The Byron York Show


The Byron York Show
Subscribe:
iTunes | Android | RSS

The Byron York Show

Byron York is chief political correspondent for the Washington Examiner, a Fox News contributor, and host of The Byron York Show podcast. He has covered the Bush, Obama, Trump, and now Biden administrations, as well as Congress and each presidential campaign since 2000. He is the author of two books — The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy, an account of liberal activism in the 2004 election, and Obsession, an account of Democratic efforts to remove President Donald Trump from office. Formerly White House correspondent for National Review, his work has been published in the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Atlantic Monthly, Foreign Affairs, and the New Republic. A graduate of the University of Alabama and the University of Chicago, he lives in Washington, DC Subscribe to the newsletter here: https://newsletters.washingtonexaminer.com/newsletters/daily-memo/

The 2024 election year will be a year of trials

Every now and then, the attorney general, whoever he or she is, whichever administration he or she serves, writes a memo called "Election Year Sensitivities." The purpose is to remind the Justice Department's 115,000 employees that they should not allow politics to influence their work.



The pee tape vs. the bribe tape

Yesterday's newsletter discussed the growing frustration among Capitol Hill Republicans about the FBI's apparent reluctance to investigate an allegation, from a trusted bureau confidential source, that Joe Biden accepted a multimillion-dollar bribe when he was vice president.



When investigators won't investigate Joe Biden

One of the murkier aspects of congressional Republicans' investigation of President Joe Biden's financial history concerns an allegation that Biden, when he was vice president, accepted a $5 million bribe from the corrupt Ukrainian energy firm Burisma. The alleged scheme also involved Biden's son Hunter.



Cocaine runaround at the White House

Republicans in Congress are starting to ask questions about last weekend's discovery of a baggie of cocaine in the White House. On Friday morning, House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY), best known as the chief investigator of Hunter Biden on Capitol Hill, sent a letter to Kimberly Cheatle, head of the Secret Service. "The presence of illegal drugs in the White House is unacceptable and a shameful moment in the White House's history," Comer wrote. "This incident has raised additional concerns with the committee regarding the level of security maintained at the White House." Comer requested a briefing for the committee by no later than next week.



The stuff Hunter Biden didn't get indicted for

There's no doubt Hunter Biden had some serious tax problems. In the 2010s, he took in millions from shady overseas business dealings, trading on the name of his father, then-Vice President Joe Biden, and had a history of filing his returns late with six-figure amounts of taxes due. There was also his lowlife, high-cost drug addict lifestyle in which he threw away hundreds of thousands of dollars on prostitutes and crack. He had personal financial problems most people don't share.



Viewing page 3 of 69|Previous Page|Next Page

Contact Us

    Affiliate Relations

    703-302-1000 (press 2 or dial ext 250)
    or 800-807-4703 (press 2 or dial ext 250)

    Office

    703-302-1000 (press 2 or dial ext 250)

    Studio

    703-302-1000 (press 1)

    Listeners with questions can email

    listeners@radioamerica.com

    Program Directors and General
    Managers can email

    affiliates@radioamerica.com

    Radio America

    1100 North Glebe Road
    Suite 900
    Arlington, VA 22201

     

    GENERAL INQUIRIES