What, Righty Whack Jobs, no threads about Scott Pruitt FINALLY getting the boot?

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I heard this over 5 hours ago, not a single peep? What happened to, "We get all the best people" and "draining the swamp?"

https://www.yahoo.com/news/scott-pruitt-epa-194906865.html

Scott Pruitt Resigns From The EPA Amid Ethics Scandals






Alexander C. Kaufman ,HuffPost•July 5, 2018

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt’s controversial tenure endedamid a five-month whirlwind of ethics scandals and at least 18 federal investigations.
President Donald Trump announced Pruitt’s resignation in a series of tweets late Thursday afternoon, praising the administrator and Andrew Wheeler, the EPA’s No. 2, who will now serve as acting administrator.


Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt’s controversial tenure endedamid a five-month whirlwind of ethics scandals and at least 18 federal investigations.
President Donald Trump announced Pruitt’s resignation in a series of tweets late Thursday afternoon, praising the administrator and Andrew Wheeler, the EPA’s No. 2, who will now serve as acting administrator.
“It is extremely difficult for me to cease serving you in this role first because I count it a blessing to be serving you in any capacity, but also, because of the transformative work that is occurring,” Pruitt said in his resignation letter, according to Fox News. “However the unrelenting attacks on me personally, my family, are unprecedented and have taken a sizable toll on all of us.”
Speaking to reporters on Air Force One later Thursday, Trump said he and the embattled EPA chief had been discussing a possible resignation “for a little while,” but that the ultimate decision was entirely Pruitt’s.
“I think Scott felt that he was a distraction,” the president said, according to a pool report. “He’ll go on to great things and he’s going to have a wonderful life, I hope. But he felt that he did not want to be a distraction for an administration that he has a lot of faith in.”
During his nearly 17 months in office, Pruitt, 50, sought to dramatically remake the EPA, contracting the budget, eliminating landmark regulations and politicizing scientific research, giving industry an outsize role in shaping the federal rules by which it plays. He played a decisive part in convincing President Donald Trump to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate accord.
The sudden exit of the nation’s 14th and second-shortest-serving EPA administrator curtails the ambitious ascent of a career politician. Pruitt, who made his name on the national stage by repeatedly suing to block EPA regulations as Oklahoma’s attorney general, flirted with becoming Trump’s next attorney general and was said to be considering a run for Senate or governor in the Sooner State. Allies said Pruitt plotted a run for the presidency as early as 2024.
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But Pruitt faced intense pressure to resign over accusations of corruption and taxpayer waste after an avalanche of scandals. It started in March when a report emerged detailing his $50-a-night sweetheart deal to rent a room in a luxury Capitol Hill townhouse linked to a gas industry lobbying firm, Williams & Jensen. The EPA’s ethics lawyers rushed to retroactively greenlight the arrangement, but struggled to defend the administrator after news broke that his adult daughter used the residence.
Deepening the perception of a conflict of interest, Williams & Jensen’s clients won approval from the EPA during the time Pruitt lived at the condominium, paying well below market rate.
Even former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), whose so-called Bridgegate controversy captured national attention and thwarted his presidential ambitions, remarked on April 1 that Pruitt’s scandal seemed too clear-cut to explain away.
“I don’t know how you survive this one, and if he has to go, it’s because he never should have been there in the first place,” Christie said on ABC News.
In early April,three Republican House members joined the chorus calling for Pruitt’s resignation. The president continually indicated his support for Pruitt, telling the administrator to “keep his head up” and “keep fighting” and praising Pruitt in June amid ongoing criticism from others.
“EPA is doing really, really well,” Trump said at an event with his Cabinet. “And you know, somebody has to say that about you a little bit.”
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Pressure intensified on Pruitt after it was reported he tried to abuse his vehicle’s emergency sirens to cut through traffic, and that the administrator reassigned, demoted or forced out five EPA officials who challenged his “unusually large spending.”
On April 6, Trump bucked efforts by his chief of staff, John Kelly, to fire Pruitt, according to the Wall Street Journal. The president tweeted his support for the administrator, saying he was “under siege” from the “Fake News Media.” One former EPA official compared Trump’s steadfast support for Pruitt to his refusal to withdraw his endorsement for former Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore (R), even as accusations mounted that Moore had sexually harassed and assaulted teen girls when he was in his 30s.
For weeks, it seemed Pruitt would weather the firestorm. But in mid-April fresh details from a federal investigation emerged, new reports on past shady dealings came out and pressure mounted from inquiries being conducted by the EPA’s internal watchdog, the top federal ethics watchdog and the Republican-led House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
The White House started telling Republicans to hold off on defending Pruitt, according to a Bloomberg report. On April 23, three of Pruitt’s staunchest allies, including Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), said they supported holding hearings on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee to investigate Pruitt’s actions.
By early May, senior White House officials were encouraging Trump to fire Pruitt, The New York Times reported. One aide told the publication that the EPA chief’s troubles were “a bottomless pit.”
