podesta-emails

podesta_email_00327.txt

podesta-emails 6,585 words email
P17 D6 V15 P18 V11
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*[image: Inline image 1]* *Correct The Record Tuesday July 29, 2014 Afternoon Roundup:* *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: "But a conservative author could call the Clintons 'broke.' Hillary Clinton could not." http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2014/07/29/the_long_tail_of_dead_broke.html … <http://t.co/fYWllEqLOK> [7/29/14, 1:30 p.m. EDT <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/494173120853725184>] *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: Crowds round the corner waiting for @HillaryClinton's arrival http://www.troyrecord.com/general-news/20140729/crowds-round-the-corner-in-wait-for-hillary-clinton-arrival-at-northshire-bookstore … <http://t.co/0Nj5WEwu24> [7/29/14, 11:34 a.m. EDT <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/494143991626362881>] *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: "Of any potential presidential contender, none could match Clinton's experience overseas." http://www.cnn.com/2014/07/29/politics/clinton-foreign-policy-liability/ … <http://t.co/X50MhP2z4t> [7/29/14, 11:29 a.m. EDT <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/494142647146401792>] *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: "This is big!" A bookstore owner on @hillaryclinton's upcoming book signing at his store. http://www.bizjournals.com/albany/morning_call/2014/07/what-northshire-bookstore-owner-says-about-hillary.html?page=all … <http://t.co/iChTcG0irf> [7/29/14, 9:53 a.m. EDT <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/494118454681927680>] *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: Really? @AmericaRising, attacking Clintons' success again? Bold for the former Romney folks http://correctrecord.org/the-right-wing-just-doesnt-get-it-attacking-clinton-success/ … <http://t.co/l4yV0FiGXx> // http://correctrecord.org/the-points/attack-hillary-clinton-is-out-of-touch/ … <http://t.co/86qvWLCAbR> [7/29/14, 11:26 a.m. EDT <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/494141966436007937>] *Headlines:* *CNN: “Is foreign policy a liability for Hillary Clinton?” <http://www.cnn.com/2014/07/29/politics/clinton-foreign-policy-liability/>* “The group Correct the Record, which was created by Clinton supporters to defend her, lists 11 foreign policy-related accomplishments on its website, including helping ‘restore America's leadership and standing in the world,’ building a coalition to enact ‘the toughest sanctions in Iran's history,’ playing ‘an integral role’ in the missile reduction START treaty with Russia, and supporting the raid to kill Osama bin Laden.” *Slate blog: Weigel: “The Long Tail of ‘Dead Broke’” <http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2014/07/29/the_long_tail_of_dead_broke.html>* “A conservative author could call the Clintons ‘broke.’ Hillary Clinton could not. In the sprawling world of Clinton defenders (who I spent some time with, for a story going up later) this is deeply annoying.” *Washington Post blog: The Fix: “Hillary Clinton still hasn’t found a good answer to questions about her wealth” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/07/29/hillary-clinton-still-hasnt-found-a-good-answer-to-questions-about-her-wealth/>* “Adrienne Elrod, communications director for Correct The Record, an outside group designed to counter attacks on Clinton, described the America Rising clip as ‘another desperate, ineffective attempt by the right wing to distract from the fact that Hillary Clinton has spent her lifetime in public service lifting up the lives of middle-class families.’” *Fusion: “Hillary Clinton regrets saying she was 'dead broke,' feels blessed by success” <http://fusion.net/Leadership/video/hillary-clinton-regrets-dead-broke-feels-blessed-success-902398>* “In an interview with Fusion's Jorge Ramos, Hillary Clinton said that she regrets the comment.” *CNN: “Hillary Clinton on her 'dead broke' misstep: 'I regret it'” <http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2014/07/29/hillary-clinton-on-her-dead-broke-misstep-i-regret-it/>* “Nearly two months later, Clinton is still being asked about it and tells Fusion that she regrets telling ABC's Diane Sawyer that her family was 'dead broke' when they left the White House in 2001.” *Huffington Post: “Hillary Clinton: 'I Regret' Saying We Were 'Dead Broke'” <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/07/29/hillary-clinton-regret_n_5630363.html>* “Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she regrets saying she and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, were ‘dead broke’ upon leaving the White House.” *Washington Post blog: Post Politics: “Hillary Clinton on ‘dead broke’ comment: ‘I regret it’” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2014/07/29/hillary-clinton-on-dead-broke-comment-i-regret-it/>* “Former secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton says she regrets saying that she and husband Bill Clinton left the White House ‘dead broke’ in 2001.” *New York Daily News: “Hillary Clinton says she knows her net worth ‘within a range’” <http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/hillary-clinton-net-worth-sort-article-1.1883962>* [Subtitle:] The former secretary of state — who has already landed herself in trouble over comments about her wealth — says she owns 'two very nice houses' but doesn’t elaborate further. *The Hill blog: Briefing Room: “Clinton declines to detail net worth” <http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/213651-hillary-clinton-declines-to-specify-her-net-worth>* “Hillary Clinton declined to specify her net worth in an interview, sidestepping questions about her family’s wealth ahead of a possible 2016 presidential run.” *Fusion: “Hillary Clinton on 2016: 'I think there will probably be many candidates'” <http://fusion.net/Leadership/video/hillary-clinton-2016-candidates-902453>* “Leaving aside her coyness on whether she will actually run, Fusion's Jorge Ramos asked Clinton whether she thinks her party would benefit from a competitive primary.” *Fusion: “Hillary Clinton disses Cheney, says 'Iraq was a mistake'” <http://fusion.net/Leadership/video/hillary-clinton-disses-cheney-iraq-mistake-902564>* “In her new book, Hillary Clinton writes that she got Iraq wrong.” *Mediaite: “Hillary Hits Cheney for Obama Criticism: ‘Should’ve Been Talking About Himself’” <http://www.mediaite.com/tv/hillary-hits-cheney-for-obama-criticism-shouldve-been-talking-about-himself/>* “In another preview from her interview with Jorge Ramos, set to air tonight on Fusion, Hillary Clinton offered up a strong defense of President Barack Obama in the face of criticism from former Vice President Dick Cheney.” *Troy Record (N.Y.): “Crowds round the corner in wait for Hillary Clinton arrival at Northshire Bookstore” <http://www.troyrecord.com/general-news/20140729/crowds-round-the-corner-in-wait-for-hillary-clinton-arrival-at-northshire-bookstore>* “Hundreds of people formed a long line around the block, from Northshire Bookstore where Clinton is signing her book, ‘Hard Choices,’ all the way down Caroline Street to Maple Avenue.” *Washington Free Beacon: “Allen West: ‘Allow Israel To Crush Hamas’” <http://freebeacon.com/national-security/allen-west-allow-israel-to-crush-hamas/>* “‘A person like Hillary Clinton should not be in the White House because she does not want to take leadership role,’ West said when speaking about the former secretary of state’s presidential ambitions. ‘Maybe she wants to give Vladimir Putin another little toy box with a red button on top of it and say ‘hey, let’s play reset again.’” *Articles:* *CNN: “Is foreign policy a liability for Hillary Clinton?” <http://www.cnn.com/2014/07/29/politics/clinton-foreign-policy-liability/>* By Leigh Ann Caldwell July 29, 2014, 7:56 a.m. EDT Presidential candidates often lack experience in one critical area: foreign policy. But should she run for president in 2016, Hillary Clinton would have more experience on that front than any other potential presidential competitor. With experience, however, comes risk. Growing global crises, some of which have festered since Clinton's time as secretary of state, could turn what is seen as one of her assets into a liability. *Unparalleled experience* Of any potential presidential contender, none could match Clinton's experience overseas. Governors are the most disconnected to foreign policy. Those aspiring for higher office often take international trips to learn about issues. Senators and members of Congress, meanwhile, can beef up their foreign policy cred by serving on committees dealing with international affairs, formulating policies and voting on matters of war, peace and which government to support. But none of that compares to the experience of being directly engaged in global events. If Clinton does run -- and win -- it would be quite a departure from modern-day political ascension. She would be the first president since James Buchanan, the 15th president, to previously serve as the country's top diplomat. (Although it was almost a requirement closer to the founding of the country, with five of the first eight presidents being previous secretaries of state.) But Buchanan, who preceded Abraham Lincoln, is considered one of the worst presidents in U.S. history. His failings, however, had nothing to do with his dealings with foreign policy, but with trouble at home over slavery and his reluctance to engage on the issue. *An opening* But Clinton's opponents are sure to make her resume a liability, especially if unrest around the world continues. Sometimes excessive experience is a liability, especially in political campaigns. It's easier to talk about what you will do with no record to show than it is to explain what you've done. As unrest around the world unfolds, Republicans will help tell Clinton's story, pointing out contradictions and inconsistencies at every turn. "It creates an opening for the Republicans," said Alex Wong, former director of foreign policy for Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential run. Wong said candidates won't win an election on foreign policy but they sure could lose one on it. Before Russia and Ukraine, Israel and Gaza, ISIS gaining ground in Iraq and Syria, Republicans had been homing in on the issue of Benghazi -- the 2012 attack on the U.S. compound that killed four Americans including Ambassador Chris Stevens -- insisting that Clinton knows more than she is willing to admit and that it was her negligence as secretary of state that led to a dangerous environment for Americans working in Libya. But since international hot spots are flaring, Republicans have more material to work with and more crises at which to point blame. For instance, after an interview with CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS" on Sunday in which Clinton said she was "among the most skeptical of Putin during the time" in the Obama administration, a Republican research organization, America Rising PAC, noted that it's "too late to hit the 'reset' button on your record with Russia." During her first months at State, Clinton spearheaded an awkward media event in which she and then-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev hit a gimmicky reset button to signal a new start to the U.S.