Anonymous ID: dff578 Aug. 22, 2018, 5:17 a.m. No.2700594   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0727

>>2700558

>2 – Look who his wife works for (pic related)Davis has four children, and now lives in Potomac, Maryland, with his second wife, Carolyn Atwell-Davis, who is the legislative affairs director for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

 

wow!

 

>>2700558

A private company that can store child porn legally,

how does that happen?

>Primarily funded by the Justice Department, the NCMEC acts as an information clearinghouse and resource for parents, children, law enforcement agencies, schools, and communities to assist in locating missing children and to raise public awareness about ways to prevent child abduction, child sexual abuse and child pornography.

Anonymous ID: dff578 Aug. 22, 2018, 6:18 a.m. No.2700835   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1179

>>2700708

no names driver for 20 years, friend of the family….this guy knows a lot!!

 

Washington, D.C. ­– U.S. Senator John McCain (R-AZ) delivered the following remarks on the floor of the U.S. Senate today honoring his Legislative Director, Joe Donoghue, on 30 years of loyal service to the Senate and to the citizens of Arizona:

 

“Mr. President, this week marks thirty years of loyal service to the Senate by Joe Donoghue, my Legislative Director, thirty years working for the citizens of Arizona and trying to make me a better senator. During those three decades he worked his way from the mailroom to a position of considerable importance on my staff. He has made himself something of an expert not only on Senate procedure, but on all the many issues our staff has worked on over the years, from budget matters to immigration reform to national security.

 

“Joe is capable, intelligent, hardworking and trustworthy, a justifiably proud professional staffer, a pro’s pro. He’s well-liked by staff and members on both sides of the aisle, especially by those who, like him, have dedicated most of their careers to the Senate. I’ve come to depend on his professionalism and his counsel. More than that, my wife, Cindy, and my children treasure his friendship. As do I.

 

“Joe and I began our Senate careers around the same time. He started sorting mail and performing other entry-level duties in the first year of my first term. He was 18 years old. I wasn’t quite that young, but it was a long time ago for both of us.

 

“When he came to work with us, I don’t think Joe knew if I was a Republican or Democrat. He just knew he needed a part time job to pay for books and beer. These were pre-Internet and email days, and making certain the immense amount of mail we received from constituents was opened, given to me or to appropriate staff and answered as quickly as possible was very labor intensive and challenging. But he acquitted himself well, as he has with every responsibility he has accepted on my behalf.

 

“His work ethic and reliability quickly made him indispensable. He worked his way up to legislative correspondent and then legislative assistant with the lead responsibility for, among other things, helping me fight years of pitched battles with appropriations bills, targeting wasteful spending and the practice of earmarking. Those were the days when the Senate actually debated appropriations bills. And I have many fond memories of Joe drafting thousands of amendments at my direction to strike wasteful earmarks, although I’m not sure they’re fond memories for the floor staff, who had to process the amendments.

 

“In addition to his legislative work, Joe was my driver for over twenty years. I travel an awful lot, back and forth to Arizona on weekends, campaigning for colleagues and on overseas trips. During the week when the Senate is in session, my nights are often consumed with meetings, dinners and speeches. Joe worked a long shift, in the office during the day and driving me to various appointments day and night, taking me to airports and picking me up, getting me safely and on time through Washington traffic to keep a schedule that was always impossibly crowded.

 

“We spent a lot of hours together, thousands of hours, and Joe was almost always good company, even when I was not. He always made a point on those drives to tell me a joke, and some of them got me in trouble when I repeated them in public.

 

“During my 2008 Presidential campaign Joe worked as my assistant traveling from campaign stop to campaign stop, doing all manner of small and large tasks for me, even once holding an umbrella overhead while I gave a speech in the rain in Manchester, New Hampshire.

 

“As my Legislative Director, Joe is someone everyone on my staff looks too for policy guidance and instruction on Senate procedure and for insights into the personalities and priorities of senior staff in other offices, and for the leadership. He goes out of his way to make sure each one of my staff knows they are appreciated and an integral part of our office.

 

“Mr. President, I am grateful for Joe Donoghue’s faithful service to my office, the Senate, the people of Arizona and to me. On their behalf and mine, I want to thank Joe. I’ve barked at you, teased you, laughed with you and counted on you. We’ve been through a lot of highs and lows in our thirty-year association, good times and bad. The good times were better and the bad times easier because of your help and friendship. Thank you my friend, my dear friend, it’s been quite a ride together. I cannot imagine serving here without you.”

 

https://www.mccain.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/floor-statements?ID=8393AA9E-8C6D-447B-93B7-FACC5F3C2796