The cascading series of controversies at the EPA followed months of criticism over Pruitt’s first-class travel accommodations. He regularly spent $2,000 to $2,600 on first-class flights to Oklahoma, and often booked $1,400 to $4,000 flights to Boston, New York and Corpus Christi, Texas, according to The Washington Post. He routinely stayed in luxury hotels.
His international travel expenses soared into the six figures. In June, a trip to an environmental summit in Italy cost over $120,000, while a December trip to Morocco to promote liquefied natural gas ― a bizarre responsibility for the nation’s environmental regulator to take on ― reportedly cost nearly $40,000. In Italy, Pruitt dined with Vatican treasurer Cardinal George Pell, a climate change denier who’s since been charged with child sex abuse, according to documents unearthed by The New York Times. And The Daily Beast revealed that during his brief trip to Rome, Pruitt spent far more time at private dinners and tours than working.
The criticism deepened when The Washington Post reported the EPA had considered leasing a private jet for Pruitt. That plan, which the agency ultimately did not pursue, could potentially have cost about $100,000 a month, according to one estimate.
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Pruitt also faced heat after it was reported he used a loophole in the Safe Drinking Water Act to give two political appointees raises after the White House rejected the request. In a heated Fox News interview on April 4, Pruitt denied knowing about the raises. But an internal email published later in the month showed that he personally signed off on the decision.
Pruitt’s scandals got more bizarre as time went on. In one week it was reported he had ordered an aide to set up a call with the chairman of Chick-fil-A to discuss the possibility of his wife becoming a franchisee of the growing fast-food chain, and also that he paid $3,230 in taxpayer money for personalized journals and pens, priced at $130 each. It was also revealed Pruitt had asked his aide Millan Hupp to try to buy “an old mattress” from the Trump International Hotel in Washington, something she said wasn’t for EPA business, to her knowledge.
By June, embarrassing new revelations emerged almost daily from newly public congressional testimony and a trove of his aide’s emails released under a Freedom of Information Act request. Just this week, allegations surfaced that Pruitt demanded aides find his wife a job with a $200,000 salary, and that he kept “secret” calendars, prompting fresh calls Thursday morning for a federal investigation into whether he violated the Federal Records Act. The controversy worsened later on Thursday, with a New York Times report detailing how the EPA fired an aide who questioned Pruitt’s deletion of sensitive meeting details.
Pruitt is arguably the highest-profile Trump administration official to depart amid a firestorm over ethics. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price resigned in September after spending over $1 million on private flights. Brenda Fitzgerald, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, stepped down after buying shares of a tobacco company, a perceived bet against her own work as a top public health official.
But, despite legal challenges halting more than one-third of his regulatory rollbacks, Pruitt earned Trump’s respect as an effective champion of his deregulatory agenda, upending work at his agency to combat climate change and furiously erasing former President Barack Obama’s environmental legacy.
Environmental groups may have little time to celebrate Pruitt’s ouster.
Andrew Wheeler, the EPA’s No. 2 and a likely contender to become the administrator, is a climate change-denying former coal lobbyist. His four years working at the EPA’s Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics under presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton earned him a reputation as an actor capable of pursuing Trump’s agenda without hitting the legal snares that slowed down some of Pruitt’s decisions in court. He is expected to become the acting administrator as of Monday.
“I am both humbled and honored to take on this new responsibility,” Wheeler wrote in an email to EPA staffers, which HuffPost obtained. “I look forward to working alongside all of you to continue our collective goal of protecting public health and the environment on behalf of the American people.”
Trump aides reportedly began pushing for Pruitt’s ouster after the Senate confirmed Wheeler in April.
Another potential pick to replace Pruitt is William Wehrum, the powerful assistant administrator of the Office of Air and Radiation, who rejects climate science and fought to undermine clean air rules and weaken mercury standards as a lawyer for the fossil fuel industry.
 

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He resigned health problems
 

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Lol, yeah, that WAS a pretty disastrous bet, wasn't it?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...s-bet-on-scott-pruitt/?utm_term=.b9af92db40bc

Trump cashes out his disastrous bet on Scott Pruitt

by Aaron Blake July 5 at 4:47 PM

The business of politics is a cost-benefit analysis, if not outright gambling. People have a certain amount of political capital, comprising their base of support and internal favors, and they get to choose when and where to spend it — with no telling how their decisions will pan out or how much of a return, if any, they will reap.
Scott Pruitt was both a bad business decision and a horrible political gamble. Yet the White House kept throwing good money after bad on that bet. As indictments of Trump's political decisions and acumen go, Pruitt ranks extremely high.
Put plainly: The White House for some reason thought this might get better, even as it was pretty clear to everyone outside 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. that Pruitt’s blatant indifference to ethical concerns ensured that it never would.
The White House finally cashed out what remained of its chips Thursday afternoon. President Trump announced that Pruitt had resigned as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, after months of scandal and more than a dozen investigations. The scandal was remarkable both for the scope of ethical violations and the White House's puzzling decision to draw out the string.


