration and public safety which the Speaker's (Sir Lindsay Hoyle) just spoken about.
'I'm proud to serve in this Government and I'd like to thank the Prime Minister, Home Office ministers past and present and a wide range of officials.'
Ms Patel also told MPs the French are 'friends' as she discussed tackling Channel crossings, just weeks after incoming prime minister Ms Truss said during the Tory leadership race the 'jury is out' on whether President Emmanuel Macron is a 'friend or foe' to the UK.
The Home Secretary also defended the Government's Rwanda policy, telling the Commons: 'This partnership is very clear in terms of standards, the treatment of people that are relocated to Rwanda, the resources that are put in and also the processing of how every applicant is treated.'
Priti Patel had already courted controversy before she joined Boris Johnson's Cabinet in 2019.
The Conservative MP for Witham since 2010 re-emerged from the backbenches when she was promoted to Home Secretary three years ago.
In 2017 she was forced to resign as international development secretary by then-prime minister Theresa May over unauthorised contacts with Israeli officials.
Known for talking tough on crime and depicted by critics as divisive, she attracted attention years earlier for her views.
In 2006 Ms Patel said she was in favour of the 'ultimate punishment' for the worst crimes and, during a Question Time debate in 2011, supported the death penalty - although she has since insisted her comments were taken out of context.
Mr Johnson himself described Ms Patel as a 'hardline' home secretary, even joking that, under her, the UK could become the 'Saudi Arabia of penal policy'.
During the course of her tenure, Ms Patel has been accused of bullying staff; became embroiled in a war of words with France over tackling the growing numbers of migrants crossing the English Channel; was dogged by criticism from campaigners over a wave of sweeping immigration and asylum reforms amid accusations her policies were 'anti-refugee'; and fell out of favour with the police amid a row over pay freezes.
But, among her supporters, the Home Secretary is praised for taking what is described as a fair but firm and no-nonsense approach on difficult subjects which prompt debate.
In April Ms Patel signed what she branded a 'world-first' agreement to send migrants deemed to have arrived in the UK illegally to Rwanda - a policy considered highly controversial among opponents, as well as some Conservatives, in light of concerns over the East African nation's track record on human rights among other factors.
The first deportation flight - due to take off in June - was grounded amid legal challenges. The legality of the policy is being called into question in a High Court battle this week.
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