George W. Bush removed Yovanovitch's predecessor, Ambassador John Evans, from the Armenia post after he rightly called the Turkish Holocaust of Armenians a "Genocide." Bush then nominated Richard Hoagland to be U.S. ambassador to Armenia, but he refused to acknowledge the Turkish Holocaust as "Genocide," so the Senate rejected him.
"This being said, it appears as though Ambassador Yovanovitch and her colleagues have learned from the disastrous Hoagland experience and are coming to understand that the U.S. Senate will not accept - and the Armenian American community will never allow - an Ambassador to Armenia who denies the Armenian Genocide."
"[An] Ambassador serves his president and may be recalled anytime and for any reason," newly appointed U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Marie L. Yovanovitch said in response to [an] ArmInfo question her personal stand on [the] Armenian Genocide will allow her further [to] work at the US Department of State if the new leadership of the White House recognizes Genocide.
We know that Ukrainian officials deeply involved in trying to help Hillary Clinton through this and we also now know that the current United States ambassador, Marie Yovanovitch, has badmouth[ed] the president of the United States to Ukrainian officials and has told them not to listen or worry about Trump policy because he is going to be impeached.
Two days later, on the Laura Ingraham show of March 22, Ingraham expressed surprise that Marie Yovanovitch, an Obama holdover with known anti-Trump biases, still had not been removed as U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, even after Rep. Pete Sessions had sent an urgent letter to Mike Pompeo to do so in May 2018.
Laura, you mentioned that Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, contrary to what a lot of people thought, was still in her job.
In a Washington Times account on April 18, 2019, Edward Lozansky likewise wrote of "U.S. Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch's bad-mouthing of the president to Ukrainian officials."
https://spectator.org/did-you-know-this-about-marie-yovanovitch/
"This being said, it appears as though Ambassador Yovanovitch and her colleagues have learned from the disastrous Hoagland experience and are coming to understand that the U.S. Senate will not accept - and the Armenian American community will never allow - an Ambassador to Armenia who denies the Armenian Genocide."
"[An] Ambassador serves his president and may be recalled anytime and for any reason," newly appointed U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Marie L. Yovanovitch said in response to [an] ArmInfo question her personal stand on [the] Armenian Genocide will allow her further [to] work at the US Department of State if the new leadership of the White House recognizes Genocide.
We know that Ukrainian officials deeply involved in trying to help Hillary Clinton through this and we also now know that the current United States ambassador, Marie Yovanovitch, has badmouth[ed] the president of the United States to Ukrainian officials and has told them not to listen or worry about Trump policy because he is going to be impeached.
Two days later, on the Laura Ingraham show of March 22, Ingraham expressed surprise that Marie Yovanovitch, an Obama holdover with known anti-Trump biases, still had not been removed as U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, even after Rep. Pete Sessions had sent an urgent letter to Mike Pompeo to do so in May 2018.
Laura, you mentioned that Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, contrary to what a lot of people thought, was still in her job.
In a Washington Times account on April 18, 2019, Edward Lozansky likewise wrote of "U.S. Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch's bad-mouthing of the president to Ukrainian officials."
https://spectator.org/did-you-know-this-about-marie-yovanovitch/
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