-Russia relationship. "The dilemma she faces is a failed foreign policy, and she was not influential enough in the administration to right the ship," Wong said. But Clinton's supporters are anticipating the onslaught of foreign policy-related attacks. The group Correct the Record, which was created by Clinton supporters to defend her, lists 11 foreign policy-related accomplishments on its website, including helping "restore America's leadership and standing in the world," building a coalition to enact "the toughest sanctions in Iran's history," playing "an integral role" in the missile reduction START treaty with Russia, and supporting the raid to kill Osama bin Laden. Correct the Record also says Clinton "helped avert all-out war in Gaza" with a cease-fire in 2012. *A tricky paradox* But responding to Republican attacks is only one part of Clinton's challenge to protect and defend her record. She is also undertaking the difficult dance of distancing herself from President Barack Obama's policies while promoting her own, especially as Republicans continue to tie Clinton to what they say is Obama's failed foreign policy. Clinton is more hawkish than Obama, but working for a President includes having to put your policy positions aside if they don't agree. With possibly higher political aspirations, Clinton must distinguish her positions from those of her former boss. She wrote a 596-page book to do just that. She used the opportunity to frame the narrative after the events happened, when context and the outcome of her decisions were apparent. Regarding Russia, in her memoir "Hard Choices," she placed herself in a category within the administration that had more modest expectations, which included progress on some priorities "the reset delivered." Clinton portrayed her role in negotiations between Israel and Palestinians as a constant broker able to maintain an honest relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as his and Obama's relationship "continued to deteriorate." Clinton wrote about phone calls she had with Netanyahu in which they "argued frequently" for more than an hour, "sometimes two." After failing to extend the freeze on settlement expansion, Clinton wrote, "I spent much of the rest of 2011 trying to keep the situation from deteriorating from deadlock into disaster. That wasn't easy." Now that Israel and the Palestinians are engaged in intense fighting, Clinton promoted her role as secretary of state while defending the President in her interview on CNN. "I think the President is doing what he can do to try to get a cease-fire and then see whether we can sort out some, you know, longer-term resolution," she said. But Aaron David Miller, with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, said Clinton's role at State is not necessarily an asset but definitely not a liability. If the world is relatively quiet by the time 2016 rolls around, foreign policy will be at the bottom of most Americans' priority list. Miller said he admires Clinton for her work in difficult circumstances under a president who didn't give her a lot of latitude. He said she was a good secretary of state who improved America's image around the world but that she isn't "in the category of slam dunk secretaries of state." "There is not a foreign policy crisis that is currently ongoing that you can directly blame Hillary Clinton for," he said. That doesn't mean her opponents won't try, though. *Slate blog: Weigel: “The Long Tail of ‘Dead Broke’” <http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2014/07/29/the_long_tail_of_dead_broke.html>* By David Weigel July 29, 2014, 11:58 a.m. EDT Yesterday, Fusion ran Jorge Ramos's interview with Hillary Clinton about her book, her wealth, and the pre-presidential campaign. Ramos took two hard swings at the wealth issue, and Republican tracking groups popped bottles when she stammered to talk about her "net worth." (She would only allow that her family was worth "millions.") And Ramos also asked if Clinton regretted telling Diane Sawyer that her family was "dead broke" upon leaving the White House. "I regret it," she said. "It was inartful. It was accurate, but we are so successful and so blessed by the success we had." Clinton has spent a whole month apologizing for that quote. Right after she gave it, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel gave her a chance to walk it back, and she did so: "That may have not been the most artful way of saying that, you know, Bill and I have gone through a lot of different phases in our lives." Weeks later, Bill Clinton attacked the "fabricated" narrative around "dead broke," reminding a CNN reporter that the Clintons were piled up with debt in