New Clinton emails appear to contradict her Benghazi testimony
Almost 7,800 pages’ worth of e-mails were released Monday night as part of an ongoing investigation into whether the presidential front-runner received and sent classified information through an unsecured private server during her time as secretary of state.
But one Senate Democratic woman was missing: Elizabeth Warren, of MA, who has not yet endorsed a presidential candidate, though she did sign a 2013 letter urging Clinton to run. However, he also added another more personal reason for omitting the graphic: “it’s the heinous MSNBC and I just can’t bring myself to give them that satisfaction”. Questions about her email account, however, have died down since Clinton addressed the issue at length during an 11-hour hearing of the House Benghazi Committee.
The subject line for the e-mail is: “100 and counting…”; Reines included a list of 94 countries that Clinton hadn’t yet visited for her to “choose from”, as he put it. Some of the countries had asterisks by them.
The campaign also rolled out a new video – titled “44 Boys Is Too Many” – that featured young girls reading letters they wrote to Clinton and speaking about the need for a woman president.
Wisconsin Sen. Tammy Baldwin said the “symbolism” of Clinton’s campaign was important.
Republicans trawling through thousands of Hillary Clinton’s emails in an effort to derail her bid for the United States presidency may have been disappointed by the latest batch released. Most of the classified messages were exchanged with fellow State Department employees, but a few of them were between Mrs. Clinton and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and others involved Sidney Blumenthal, a controversial confidante of the Clintons.
The stage setting was emblematic of Clinton’s campaign, which has managed to round up the vast majority of the Democratic Party’s elected officials into her camp, and especially colleagues of her top rival for the nomination, Sen.
In a significant policy switch, Clinton also announced her opposition to a massive Asia-Pacific trade deal she had promoted as secretary of state in President Barack Obama’s first term.
“Hillary’s position is very strong and I don’t think a process story here or there is going to have much impact on her stance with any particular group in the Democratic orbit”, Burton said.
Clinton told the audience that she would spend more on infrastructure, affordable education and fighting climate change, and pledged not to raise taxes on middle-class Americans.
When asked why she wants to be president, Clinton said: “I’m not doing it to move back in, although it’s a wonderful place”. You looked real. There’s a difference.