posted by kizer permanente
"But the six-person bipartisan agency, which requires four affirmative votes to take most official actions, including launching an investigation, deadlocked on the recommendation, as it frequently does. By voting against the recommendation, Republican Commissioners Sean Cooksey and James “Trey” Trainor effectively killed any further inquiry into Trump’s actions, despite the fact that the agency’s professional staff believed the available evidence was at least sufficient to conduct a formal investigation"
I wouldn't consider 2 partisan hacks stonewalling efforts a ringing endorsement for absolving someone from wrongdoing... but you do you lol.
You really should learn how to use google before making an ass of yourself mocking someone. You got gaslit by someone ignoring the 4-1 vote.
https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/552271-fec-drops-investigation-into-trump-hush-money-payments/
"The FEC voted 4-1
to close the inquiry after failing to find that Trump or his campaign
“knowingly and willfully” violated campaign finance law when his former
attorney Michael Cohen paid $130,000 to porn star Stormy Daniels to keep her from disclosing an alleged affair."
"
However, the FEC said that it failed by a 2-2 vote to prove any of the parties violated campaign finance law.
Republican Commissioners James “Trey”
Trainor and Sean Cooksey voted to dismiss the matter. Republican Vice
Chairman Allen Dickerson recused himself, while independent Commissioner
Steven Walther did not vote."
So it was a 2-2 vote along partisan lines to dismiss the matter, with the independent abstaining. WHICH MEANS the independent joined the 3 Republicans voting NOT to fine or charge Trump in the first instance (and I believe it requires 4 votes TO CHARGE, and this was 4 votes to close the matter).
Here's another link referencing the same:
https://www.politifact.com/article/2024/may/08/trump-says-the-fec-saw-no-merit-in-the-stormy-dani/
"However, in February 2021, the FEC deadlocked on a 2-2 vote
on whether Trump willfully violated federal law. The commission often
deadlocks along partisan lines when it considers controversial cases.
(In this case, the FEC was down from six commissioners to four. One
commissioner, an independent, was absent; and one commissioner, a
Republican, opted to recuse.)"
That same commission, by the way, voted to charge Cohen. So maybe the Republicans weren't the "partisan hacks" [as if the Dems aren't] you claim.