January 2001. They've got to be sick of this by now. Maggie Haberman had it nailed three weeks ago: Hillary Clinton was "still raw over the partisan wars that hindered her husband’s legacy and left the couple with millions of dollars in legal debt." Her answer, as she told Ramos, was accurate, and it's baffling to her that this became a "gaffe." As she continued her tour, HarperCollins was printing up copies of Clinton, Inc, a tell-all by The Weekly Standard's Daniel Halper. On page 18, Halper recalls that in 2001 "the Clintons were broke, owing a fortune in legal fees from the many investigations into their personal lives," and that they had to be loaned $1.3 by Terry McAuliffe. Until just a month ago, that was how even conservatives remembered the Clintons' departure from the White House. But a conservative author could call the Clintons "broke." Hillary Clinton could not. In the sprawling world of Clinton defenders (who I spent some time with, for a story going up later) this is deeply annoying. *Washington Post blog: The Fix: “Hillary Clinton still hasn’t found a good answer to questions about her wealth” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/07/29/hillary-clinton-still-hasnt-found-a-good-answer-to-questions-about-her-wealth/>* By Chris Cillizza July 29, 2014, 11:57 a.m. EDT America Rising, a Republican-aligned opposition research group, blasted out a clip this morning of Hillary Clinton being asked about her wealth for the bajillionth time (NOTE: This is a rough estimate). This time the interviewer was Jorge Ramos, an anchor for Fusion, in an interview set to air Tuesday night. And, yet again, she seemed caught somewhat off guard in her answer. Here's the clip. And, here's the transcript of that exchange -- courtesy of David Ford at Fusion. Ramos: Do you know your net worth? Do you know how much money you have? Clinton: You know, within a range, yeah. I mean, we have two very nice houses which we're very proud of and not selling anytime soon so... Ramos: But millions… Clinton: Yeah. Yes, yes, indeed. Um, ok. Again, it just seems hard for me to believe that Clinton, who has been repeatedly battered in the media -- and by conservative critics -- about her comments about her wealth doesn't have a clearer answer to questions like the one posed by Ramos. Clinton, in response to Ramos' question about how much money she had exactly, could have easily said some version of this: "I don't have an exact number at the tip of my tongue, Jorge. It's plenty. We've been very blessed in our lives. But, I've also spent my entire life fighting for those less fortunate than Bill and I." In fact, Clinton said many of those things in response to Ramos' previous question about whether she regretted telling ABC's Diane Sawyer that she and her husband were "dead broke" when they left the White House. Here's how Clinton, effectively, handled that question: “I regret it. It was inartful. It was accurate but we are so successful and we're so blessed by the success we've had and my husband has worked incredibly hard. What I worry about is not my family. I worry about other families in our country who feel like they're running in place. They're not getting ahead or maybe they're falling backwards. And what I want to do and this is what Bill has always done from the very beginning of his public life is to try to create more ladders of opportunity for more Americans so that they can have the same opportunities that Bill and I have had.” While Clinton could have probably done without the "it was accurate" line, this answer is MUCH better than the one she went on to give Ramos in response to how rich she actually is. Politicians repeat themselves all the time. If Clinton had basically rephrased this first answer when responding to the second question, she would have been in great shape. It's more than just Clinton's words that aren't great in that second answer though. She seems visibly uncomfortable when asked directly about how much money she and her husband have. I'm not sure it merits the "Clinton stutters, still unwilling to own up to her wealth" description that America Rising uses in their blog post on the clip, but it's certainly a moment where you can tell Clinton is not entirely comfortable. (Adrienne Elrod, communications director for Correct The Record, an outside group designed to counter attacks on Clinton, described the America Rising clip as "another desperate, ineffective attempt by the right wing to distract from the fact that Hillary Clinton has spent her lifetime in public service lifting up the lives of middle-class families.") Being wealthy is not the problem for politicians. (The vast majority of people who run for president are millionaires, and many are far wealthier than that.) It's how comfortable (or not) they are talking about their wealth that gets them into trouble (or not). Mitt Romney is the ur-example of a politician who could just never talk about his wealth in a way that worked for him rather than against him. Every time someone asked about his affluence, he looked like he was undergoing a painful medical procedure as he answered. His awkwardness when talking about his money led to more questions about it. Which led to more awkwardness. And so on and so forth. It was a vicious cycle. To be clear, Clinton is not Mitt Romney. Romney's wealth -- and his inability to put to rest the