WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton cleared another major hurdle in a week full of them Thursday when she avoided giving Republicans any ammunition to use against her during a grueling 11 hours of testimony before the House Select Committee on Benghazi.
The hearing, which began at 10:00 a.m. ET, stretched deep into the evening as Republicans grilled Clinton on everything on what have now become well-known conservative hobby horses in the larger Benghazi controversy.
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All Republicans needed was one stray moment – like the one from Clinton’s 2013 hearing on Benghazi when she declared “what difference does it make” and created fodder for GOP attack ads – but instead she maintained her composure during a full day in the hot seat.
Little new was revealed about the Sept. 11, 2012 attack on U.S. government facilities in the Libyan cities, and even committee chairman, Republican Rep. Trey Gowdy, struggled to say what new he had learned from the hearing when asked by reporters afterwards.
Democrats were outright hostile. “What we’ve learned here is, well, nothing, frankly,” Democratic Rep. Adam Smith fumed during the proceedings.
Some Democrats had expected the committee’s Republicans to focus on less controversial issues, in light of major questions about the committee’s credibility raised by Republican members of Congress. But the GOP majority asked the kind of questions one might expect them to ask if they were seeking to damage Clinton.
Gowdy seemed intent on defending the committee’s existence after seven other congressional committees investigated the matter previously.
Republicans’ most pointed questions came on the subject of Sidney Blumenthal, the former Clinton White House adviser who forwarded Clinton emails about Libya. “I just don’t understand the preoccupation with Blumenthal. You would think he was in Benghazi, manning the barricades,” quipped Rep. Adam Schiff as the committee’s hearing entered its eighth hour.
Clinton was all smiles as she left and reentered the room during breaks, and spoke in measured calm tones throughout. Clinton spokesperson Brian Fallon marveled that Republicans were focusing on what he dubbed “conspiracy theories,” which only resonate among conservatives.
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