This notion of a congressional investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of personal email accounts while she was secretary of state is beginning to sound laughable.
Some of us out here will break out into hysterical howls if Clinton does the improbable — and doesn’t run for president of the United States next year.
Why the guffaws?
Congress will drop the story like a bad habit.
House Speaker John Boehner is considering a congressional probe. House Benghazi Committee Chairman Trey Gowdy is going to peek into whether Clinton’s personal account email use somehow is related to the Benghazi mess of September 2012, the fire fight that killed four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya.
This has all the apparent earmarks of a political hatchet job.
Clinton is likely to run for president. Her Republican critics in Congress and elsewhere don’t want her in the White House. She’d be a formidable candidate and as it stands right at this moment she remains a strong favorite to defeat almost any GOP challenger.
But what if she doesn’t run? What if she decides, “You know, I just don’t think I have the stomach for this. I’ve taken enough of a battering over this Benghazi thing, during my time in the U.S. Senate and, oh yeah, when I was first lady and trying to push through my husband’s health care overhaul — which went nowhere.”
My hunch is that all these probes, these searches for the truth, these quests to find an email scandal where none exists will disappear.
The opposition will pat itself on the back, say “so long” to Hillary Clinton and go about looking for demons behind other closet doors.