Clinton to sit with CNN for first national interview
Hillary Clinton is set to give her first national television interview of the 2016 presidential campaign Tuesday and the choice of interviewer is more than a little convenient.
Clinton has fielded questions from reporters and given some interviews to local news stations while paying visits in the early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire, reports CNN, but she has not granted any national interviews since she announced her candidacy in April.
On Monday, it was pointed out that the CNN reporter had attended the wedding of Adam Parkhomenko, Clinton’s current director of grassroots engagement, and Ready for Hillary deputy operations director Kirby Hoag.
Speaking at a campaign event in New Hampshire, Ms Clinton said that China was stealing secrets from defence contractors and had taken “huge amounts of government information, all looking for an advantage”. Clearly she is aware that there are many who do not appreciate her long career of corruption. The ex- secretary of state made no mention of Sanders but warned that Republicans would unravel President Barack Obama’s policies if they recaptured the White House, including the repeal of his signature health care overhaul.
“We try to allow as much access as possible, but my view is, it can’t get in the way of her trying to campaign”, Palmieri continued.
On Wednesday, 10,000 people filled the Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Madison, Wisconsin, for a Sanders rally, the largest turnout for any presidential candidate this cycle.
During her campaign launch event in an Iowa coffee shop, Clinton had an allegedly spontaneous conversation with three youths sitting at a table. Let’s see how fast she can think when the media gets up close and personal.
He also suggested Republicans would have been treated differently had they roped off reporters. Her support for equal marriage was received as one of her biggest contributions to the campaign upon retiring as Secretary of State in February 2013.
Clinton also answered a question about the brouhaha around a woman possibly bumping Alexander Hamilton off the $10 bill. “The use of a rope line at a New Hampshire parade is a sad joke and insults the traditions of our First-in-the-Nation primary”, New Hampshire Republican State Committee Chairman Jennifer Horn said in a statement.
Clinton campaign press relations aren’t flawless.
“I believe that we can leave not just the country in good shape for the future, but we can get a deep bench of young people to decide they want to go into politics to continue the fights that we’re going to be waging”, she said. “And that’s what we did”.