The Fani Willis circus is back in town, and it's a clown car riding over a cliff.
Last time we checked in on this ongoing Democrat disaster, the ridiculous election interference case against President Donald Trump had finally been put out of its misery and officially dropped last month. That came after Willis got herself booted off the thing last year for her, ahem, "improper" romantic entanglements.
Trump scored a massive victory there, but Willis is still knee-deep in her own mess. She finally got dragged in front of a Georgia state Senate committee to answer for her antics in that witch hunt.
And let me tell you, she was not thrilled to be under the spotlight on Wednesday. She had multiple meltdowns as they grilled her, starting with questions about how much cash her boyfriend-turned-special-prosecutor Nathan Wade raked in like he had a money printing press.
Willis claimed she didn't review the invoices Wade submitted, but that she "allowed him to bill 160 hours a week." Yes, 160 hours a week. Funny, there are only 168 hours in a week so it looks as if not much sleep was had by Wade, or maybe he was just padding the bill.
She praised him for showing up first every day and straightening out the slackers in the office. (Why exactly did they need that kind of "correction"?)
Then Willis completely lost her stuff: "Why don't you investigate how many times they called me the 'n word'?" she ranted. She insisted she didn't review those invoices and dodged giving a clear answer on who did.
(Reports say she later "corrected" that 160 hours a week slip to 160 hours a month—nice recovery, Fani—but it sure showed how rattled she was getting. Wade reportedly pocketed around $700,000 while he was on the gig.)
Willis feigned anger again when pressed on Wade's involvement in meetings.
She demanded they show her whatever Wade had said about it. "I don't really trust you," she snapped at the committee, using indignation to mask her behavior.
She went completely off the rails at one point, accusing the senators of "trying to intimidate me."You think that you're going to intimidate me! You all have been trying to intimidate me for five years, which is why I have not been able to live in my house for five years, because the n word has been written on my house!"
Then Willis completely lost her stuff: "Why don't you investigate how many times they called me the 'n word'?" she ranted. She insisted she didn't review those invoices and dodged giving a clear answer on who did.
(Reports say she later "corrected" that 160 hours a week slip to 160 hours a month—nice recovery, Fani—but it sure showed how rattled she was getting. Wade reportedly pocketed around $700,000 while he was on the gig.)
Willis feigned anger again when pressed on Wade's involvement in meetings.
She demanded they show her whatever Wade had said about it. "I don't really trust you," she snapped at the committee, using indignation to mask her behavior.
She went completely off the rails at one point, accusing the senators of "trying to intimidate me."You think that you're going to intimidate me! You all have been trying to intimidate me for five years, which is why I have not been able to live in my house for five years, because the n word has been written on my house!"
Again, the indignation ploy.
She even took a swipe at Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), declaring she wasn't going to "quit in a month." (Greene's heading out of Congress next month, by the way.) Sure, Willis hasn't quit, but she got disqualified, and the Trump case got tossed. Maybe keep the victory laps to yourself, lady.
On questions about contacts between her team and the Jan. 6 Committee, she stayed vague, like a politician.
Jan. 6 committee letter: Willis acknowledged a Dec. 17, 2021, letter (with her signature) seeking documents from the Jan. 6 committee; she said she recalled no nonpublic documents being provided and said she has never met Rep. [Bennie] Thompson [the J6 committee chair].
D.C. trip acknowledged, purpose vague: Willis confirmed Wade and staff traveled to Washington and said it was connected to "this investigation," but she said she could not recall the purpose or who they spoke with, a case of convenient amnesia.
Bottom line: Willis somehow managed to come out of this hearing looking even worse than she went in—and that's really saying something. The gift that keeps on giving from the left's lawfare playbook.
She even took a swipe at Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), declaring she wasn't going to "quit in a month." (Greene's heading out of Congress next month, by the way.) Sure, Willis hasn't quit, but she got disqualified, and the Trump case got tossed. Maybe keep the victory laps to yourself, lady.
On questions about contacts between her team and the Jan. 6 Committee, she stayed vague, like a politician.
Jan. 6 committee letter: Willis acknowledged a Dec. 17, 2021, letter (with her signature) seeking documents from the Jan. 6 committee; she said she recalled no nonpublic documents being provided and said she has never met Rep. [Bennie] Thompson [the J6 committee chair].
D.C. trip acknowledged, purpose vague: Willis confirmed Wade and staff traveled to Washington and said it was connected to "this investigation," but she said she could not recall the purpose or who they spoke with, a case of convenient amnesia.
Bottom line: Willis somehow managed to come out of this hearing looking even worse than she went in—and that's really saying something. The gift that keeps on giving from the left's lawfare playbook.
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