Indeed, to call it a “scandal” actually misses this point. It was a series of scandals, all united by a common theme: indifference to ethics. And the scandals showed no signs of abating. New developments in the past week included Pruitt’s own allies and top staffers testifying to ethically murky behavior, and shortly before Trump’s announcement on Thursday, the New York Times ran an on-the-record interview with a scheduler who said she was fired shortly after suggesting that staffers might have been illegally altering Pruitt’s official calendars.
There was also, of course, the first-class travel Pruitt insisted he needed for security reasons, even as the EPA failed to document any real need. There was the $43,000 soundproof phone booth he had installed. There was the $50-per night apartment rental from the wife of an energy lobbyist. And there were the explanations Pruitt offered personally that seemed to run counter to the facts.
The apartment rental story was the canary in the coal mine. How an EPA administrator would think it was a good idea to rent at such a reduced rate from a family with clear business interests in his agency betrayed complete cluelessness about or apathy toward ethics rules and the damage he was doing to himself. Even if you accept that Pruitt was trying to save a few bucks, why on earth would you put your career at risk like that — especially given that some people had you pegged for the next attorney general of the United States?
A guy who makes such horrendously bad decisions was bound to make many other bad ones. And news of those bad decisions just kept coming out. So with no end in sight, the White House appears to have decided to cut bait — or more accurately, to dumbfoundingly wait three months and then cut bait.
 

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Im still reeling over Right Whack Job Ben Carson losing his brain surgeon license in all 50 states... It hasnt sunk in yet on how drastic that news was
 

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Im still reeling over Right Whack Job Ben Carson losing his brain surgeon license in all 50 states... It hasnt sunk in yet on how drastic that news was

Yeah, THAT'S right, keep that Montana-sized boulder head of yours plugged WAAAAAAAAY up your lard ass, and keep on pretending that the whole Pruitt deal never happened. He was a friggin' DISGRACE, and anybody who HIRED scum like that is a grade A moron, not to mention, similarly dishonest. Hey, Fat Boy did you notice Mueller didn't fall asleep at the wheel re: the "release demands" of Manafort? Maybe Paulie will release the "evidence" that those two witnesses who claimed he tried to suborn perjury were liars, whaddya think?:nohead:^
 

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Yeah, THAT'S right, keep that Montana-sized boulder head of yours plugged WAAAAAAAAY up your lard ass, and keep on pretending that the whole Pruitt deal never happened. He was a friggin' DISGRACE, and anybody who HIRED scum like that is a grade A moron, not to mention, similarly dishonest. Hey, Fat Boy did you notice Mueller didn't fall asleep at the wheel re: the "release demands" of Manafort? Maybe Paulie will release the "evidence" that those two witnesses who claimed he tried to suborn perjury were liars, whaddya think?:nohead:^
pretending the whole pruitt deal never happened- like when you pretend all these threads you start - that turn out- oh so wrong- is that what you mean by pretending??
 

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pretending the whole pruitt deal never happened- like when you pretend all these threads you start - that turn out- oh so wrong- is that what you mean by pretending??

You've run from many wrong stances, Hobo, so, STFU.
 
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Hey DuuuuuFelch,

Are you going to run and hide again like a fucking pussy maggot when Trump gets re-elected?

Just think, at least 6 more years of pure greatness.

MAGA bitch.
 

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Hey DuuuuuFelch,

Are you going to run and hide again like a fucking pussy maggot when Trump gets re-elected?

Just think, at least 6 more years of pure greatness.

MAGA bitch.

Go blow yer butt buddy, Witless Willie-he needs consoling nowadays because he his idol, Paulie Numbnuts is doing hard time in the joint. You'll be swallowing something unpleasant so enough, turd.Loser!@#0kth)(&^:madassholazzkick(&^:bigfinger:trx-smly0:madasshol:tongue2::fckmad:
 

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He resigned health problems

Yeah, "health problems," you brainless putz-plus, it says says something about Twittler scum that he was, apparently, blindsided by this and evidently thinks it was uncalled for, lol. Hey, only FIFTEEN active investigations into him, what's the big deal? This scumbag ought to be a jail almost as much as Twittler....


http://fortune.com/2018/07/06/scott-pruitt-epa-fired-resigns-trump/

[h=1]Scott Pruitt Is Devastated That White House Forced Him to Resign EPA Post, Sources Say[/h]

By BLOOMBERG July 6, 2018
Scott Pruitt resigned as EPA chief Thursday after White House Chief of Staff John Kelly delivered a message from the president that it was time for the scandal-plagued administrator to leave, according to two people familiar with the situation.

