Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Bill Clinton declines to weigh in on Hillary email debacle …

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Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, pictured here on Tuesday, March 3, has become one of the most powerful people in Washington. Here's a look at her life and career through the years.

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Before she married Bill Clinton, she was Hillary Rodham. Here, Rodham talks about student protests in 1969, which she supported in her commencement speech at Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts.

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Rodham, center, a lawyer for the Rodino Committee, and John Doar, left, chief counsel for the committee, bring impeachment charges against President Richard Nixon in the Judiciary Committee hearing room at the U.S. Capitol in 1974.

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Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton helps first lady Rosalynn Carter on a campaign swing through Arkansas in June 1979. Also seen in the photo is Hillary Clinton, center background.

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Bill Clinton embraces his wife shortly after a stage light fell near her on January 26, 1992. They talk to Don Hewitt, producer of the CBS show "60 Minutes."

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Bill Clinton declines to weigh in on Hillary email debacle ...

O’Malley emerges in New Hampshire as potential Clinton …

Former Maryland Gov. Martin OMalley is emerging as a potential challenger to Hillary Clinton for the partys 2016 presidential nomination but appears unwilling, at least for now, to mount a head-on challenge to the front-running Clinton.

OMalley on Friday night at a Democratic fundraiser in key voting state New Hampshire declined to discuss two Clinton controversies -- donations to the Clinton Foundation and her use of a private email accounts -- much less use them to his political advantage.

I like Hillary Clinton. I respect Secretary Clinton. I am not here to talk about Secretary Clinton," OMalley said when asked after his speech about the foundation accepting large donations from foreign countries in the two years since Clinton left her post as secretary of state.

Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, have long been supportive of OMalley, who reportedly got Hillary Clintons blessing to run for the White House as far back as 2013.

OMalleys speech Friday at the Merrimack County Democrats fundraiser in Concord, N.H., marks his first visit to the state since the midterm elections. He last visited New Hampshire in October to campaign on behalf of Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan, who won re-election.

Clinton, also a former New York senator, has been the presumptive Democratic 2016 presidential nominee since polling started as far back as 2012, though she has yet to announce whether she is running.

With roughly 44 percent of the potential vote, formidable fundraising might and campaign infrastructure, Clinton has essentially cleared the field of potential primary challengers.

The 67-year-old Clinton has so far in speeches largely focused on wage equality for women and helping the middle and lower classes by increasing pay overall.

When OMalley was asked Friday night how he would distinguish himself from Clinton, he said, I dont know. I don't know what she's proposing as her candidacy.

On the issue of Clinton using at least one private email account when secretary of state from 2009 to 2013, OMalley, a former assistant U.S. attorney, said he wasnt familiar enough with federal regulations to comment.

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Hillary Clinton ran own computer system for her official emails

The computer server that transmitted and received Hillary Rodham Clinton's emails on a private account she used exclusively for official business when she was secretary of state traced back to an Internet service registered to her family's home in Chappaqua, New York, according to Internet records reviewed by The Associated Press.

The highly unusual practice of a Cabinet-level official physically running her own email would have given Clinton, the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate, impressive control over limiting access to her message archives. It also would distinguish Clinton's secretive email practices as far more sophisticated than those of some other politicians, including Mitt Romney and Sarah Palin, who were caught conducting official business using free email services operated by Microsoft Corp. and Yahoo Inc.

Most Internet users rely on professional outside companies, such as Google Inc. or their own employers, for the behind-the-scenes complexities of managing their email communications. Government employees generally use servers run by federal agencies where they work.

In most cases, individuals who operate their own email servers are technical experts or users so concerned about issues of privacy and surveillance they take matters into their own hands. It was not immediately clear exactly where Clinton ran that computer system.

Clinton has not described her motivation for using a private email account hdr22@clintonemail.com, which traced back to her own private email server registered under an apparent pseudonym for official State Department business.

Operating her own server would have afforded Clinton additional legal opportunities to block government or private subpoenas in criminal, administrative or civil cases because her lawyers could object in court before being forced to turn over any emails. And since the Secret Service was guarding Clinton's home, an email server there would have been well protected from theft or a physical hacking.

But homemade email servers are generally not as reliable, secure from hackers or protected from fires or floods as those in commercial data centers. Those professional facilities provide monitoring for viruses or hacking attempts, regulated temperatures, off-site backups, generators in case of power outages, fire-suppression systems and redundant communications lines.

A spokesman for Clinton did not respond to requests seeking comment from the AP on Tuesday. Clinton ignored the issue during a speech Tuesday night at the 30th anniversary gala of EMILY's List, which works to elect Democratic women who support abortion rights.