idea that it was representative of a mindset in which he looked out for his wealthy friends first and foremost -- became the defining issue of the 2012 presidential campaign. Unlike Romney, Clinton's wealth largely comes from speeches and book sales not the venture capital business from which Romney made his fortune. And, Clinton can effectively make the case that she has spent the vast majority of the last two decades -- from her time as First Lady to her time in the Senate to her tenure as Secretary of State -- serving the American public first and foremost. Still, Clinton's struggles to answer what seem like pretty basic questions about her wealth remain baffling -- particularly for a politician as practiced in the art as she is. Until she finds three sentences (or so) to button up any/all questions about her wealth, those questions will keep coming. And that's not the way Clinton wants to run-up to her now all-but-certain presidential bid. *Fusion: “Hillary Clinton regrets saying she was 'dead broke,' feels blessed by success” <http://fusion.net/Leadership/video/hillary-clinton-regrets-dead-broke-feels-blessed-success-902398>* By America With Jorge Ramos July 28, 2014, 6:38 p.m. EDT It was the answer that spawned a wave of new questions. When Hillary Clinton told Diane Sawyer that she and Bill Clinton were "dead broke" when they left the White House, a debate began over whether the statement was really accurate and if the potential presidential candidacy of Hillary Clinton would be able to connect with the problems of average Americans -- given the hefty Clinton bank account today. In an interview with Fusion's Jorge Ramos, Hillary Clinton said that she regrets the comment. "It was accurate but we are so successful and we're so blessed by the success we've had and my husband has worked incredibly hard," Clinton said. "What I worry about is not my family. I worry about other families in our country who feel like they're running in place." Polls taken after the controversy have shown that most Americans still believe that Clinton can relate with everyday Americans and their problems. Clinton is sure to face continued inquiries about her wealth and taxes. Ramos asked Clinton if she knows her net worth. "You know, within a range, yeah," Clinton said. "I mean, we have two very nice houses which we're very proud of and not selling anytime soon." As the Washington Post's Dan Balz noted, the most important takeaway from the uproar may be that Hillary Clinton's political instincts look rusty, and she faces a broader challenge of turning her years of experience into a campaign that energizes voters. That's all if she announces that she's running in the first place, of course. *CNN: “Hillary Clinton on her 'dead broke' misstep: 'I regret it'” <http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2014/07/29/hillary-clinton-on-her-dead-broke-misstep-i-regret-it/>* By Dan Merica July 29, 2014, 11:40 a.m. EDT Hillary Clinton first opened the can of worms on her sizable wealth during the first interview of her book tour on June 9. Nearly two months later, Clinton is still being asked about it and tells Fusion that she regrets telling ABC's Diane Sawyer that her family was 'dead broke' when they left the White House in 2001. "Well, I regret it. It was in-artful," she told Fusion's Jorge Ramos in a portion of an interview posted Monday night. "It was accurate but we are so successful and we're so blessed by the success we've had and my husband has worked incredibly hard." Clinton then pivoted from her personal wealth and previous comments to what she hopes to do in the future for people struggling to get out of debt. "What I worry about is not my family. I worry about other families in our country who feel like they're running in place, they're not getting ahead or maybe they are falling backwards," Clinton said. "What I want to do–and this is what Bill has always done since the very beginning of his public life–is to try to create more ladders of opportunity for more Americans so that they can have the same opportunities that Bill and I have had." Clinton's comments about being “dead broke” and in debt in 2001 rang hollow to many given the fact the family had two massive book advances in the works, a sizable government pension, and the prospect of making millions on the speaking circuit in their future. Clinton has called her comments in-artful a number of times, including the day after her first interview. "That may have not been the most artful way of saying that you know Bill and I have gone through a lot of different phases in your lives," Clinton said at an event with Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Both Bill and Hillary Clinton, however, have accurately stood by the fact that their family was in debt after leaving the White House. According to financial disclosure forms, the Clintons had between $2.28 million to $10.6 million in debt in 2001. Former President Bill Clinton recently told an audience that that amount of debt "would qualify as being dead broke." But the Clintons didn't stay in debt for long. A CNN analysis of the family's financial records in early 2013 showed that Bill Clinton had earned $106 million from paid speeches since leaving the presidency behind. Bloomberg reported earlier this month that Hillary Clinton has earned $12 million speaking and writing since leaving the