'Humiliating': Jon Ossoff grills Jay Clayton into silence
If we're asking someone to oversee 18 intelligence agencies, manage America's most closely guarded secrets, and advise the president on matters of war and national security, acknowledging basic, estab
By The Daily News New York
· Updated · 1 min read
Credit: The Hill
If we're asking someone to oversee 18 intelligence agencies, manage America's most closely guarded secrets, and advise the president on matters of war and national security, acknowledging basic, established facts, like who won the 2020 election, should not be optional.