It was unclear whom Clinton hired to set up or maintain her private email server, which the AP traced to a mysterious identity, Eric Hoteham. That name does not appear in public records databases, campaign contribution records or Internet background searches. Hoteham was listed as the customer at Clinton's $1.7 million home on Old House Lane in Chappaqua in records registering the Internet address for her email server since August 2010.

The Hoteham personality also is associated with a separate email server, presidentclinton.com, and a non-functioning website, wjcoffice.com, all linked to the same residential Internet account as Mrs. Clinton's email server. The former president's full name is William Jefferson Clinton.

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Hillary Clinton ran own computer system for her official emails

Hillary Clinton emails: Some in GOP resist overreach

If there's potency to Clinton's close guard of her emails, using a personal address on a private server to keep strict control of what's made public, it's that the ordeal makes her look secretive and untrustworthy -- exactly the line of attack Republicans have been employing against her for decades.

READ: Bill Clinton declines to weigh in on Hillary's emails

But House GOP investigators' eagerness to put Clinton in their crosshairs and keep the details of her latest scandal front-and-center is a reminder that they face a risk, too: Turning Clinton into a sympathetic figure, instead of allowing her to do the damage herself.

Over the years, Congress and the Clintons have gone a number of rounds. And while the Clintons have endured, past congressional Republicans have been burned.

Newt Gingrich was at the top of the political world when he became speaker of the House in 1994. Four years and a Monica Lewinsky investigation and Bill Clinton impeachment later, Gingrich was done.

More recently, the GOP's unchecked desire to attack its least-favorite Democrats has backfired with President Barack Obama in office, too -- most recently when a push to use Department of Homeland Security funding as leverage to undercut Obama on immigration failed. Facing self-imposed political fallout, House Republicans were forced to concede just hours before the key anti-terrorism agency was to shut down.

That the right was champing at the bit to go after Clinton over her private emails was evident this weekend.

SEE ALSO: Jeb Bush must win over conservatives, poll shows

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said Saturday in Iowa that the Justice Department should "absolutely" investigate whether Clinton broke the law by exclusively using a personal email address on a private server.

The attacks continued on Sunday news programs. Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-South Carolina, chairman of the House panel investigating the attack on the U.S. embassy in Benghazi, said on CBS' "Face the Nation" that "there are gaps of months and months and months" in the Clinton emails the State Department has turned over.

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Hillary Clinton emails: Some in GOP resist overreach

Hillary Clinton's use of private email not unusual, but still raises questions

Hillary Rodham Clintons use of personal email accounts as secretary of State mimicked her predecessors but drew attention to her penchant for secrecy as she begins what appears to be a second presidential run.

Clinton turned her personal email over to the State Department last year so it could be saved for history, following both the letter and the spirit of the rules, Nick Merrill, a spokesman for the presumptive Democratic candidate, said in a statement Tuesday.

Yet many of her emails became part of the record only when Clinton messaged State Department employees at their official addresses, he said, a practice that stops short of ensuring that every email Clinton wrote made its way into federal archives. The explanation left out what happened to her emails to foreign officials or others outside the government and what security concerns were raised by her use of a private email account.

Clintons allies defended the practice, with one liberal group labeling questions about it a right-wing attack. Merrill cited former secretaries of State of both parties who did the same thing.

Like secretaries of State before her, she used her own email account when engaging with any department officials, Merrill said. For government business, she emailed them on their department accounts, with every expectation they would be retained.

The Clinton camps response recalled earlier instances of her political instinct for privacy and protection, honed over years in public life. As first lady in the early 1990s, for example, the secrecy surrounding the closed-door healthcare reform negotiations that she spearheaded for President Clinton helped contribute to their failure.

Now, with Clinton widely considered the front-runner for her partys presidential nomination even though she has yet to declare her candidacy, her team is facing questions about her high-profile role as the nations top diplomat during President Obamas first term.

If the secretary was doing what she was supposed to do under the law, why would the State Department have to ask her for her emails back? asked Republican Rep. Trey Gowdy of South Carolina, the chairman of a House select committee looking into the attacks on a U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, that happened while Clinton ran the department. Four Americans were killed, including the ambassador.

Word of Clintons private email account, first disclosed by the New York Times, put pressure on the White House to answer questions about an administration that Obama long has promised would be the most transparent in history. His team is supposed to conduct business on government email, yet some officials apparently exchanged messages with Clinton at one or more private email addresses when she was secretary of State.

The top White House spokesman said he wasnt sure whether anyone in the West Wing suspected Clinton wasnt using an official email address like everyone else.

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Hillary Clinton's use of private email not unusual, but still raises questions