Rep. Tim Burchett criticized former President Barack Obama and the media’s coverage of Jeffrey Epstein during an interview with commentator Benny Johnson, raising questions about Obama’s political ascent and the lack of scrutiny he believes surrounded Epstein during Obama’s presidency.
Johnson began by pointing to Kathryn Ruemmler’s resignation from Goldman Sachs, noting her previous role as Obama’s White House counsel.
“Like, so the Kathryn Ruemmler is the big news this morning because she resigned from Goldman Sachs. She was Obama’s personal White House attorney,” Johnson said.
“Like Obama’s the one, Obama’s the one who’s like, sort of skated on this, and nobody’s really brought up his name.”
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Johnson referenced the timing of Epstein’s criminal conduct and imprisonment.
“But wait a second, like the vast majority of Epstein’s most heinous crimes took place while Barack Obama was president. Got out of jail right as Barack Obama was being put into office, and all of this stuff was going on, and it’s his lawyers, the White House Counsel, who’s communicating with this pedophile, this convicted, now convicted, sentenced pedophile, and she’s like, tee hee heeing doing favors for him through Obama,” Johnson said.
He added, “Obama is like, signing executive orders you can, like, tie all this back to the Rothschild Bank. Like, he’s, like, doing all this stuff, and he’s like, skating somehow. Like, Obama’s getting zero pushback on this. Why? Nobody asking Obama? Like, why didn’t you do something about Jeffrey Epstein?”
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Burchett responded by questioning how Obama rose to national prominence.
“Because President Obama was created. He was not he’s not organic,” Burchett said.
“I mean, you pick this obscure guy from college who has zero records. You have college professors that don’t remember him ever being there, and he runs and he’s and all of a sudden people drop out of races, and he’s unopposed, and he’s goes from a state senator to a US senator, to an unknown to being president United States. Because he was created.”
Burchett compared Obama’s rise to a storyline from “The Brady Bunch.”
“They found somebody that fit their mold. It’s the classic. I went back and watched it a couple days ago, the Brady Bunch, where Greg was wanting to be a great musician, you know,” he said.
Burchett described an episode in which a character was selected to fill a predetermined role.
“And so Greg’s this guy, and he goes in and this record studio. And they’re like, yeah, man, yeah, we’re really digging what you’re putting down, you know? And and then he says, and he’s the lady, and it’s, it’s very almost Epstein ish. And she says, she says, I’m never wrong about these things. Well, the guy that they had, Johnny Bravo, had quit before they could make him a star, and they’d already bought his suit, and Greg fit that suit, and so then they tried to make him a rock and he was going to be a rock star, but because of his, you know, his, his slave to his, his art form, or whatever, he couldn’t do it, which is total bogus. Anybody gave me that opportunity to take that chance, but that’s, that’s the way Obama was, you know, he fit the suit, and he, he was, he’s a good looking, articulate guy, and, you know, had a couple of kids and came up through the corrupt Chicago machine,” Burchett said.
He also drew parallels to other political figures.
“And that’s, and, you know, you’ve got several in Congress. They’re just like that, several the squad. I mean, they, you had billionaires putting money behind probably 30 or 40 different candidates across the country, and they hit on, on a half, you know, AOC, they hit on a bunch of them. And that’s, and that’s how they got there, and we got to start realizing this,” Burchett said.
Burchett said he believes conservatives face challenges in elevating candidates in a similar way.
“And the Conservatives just aren’t good at creating anybody. I mean, you know, it’s we’re all a mismatch of mismatch of different backgrounds and everything and and somehow it tends to work occasionally. But here we are one vote away from losing the majority,” he said.
Turning back to Epstein, Burchett said congressional investigators examined a significant volume of documents.
“But back to the Epstein files. You know, they were putting them out, and the media just would, for some reason, wouldn’t pay any attention to Comer and the Oversight Committee. We were doing it the right way. 20 or 30,000 pages, and it wasn’t good enough,” Burchett said.
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