Dems 'want answers' on Biden documents, Rep. Porter says: 'Classified documents belong in classified settings'

Democrats want answers from the White House regarding stashes of classified documents improperly held by President Biden since the Obama administration, Democratic Rep. Katie Porter of California said.

Porter, speaking with reporters after a town hall event Tuesday, was asked about her role in the House Oversight Committee and the ongoing investigation into Biden’s illicit storage of classified documents at his private residence, inside his garage, and in the office of his think tank.

WHITE HOUSE REFUSES TO SAY IF BIDEN WOULD SIT FOR INTERVIEW WITH SPECIAL COUNSEL IN CLASSIFIED RECORDS PROBE

“So I definitely think that we want to get answers from the White House,” Porter said. 

Porter, however, wouldn’t say if she will sign on to a request from Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer for records related to the classified documents.

“I don’t know if that document request – I have not reviewed the line by line of the request that Chairman [James] Comer made – but I definitely think we want answers. Classified documents belong in classified settings, and I think you heard me say oversight is not a partisan thing. Good oversight means you’re willing to hold any rule breaker to account.”

Comer, a Kentucky Republican, sent a letter Sunday to White House chief of staff Ron Klain requesting more documents and communications related to the discoveries of multiple Obama-era classified documents in several locations at Biden’s home in Wilmington, Delaware, and the Penn Biden Center in Washington, D.C. 

COMER WILL ‘CONTINUE TO PRESS’ FOR INFO ON BIDEN DOCS SCANDAL AFTER WHITE HOUSE SAYS NO VISITOR LOGS IN DE

Porter went on to say there has been “much broader abuse of classified information” by former President Donald Trump.

“I don’t have all the facts about President Biden’s classified information,” Porter continued. “We don’t have all the facts, sadly, because of obstruction yet about President Trump’s much broader abuse of classified information. But we should be asking for answers in a respectful way, and we should be expecting to get honest ones.”

BIDEN IGNORES REPORTERS’ QUESTIONS ABOUT CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS FOR 2ND TIME AS STAFF ESCORTS MEDIA OUT

Biden again ignored reporters’ questions on Tuesday as they tried to get him to address the classified documents from his time as vice president that were recently found at his Delaware home and the Penn Biden Center.

Biden had a meeting with Netherlands Prime Minister Mark Rutte, and after the two leaders delivered brief remarks, reporters began hurling questions at the president. They were all met with silence.

The same thing happened three times last week. First, Biden refused to answer questions about the documents on Monday, Jan. 9. 

Then the following day, Jan. 10, the president did not acknowledge questions after his meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Fox News’ Ronn Blitzer contributed to this report.

Version Story (YC W21), building Git for documents, hiring first engineer

Hey HN,

I’m Jordan, cofounder of Version Story (YC W21).

Imagine a world with no Git. In this versioning Mordor, even basic operations would be tedious and confusing.

To submit changes to your codebase, you designate one person on your team to manually update your repository. To get your changes approved, you email your code to the team and wait for colleagues to send you comments. When a colleague shares their changes before you do, you manually rebase your changes against theirs.

This is how professionals collaborate in many of the most important fields. These include lawyers drafting contracts, academics writing research papers, legislators drafting bills, and engineers managing CAD files. They all encounter the fundamental issues that git solves for coders. In the absence of git, they execute most git actions manually

Version Story is solving this problem. We’ve built the functionality of git into an intuitive visual, Figma-style interface.

My cofounder Kevin and I are both technical and we’ve built our initial product ourselves. We recently closed our first enterprise contract with a major law firm (https://www.artificiallawyer.com/2022/12/01/mishcon-brings-a…) and have many others in our sales pipeline. Now that we’re confident our product will be successful, we’re expanding our team.

At the moment, our team consists of me and Kevin. Kevin is a Stanford Law School-educated lawyer turned coder with experience working in Mergers & Acquisitions at Simpson Thatcher, and also as a software engineer at LinkedIn. I studied computer science at the University of Michigan and worked as a senior software engineer at LinkedIn prior to founding Version Story. We’re backed by investors including Y Combinator and Accel Ventures.

We’re looking for a strong, generalist engineer who is interested in traversing all parts of the stack to build new features, architecting our infrastructure, and helping us design git for documents.

For more information on this role, see here https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/version-story/jobs/Div….

If this role interests you, please reach out!


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