Pruitt didn’t want to leave his post and was described as being devastated that he had to resign, said the people, who asked not to be named discussing a personnel matter.

President Donald Trump wanted Pruitt to leave, after revelations that the administrator’s public schedule had been altered to shield some meetings from public view, they said. Doctored schedules—which could be a criminal violation of the Federal Records Act—were effectively the final straw after a tenure marred by alleged ethical missteps. The administration knew that more damaging reports would emerge soon, one of the people said.

Trump ultimately announced Pruitt’s departure on Twitter at 3:37 p.m. Thursday, saying the EPA chief had done an “outstanding job.” Later, Trump said Pruitt chose to resign because he felt he was a distraction. “It was very much up to him,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One. “We’ve been talking about it for a little while.”

Top White House advisers have been encouraging Trump to dismiss Pruitt for months, amid mounting allegations of unethical conduct, improper spending and abuses of power. And Trump discussed the idea with people close to him several times, as he sharpened his public criticism of Pruitt’s activities.

An early June disclosure that a top EPA aide helped Pruitt try to buy a used mattress from the Trump International Hotel was particularly embarrassing to the president, one of the people said.

But Pruitt was caught off guard by Kelly’s call and flummoxed by his request to resign, one of the people said. Just one day earlier, Pruitt had been celebrating Independence Day at the White House.

On Friday, his final day in office, Pruitt was back at the EPA building in downtown Washington to say goodbye to aides.

Spokespeople for the EPA didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment.
 

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Pruitt Was Told to Resign in Call From White House, Sources Say J

What a punk ass 'lil BITCH, alllll that "You're FIRE!" bullshit on that stupid show, but, in real life, he hasn't got the balls to do the deed himself, always sends some sleazy go-between. I that's the main reason he hasn't canned Kelly-who would he get tell him?

https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/pruitt-told-resign-call-white-213207838.html

[h=1]Pruitt Was Told to Resign in Call From White House, Sources Say[/h][FONT=&quot] Jennifer Jacobs, Jennifer A Dlouhy 23 hours ago

[FONT=&quot]Scott Pruitt resigned as EPA chief Thursday after White House Chief of Staff John Kelly delivered a message from the president that it was time for the scandal-plagued administrator to leave, according to two people familiar with the situation.[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Pruitt didn’t want to leave his post and was described as being devastated that he had to resign, said the people, who asked not to be named discussing a personnel matter.[/FONT][FONT=&quot]President Donald Trump wanted Pruitt to leave, after revelations that the administrator’s public schedule had been altered to shield some meetings from public view, they said. Doctored schedules -- which could be a criminal violation of the Federal Records Act -- were effectively the final straw after a tenure marred by alleged ethical missteps. The administration knew that more damaging reports would emerge soon, one of the people said.[/FONT][FONT=&quot]More from Bloomberg.com: Trump Eyes Even Higher Tariffs as China Trade War Escalates[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Trump ultimately announced Pruitt’s departure on Twitter at 3:37 p.m. Thursday, saying the EPA chief had done an “outstanding job.” Later, Trump said Pruitt chose to resign because he felt he was a distraction. “It was very much up to him,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One. “We’ve been talking about it for a little while.”[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Read More: EPA Chief Scott Pruitt Resigns Amid Crush of Ethics Scandals[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Top White House advisers have been encouraging Trump to dismiss Pruitt for months, amid mounting allegations of unethical conduct, improper spending and abuses of power. And Trump discussed the idea with people close to him several times, as he sharpened his public criticism of Pruitt’s activities.[/FONT][FONT=&quot]More from Bloomberg.com: Mueller Taps More Prosecutors to Help With Growing Trump Probe[/FONT][FONT=&quot]An early June disclosure that a top EPA aide helped Pruitt try to buy a used mattress from the Trump International Hotel was particularly embarrassing to the president, one of the people said.[/FONT][FONT=&quot]But Pruitt was caught off guard by Kelly’s call and flummoxed by his request to resign, one of the people said. Just one day earlier, Pruitt had been celebrating Independence Day at the White House.[/FONT][FONT=&quot]On Friday, his final day in office, Pruitt was back at the EPA building in downtown Washington to say goodbye to aides.[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Spokespeople for the EPA didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment.[/FONT][FONT=&quot]More from Bloomberg.com
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I posted about Pruitt in the "Bloodhound Bob" thread
 

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