state department in 2013. Questions about Clinton's wealth have persisted for the last two months. Republicans seized on the talking point in an effort to paint the former secretary of state and possible 2016 presidential hopeful as out of touch with everyday Americans, and reporters have continued to press to see how much money the Clintons have made since leaving public service. Ramos, whose full interview with Clinton will air Tuesday night, also asked Clinton if she knew her net worth. "Within a range," Clinton said. "We have two very nice houses which we are very proud of." When asked if the figure was in the millions, Clinton responded, "Yes, indeed." *Huffington Post: “Hillary Clinton: 'I Regret' Saying We Were 'Dead Broke'” <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/07/29/hillary-clinton-regret_n_5630363.html>* By Paige Lavender July 29, 2014, 11:31 a.m. EDT Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she regrets saying she and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, were "dead broke" upon leaving the White House. "I regret it. It was inartful," Clinton said in an interview on Fusion’s “AMERICA with Jorge Ramos." "It was accurate but we are so successful and we're so blessed by the success we've had and my husband has worked incredibly hard." Clinton, who noted she and her husband are "indeed" worth millions, said she doesn't worry about her financial situation like she worries about families across the United States. "What I worry about is not my family. I worry about other families in our country who feel like they're running in place. They're not getting ahead or maybe they're falling backwards," Clinton said. "And what I want to do, and this is what Bill has always done from the very beginning of his public life, is to try to create more ladders of opportunity for more Americans so that they can have the same opportunities that Bill and I have had." *Washington Post blog: Post Politics: “Hillary Clinton on ‘dead broke’ comment: ‘I regret it’” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2014/07/29/hillary-clinton-on-dead-broke-comment-i-regret-it/>* By Sean Sullivan July 29, 2014, 11:46 a.m. EDT Former secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton says she regrets saying that she and husband Bill Clinton left the White House "dead broke" in 2001. "I regret it. It was inartful. It was accurate. But, we are so successful and we are so blessed by the success we've had. And my husband has worked incredibly hard," Hillary Clinton told Fusion TV's Jorge Ramos in an interview Monday. Clinton told ABC's Diane Sawyer in a June interview, "We came out of the White House not only dead broke, but in debt." The former first lady cited legal fees that she and her husband had to pay during his White House tenure. Clinton said she worries about the economic outlook of "other families in our country who feel like they are running in place," not her own family. The former secretary of state said she knows her net worth "within a range" but declined to offer a specific estimate. "But millions?" Ramos asked her. Clinton responded: "Yes, indeed." *New York Daily News: “Hillary Clinton says she knows her net worth ‘within a range’” <http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/hillary-clinton-net-worth-sort-article-1.1883962>* By Leslie Larson July 29, 2014, 11:35 a.m. EDT [Subtitle:] The former secretary of state — who has already landed herself in trouble over comments about her wealth — says she owns 'two very nice houses' but doesn’t elaborate further. Hillary Clinton stopped short of asking "what difference does it make?" when asked Monday if she knew her exact net worth. "You know, within a range, yeah," she told Fusion TV's Jorge Ramos when he inquired if the former secretary of state knew the sum of her assets. "I mean, we have two very nice houses which we're very proud of and not selling anytime soon," a slightly annoyed Clinton added. Clinton discussed her new book "Hard Choices" and also heaped scorn on former Vice President Dick Cheney - who co-authored a Wall Street Journal op-ed in June criticizing President Obama's policy in Iraq. "He should've been talking about himself, shouldn't he?" Clinton said of George W. Bush's chief cheerleader for the 2003 invasion. "I don't know why he's saying what he's saying, and clearly we don't need that kind of vitriol and finger pointing." Then Sen. Clinton (D-N.Y.) supported W. Bush's Iraq invasion in 2003 but upon reflection calls her support "a mistake." "I gave (President Bush) the benefit of the doubt in area where I should not have, and then the initial decision was wrong, and then the follow-up that they did inside Iraq made it even worse." *The Hill blog: Briefing Room: “Clinton declines to detail net worth” <http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/213651-hillary-clinton-declines-to-specify-her-net-worth>* By Rebecca Shabad July 29, 2014, 10:53 a.m. EDT Hillary Clinton declined to specify her net worth in an interview, sidestepping questions about her family’s wealth ahead of a possible 2016 presidential run. In the interview with Fusion posted Monday evening, Clinton, considered the Democratic frontrunner if she decides to run, was asked how much money she has. “Ummm, you know within a range,” Clinton said. “You know we have two very nice houses that we’re very proud