Excerpt:
Well, well, well, the Huma Abedin controversy has finally hit the legacy media. Okay, okay — it's not the Huma Abedin controversy, but it's one Obama's court stenographers apparently feel comfortable talking about.
It seems Ms. Abedin, accurately described by the New York Times as Hillary Rodham Clinton's "longtime aide and confidante," spent her last months at the State Department not really at the State Department. Despite maintaining her title as Secretary of State Clinton's deputy chief of staff, she was permitted, upon returning to government service from maternity leave in mid-2012, to remain at home in New York with her newborn child and her husband, the disgraced former Congressman Anthony Weiner — he of the notorious Weiner all aTwitter photos. While the State Department was paying her $135,000 as a "special government employee," Abedin was also permitted to moonlight as a "strategic consultant" for Teneo, a firm founded by Doug Band, a former adviser to President Bill Clinton. (Teneo, the Times informs us, advises such firms as MF Global, the brokerage firm whose investors were broken by Jon Corzine — the former New Jersey governor and Obama campaign bundler.) In addition, Abedin found time in her busy "special government employee" schedule to do consultant work for the William Jefferson Clinton Foundation.
With that familiar Clinton flare, Abedin did not disclose her consultant income on government financial disclosure forms. According to the State Department, you see, her new "part-time" position as "special government employee" meant the usual disclosure requirements did not apply to her … notwithstanding that, the Atlantic Wire reports, Abedin continued to be referred to in official documents as deputy chief of staff to the United States secretary of state. The arrangement finally came to an end in March when Ms. Abedin officially left the State Department to head up Mrs. Clinton's six-person "transition office" — i.e., the transition from secretary of state to what the tongue-in-cheeky Atlantic calls Mrs. Clinton's "version of private life."