“Media reputation also on the line when Mueller report gets released”—Phillip Klein, Washington Examiner“‘It’s absolutely gripping.’ Washington races to make sense of the Mueller report”—Dan Zak, Ben Terris, Avi Selk, The Washington PostOn May 17, 2017 Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein signed the authorizing document empowering the Department of Justice Special Counsel's Office headed by Robert Mueller “to investigate Russian interference with the 2016 Presidential election and related matters” as well as "any matters that arose or may arise directly from the investigation." Six weeks shy of two years later, Special Counselor Robert Mueller’s report, though significantly redacted, has now been released. Depending on your political viewpoint, a myriad number of conclusions could be drawn from both the investigation and the report. Regardless of political affiliation, there is consensus that politically the division of the U.S. electorate is widening. Perhaps more important than the division itself is the caustic nature of the debate on both sides of the political spectrum. It is during these times that we as citizens must be more informed by primary data than simply through the media headlines. It is in this spirit that the Report On The Investigation Into Russian Interference In The 2016 Presidential Election is published in paperback format. -Foreword by Author Scott A. Stawski“In Divided Washington, Relief and Disappointment at Mueller's Report”—Katie Rogers, The New York Times
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