of, which we’re not selling anytime soon.” “But millions?” the interviewer pressed. “Yeah, yes, indeed,” confirmed Clinton. Clinton came under fire in early June, as she launched a national book tour for her memoir Hard Choices, for claiming that she and former President Bill Clinton left the White House “dead broke” and “in debt.” She told Fusion she regrets making those statements. “I regret it, it was inartful,” she said. “It was accurate but we are so successful and we're so blessed by the success we've had and my husband has worked incredibly hard. “What I worry about is not my family,” she continued. “I worry about other families in our country who feel like they're running in place. They’re not getting ahead.” Clinton told ABC News’s Diane Sawyer last month that her family left the White House in 2001 “dead broke.” "We came out of the White House not only dead broke, but in debt," Clinton said. "We had no money when we got there, and we struggled to, you know, piece together the resources for mortgages, for houses, for Chelsea's education. You know, it was not easy." The day after the interview aired, she clarified and also defended her remarks, claiming she and Bill are “obviously blessed.” The former president later came to his wife’s defense, saying that she was not “out of touch.” *Fusion: “Hillary Clinton on 2016: 'I think there will probably be many candidates'” <http://fusion.net/Leadership/video/hillary-clinton-2016-candidates-902453>* By America With Jorge Ramos July 29, 2014, 12:21 a.m. EDT Many observers think it's a foregone conclusion that Hillary Clinton will get the nod in the 2016 Democratic primary. Leaving aside her coyness on whether she will actually run, Fusion's Jorge Ramos asked Clinton whether she thinks her party would benefit from a competitive primary. "Well, I think there will probably be many candidates," Clinton said. "I mean, I'm somebody who believes anybody can run." Clinton certainly remembers President Obama's sudden rise from one-term senator to Democratic front-runner during in 2008, but she still sees the value of the primary gauntlet. Competitive primaries can often help energize a party's base around a candidate and steel their campaign for the general election, provided the primary winner avoids gaffes and extreme positions won't sit well with crucial swing voters. Such a political trial would be a welcome part of her potential campaign, Clinton told Ramos. "I'm not sure I'm going to run but if I do, I think competition is healthy and if people want to get in and want to be in a primary, more power to them," Clinton said. *Fusion: “Hillary Clinton disses Cheney, says 'Iraq was a mistake'” <http://fusion.net/Leadership/video/hillary-clinton-disses-cheney-iraq-mistake-902564>* By America With Jorge Ramos July 28, 2014, 6:46 p.m. EDT In her new book, Hillary Clinton writes that she got Iraq wrong. Her 2008 supporters may wonder what took her so long. "Iraq was a mistake," Clinton said. "I gave [President Bush] the benefit of the doubt in area where I should not have, and then the initial decision was wrong, and then the follow-up that they did inside Iraq made it even worse." Ramos also asked Clinton about Dick Cheney's Wall Street Journal op-ed, written with his daughter Liz, criticizing President Obama's policies in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the wider Middle East, saying that "rarely has a U.S. president been so wrong about so much at the expense of so many." "He should’ve been talking about himself, shouldn’t he?" Clinton said. "I don’t know why he’s saying what he’s saying, and clearly we don’t need that kind of vitriol and finger pointing." "One of the things we’ve lost over the last few years is that idea where we’re going to have our differences but when we face problems, whether they’re humanitarian problems, terrorist problems, whatever they might be, we need to come together and work together and we need to have a nonpartisan approach," Clinton continued. "And he keeps trying to inject a personal and partisan approach where it doesn’t belong." *Mediaite: “Hillary Hits Cheney for Obama Criticism: ‘Should’ve Been Talking About Himself’” <http://www.mediaite.com/tv/hillary-hits-cheney-for-obama-criticism-shouldve-been-talking-about-himself/>* By Matt Wilstein July 29, 2014, 9:59 a.m. EDT In another preview from her interview with Jorge Ramos, set to air tonight on Fusion, Hillary Clinton offered up a strong defense of President Barack Obama in the face of criticism from former Vice President Dick Cheney. In response to Cheney’s assertion about Obama that “rarely has a U.S. president been so wrong about so much at the expense of so many,” Clinton said, “He should’ve been talking about himself, shouldn’t he?” “I don’t know why he’s saying what he’s saying, and clearly we don’t need that kind of vitriol and finger pointing,” Clinton continued. “One of the things we’ve lost over the last few years is that idea where we’re going to have our differences but when we face problems, whether they’re humanitarian problems, terrorist problems, whatever they might be, we need to come together and work together and we need to have a nonpartisan approach. And he keeps trying to inject a personal and partisan approach where it doesn’t belong.” On the issue of Iraq, Clinton reiterated the regret she expresses in her book Hard Choices. “I made