Will book derail Clinton’s campaign?

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton holds a round table discussion with employees at Whitney Brothers during a campaign stop in Keene. Picture: Jim Cole

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton holds a round table discussion with employees at Whitney Brothers during a campaign stop in Keene. Picture: Jim Cole

Published Apr 21, 2015

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Washington - US Democrat Hillary Clinton, on the 2016 presidential campaign trail Monday, faced unsettling new accusations of financial conflicts of interest involving her family's philanthropic foundation, including some in a new book.

“We will be subjected to all kinds of distractions and attacks,” Clinton told a small group of reporters when asked directly about allegations in the book, “Clinton Cash,” which will be published May 5.

The book “Clinton Cash: The Untold Story of How and Why Foreign Governments and Businesses Helped Make Bill and Hillary Rich” claims foreign donors who gave money to the Clinton Foundation had special treatment while she was US Secretary of State.

Individuals and companies who offered her husband Bill lucrative speaking gigs were also given favours, it is alleged.

The book, out next month, is seen as the most highly anticipated attack on Mrs Clinton since she announced she is running for president in next year’s election.

The New York Times and the Washington Post have agreed to serialise the claims.

Author Peter Schweizer claims it will show a “pattern of financial transactions involving the Clintons that occurred contemporaneous with favourable US policy decisions benefiting those providing the funds”, the New York Times reported.

“I don't know what they'd talk about if I weren't in the race,” she said of Republicans, whose main 2016 challengers also descended on New Hampshire this past weekend in early efforts to woo voters.

“But I am in the race, and hopefully we'll get on to the issues, and I look forward to that.”

Clinton has spoken only rarely with the media since hitting the campaign trail last week in Iowa, opting instead for small, intimate roundtables at coffee shops, community colleges and small businesses, with just a handful of reporters on hand.

Her first campaign rally and speech is expected in May.

But Republicans on Monday were seizing on a report that the new book authorised by Peter Schweizer will detail incriminating findings related to foreign contributions to the foundation founded by former president Bill Clinton in 2001.

Several donations from foreign governments, apparently made to the foundation during Hillary Clinton's 2009-2013 tenure as secretary of state, are put under the microscope in the book, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times.

“We will see a pattern of financial transactions involving the Clintons that occurred contemporaneous with favourable US policy decisions benefiting those providing the funds,” the daily quotes Schweizer as writing.

He also reportedly writes that the hundreds of major Clinton transactions with foreign governments have added “millions” of dollars to the family's personal fortune.

Democratic groups have preemptively labelled Schweizer, a former speech-writing consultant to former president George Bush and advisor to 2008 vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, as an activist penning a conservative hit job on Clinton.

AFP and Daily Mail

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