Recusals are always voluntary. As are recusals to recuse. See, e.g., AG Lynch, last seen on the tarmac
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Replying to @ChanceBGardener
You're in denial about the circumstances under which Sessions and Nunes recused themselves.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
Sessions recused as I said: why not? Don't be Lynch seems a good rule.
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Replying to @ChanceBGardener
Your preference for Sessions over Lynch says it all.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
The Comey downfall was all about her failure to recuse; your inability to see that says it all
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Replying to @ChanceBGardener @HeerJeet
I mean, on your understanding, her failure to recuse cost Clinton the election, and you still defend!
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Replying to @HeerJeet
Her failure to recuse caused Comey to make statement, which caused election loss; which part do you disagree with?
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Replying to @ChanceBGardener
Comey didn't have to make the statement. He had free will.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
I'd say we're making progress--before you resisted the notion that anything could be voluntary, and now everything is.
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Sessions's recusal not voluntary because it came out after revelations of his perjury, which he didn't want know. He was forced to recuse.
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