a mistake,” she said, adding that she gave President George W. Bush “the benefit of the doubt in area where I should not have, and then the initial decision was wrong, and then the follow-up that they did inside Iraq made it even worse.” Watch video below, via Fusion: [VIDEO] *Troy Record (N.Y.): “Crowds round the corner in wait for Hillary Clinton arrival at Northshire Bookstore” <http://www.troyrecord.com/general-news/20140729/crowds-round-the-corner-in-wait-for-hillary-clinton-arrival-at-northshire-bookstore>* By Paul Post July 29, 2014, 10:42 a.m. EDT People from Albany to Manchester, Vt. got up early and drove more than an hour Tuesday for a chance to meet former First Lady, U.S. Senator and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Hundreds of people formed a long line around the block, from Northshire Bookstore where Clinton is signing her book, “Hard Choices,” all the way down Caroline Street to Maple Avenue. For most people, making time to meet the possible next president of the United States wasn’t a hard choice at all. “I think she’s wonderful; she’d be an awesome president,” said Molly Zeif, of Manchester, who is currently studying political science and international relations. Mary Browne, of Berne, said she left home at 7 a.m. to meet Clinton. “I’m 75,” she said. “Let’s not waste time. If she’s going to be our next president I’d like to say hi. I’ve met every one of them, starting with Jimmy Carter. I worked on a Habitat for Humanity project with him in South Dakota.” Browne said she believes Clinton would make an exceptional president. “She’ll have a balanced outlook on things,” she said. “It’s exciting to think of a woman in the presidency.” However, not everyone agrees. Two protestors marched down the opposite side Caroline Street, from the book-signing line, holding posters that read: “Benghazi: We will not forget” and “Hillary: Whitewater Witch.” “She’s going to be our next president,” a Clinton supporter yelled back. Saratoga Springs police and Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office deputies patrolled the area on foot and in cars. Of course, Clinton has her own security, too. “Mrs. Clinton and Secret Service come as a package deal,” city police Lt. Sean Briscoe said. Only people who purchased books – $29.95 apiece – were allowed to enter the store for Clinton’s signing. First they had to stand in line for a wrist band; then wait to get their book signed. Clinton did not hold a press conference and visitors were not permitted to engage her in conversation or ask questions. Josh Vellozzi, of Albany, made a special trip to Saratoga Springs a few weeks ago to buy “Hard Choices” and came back again Tuesday to meet its author. “She’s going to be the next president; that’s a good enough reason,” he said. “And to be around a powerful woman, too.” “I’m hoping she runs,” said Jeff McLellan, of Saratoga Springs. “It’s really an opportunity to meet with a political person of national prominence.” Teachers Laura Lewis and Danielle Lambert said they can’t wait to share their experience with students this fall. “Its’ really exciting,” said Lewis, who teaches ninth grade world history at Schuylerville. Lambert, of Saratoga Springs, teaches social studies in Gloversville. “It’s a huge opportunity to go back to our classes and say, ‘You, too, could meet a world leader,’ ” she said. *Washington Free Beacon: “Allen West: ‘Allow Israel To Crush Hamas’” <http://freebeacon.com/national-security/allen-west-allow-israel-to-crush-hamas/>* By Larry O’Connor July 29, 2014, 10:27 a.m. EDT Former congressman Lt. Col. Allen West says the United States “should allow Israel to crush Hamas.” Appearing on WMAL radio in Washington, D.C., West told co-host Brian Wilson and Larry O’Connor, “We should sit down with … all those who understand that this move of radical Islamism in the Middle East has to be crushed.” Leveling harsh criticism on President Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry, West questioned whether the world knows whose side we are on in the Middle East. “He has been an absolute catastrophe,” West said with regard to Kerry. “President Obama, I don’t understand who he sides with. We have fled Libya because the ‘militia and rebels’ who we supported have now caused us to get out of Libya because they are Islamists,” West continued. “He supported the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and now that General el-Sisi has gotten rid of the Muslim Brotherhood, he does not want to support Egypt.” “We are on the wrong side in the Middle East,” he concluded. “Israel sees it.” West’s criticism of the Obama administration didn’t stop at their policies toward Israel. He turned his focus on our crumbling influence in Europe and Russia’s continued aggression in that region. “A person like Hillary Clinton should not be in the White House because she does not want to take leadership role,” West said when speaking about the former secretary of state’s presidential ambitions. “Maybe she wants to give Vladimir Putin another little toy box with a red button on top of it and say ‘hey, let’s play reset again.” “We need to have someone like a Ronald Reagan to stand up at a Brandenburg Gate and say ‘Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall’ because right now Vladimir Putin is attempting to rebuild it.”
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