
Hillary
Clinton says she doesn’t know what to expect when she testifies before
the House Select Committee on Benghazi this week, but it’s clear the
panel “ended up becoming a partisan arm of the Republican National
Committee” determined to derail her 2016 presidential bid.
“I
think it’s pretty clear that whatever they might’ve thought they were
doing, they ended up becoming a partisan arm of the Republican National
Committee with an overwhelming focus on trying to — as they admitted —
drive down my poll numbers,” Clinton told CNN’s Jake Tapper in an
interview that aired on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday. “I’ve
already testified about Benghazi. I testified to the best of my ability
before the Senate and the House. I don’t know that I have very much to
add.”
Clinton noted that this is the eighth such committee to investigate the Benghazi attacks.
“They’ve
all looked into this and basically just rejected the conspiracy
theories that are still floating in some circles,” Clinton said. “I will
do my very best to answer their questions but I don’t really know what
their objective is right now.”
She
also dismissed the controversy surrounded her use of a private email
server as secretary of state, saying, “nothing that I was sent or that I
sent was marked ‘classified.’”
The Democratic frontrunner is scheduled to appear before the committee Thursday on Capitol Hill.

Clinton speaks at a rally in Nashua, N.H., on Friday. (Photo: Brian Snyde/Reuters)
Earlier this month, former President Bill Clinton called Republican frontrunner Donald Trump a “master brander” whose “pizzazz and zip” has generated excitement within the GOP.
Hillary Clinton agrees with her husband’s assessment of the former “Celebrity Apprentice” star.
“He
has brought his oversize personality and his reality television
experience to the highest level of American politics and seems to be
getting a very positive response among a large part of the Republican
electorate,” she said.
But
she vowed to continue to criticize Trump “for going beyond the bounds
of what I think is appropriate for anybody running for president” —
namely, “the attacks that he’s made on immigrants [and] women.”
Clinton
declined the opportunity to criticize her Democratic challenger,
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, saying any policy differences the pair have
pale in comparison to those running for the Republican nomination.
“You
could see on that stage in Las Vegas how we are maybe approaching these
problems with different solutions, but we’re both seeing the pressures
that American families are under and the challenges that they’re
facing,” she said. “We’re not peddling the same old failed policies of
trickle-down economics and let the corporations do what they want and
cut taxes on the wealthy.”
Clinton
added: “I think he is raising issues that the electorate — not just
Democrats, everybody needs to be thinking about. He has put forward his
plans with passionate intensity, and I have put forth mine and just
think of the difference between us and the Republicans who have put
forward nothing but the same old out of touch, out of date policies.”
A
day after the debate, Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta said “the
time has come” for Vice President Joe Biden to decide whether or not to
jump into the race.
No comments:
Post a Comment
publisher,advertisement,fun,cool,interesting,news,travelling,football