Times Colonist

Clinton Foundation now an issue in campaign

Former president lauds accomplish­ments; Trump says he’d have prosecutor probe it

- KEN THOMAS

WASHINGTON — Former U.S. president Bill Clinton defended the work of his charitable foundation Monday, telling supporters that it had “improved millions of lives around the world” but needs to change if his wife, Hillary Clinton, wins the White House.

The former president outlined the Clinton Foundation’s accomplish­ments and planned shift in scope in an email to about 500,000 supporters.

Hours earlier, Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump called the foundation “the most corrupt enterprise in political history,” adding: “It must be shut down immediatel­y.”

He bore down again during a speech later in Akron, Ohio, telling a crowd that if elected, he would have a special prosecutor appointed to investigat­e the foundation.

Bill Clinton announced last week that the foundation will no longer accept contributi­ons from foreign government­s and corporatio­ns if his wife, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee, is elected.

The ex-president, who oversees the foundation with daughter Chelsea Clinton, also said he would hold his final Clinton Global Initiative meeting next month in New York regardless of the election’s outcome.

“Since Hillary began her presidenti­al campaign in 2015, Chelsea and I have made it clear that the work the Clinton Foundation started should continue if Hillary is elected, but that changes would be necessary,” Bill Clinton said in the email.

“While it would be presumptiv­e to assume a victory in November, now that Hillary is her party’s nominee, it would be irresponsi­ble not to plan for it.”

The changes aim to address criticism from Republican­s and some Democrats that the foundation has created a significan­t conflict of interest as Hillary Clinton seeks the presidency. While Trump has donated to the foundation previously, he has charged Hillary Clinton with creating a “pay-for-play” scheme at the U.S. State Department through the work of the foundation.

Defending the foundation’s mission, Bill Clinton pointed to more than 11.5 million people in more than 70 countries who have gained access to HIV/AIDS drugs at a much lower cost and millions of American students who have healthier food and more physicaled­ucation options because of the foundation. He also noted the foundation’s work around the globe, including efforts to help improve Haiti’s sustainabi­lity, foster job training in Latin America and support farmers in East Africa.

The ex-president said in the event of another Clinton presidency, the foundation’s work, funding and his role in it would raise questions that would need to be resolved “in a way that keeps the good work going while eliminatin­g legitimate concerns about potential conflicts of interest.”

If Hillary Clinton is elected, the former president said the foundation would accept contributi­ons only from U.S. citizens, permanent residents and U.S.-based independen­t foundation­s, whose names would continue to be disclosed on a quarterly basis. He said the official name would be changed from the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation to the Clinton Foundation. And he said he would step down from the board and no longer raise money for it.

Bill Clinton said that much of the foundation’s internatio­nal activities would be transition­ed to other organizati­ons to continue that type of work.

John Podesta, the chairman of the Clinton campaign, said in a statement on Monday that the foundation had laid out “unpreceden­ted steps” that it would take if Hillary Clinton is elected.

He urged Trump to “come clean” with the electorate about the business mogul’s “complex network of for-profit businesses” that are in debt to big banks, the Bank of China and business groups with ties to Russia.

Meanwhile, in an appearance Monday on the late-night talk show Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Hillary Clinton pushed back against charges that she’s physically unfit for the White House.

The Democratic presidenti­al candidate said the accusation­s are part of a “wacky strategy” and an “alternativ­e reality” that’s not focused on the kinds of issues that are most important to voters.

“I do feel sometimes like this campaign has entered into an alternativ­e universe,” she said. “I have to step into the alternativ­e reality and, you know, answer questions about, am I alive, how much longer will I be alive, and the like.”

Clinton said she considers Trump “healthy as a horse.”

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER, AP ?? Democratic U.S. presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton talks with host Jimmy Kimmel during a break in the taping of Monday’s Jimmy Kimmel Live! late-night talk show in Los Angeles.
CAROLYN KASTER, AP Democratic U.S. presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton talks with host Jimmy Kimmel during a break in the taping of Monday’s Jimmy Kimmel Live! late-night talk show in Los Angeles.

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