Chattanooga Times Free Press

Clinton aides suggested email jokes

- BY LAURIE KELLMAN

WASHINGTON — Hacked emails from the personal account of Hillary Clinton’s top campaign official show her aides considered inserting jokes about her private email server into her speeches at several events — and at least one joke made it into her remarks.

“I love it,” she told a dinner in Iowa on August 14, 2015, noting she had opened an online account with Snapchat, which deletes posts automatica­lly. “Those messages disappear all by themselves.”

The crack scored a laugh from the audience, but the issue was plenty serious. About a month earlier, news broke of an FBI investigat­ion into whether some of the emails that passed through Clinton’s unsecured server contained classified informatio­n. Ultimately, the agency criticized Clinton for being reckless with classified informatio­n but declined to prosecute her.

But hacked emails of John Podesta, Clinton’s top campaign official, show the Democratic candidate and her team were slow to grasp the seriousnes­s of the controvers­y, initially believing it might blow over after one weekend. It did not.

Almost from the moment The Associated Press on March 3, 2015, called the campaign for comment on its breaking story that Clinton had been running a private server to five months later, campaign aides sought venues on Clinton’s schedule where she could show some humor over the issue, according to the hacked emails.

In a series of emails on March 3, 2015 — the same day The Associated Press called for comment — staffers tossed around the idea of making jokes about the emails at a dinner hosted by EMILY’s List, a political action committee, that evening.

Later, Clinton’s director of speechwrit­ing, Dan Schwerin, shared a draft of a speech for the annual Iowa Wing Ding dinner in an email to colleagues, asking for input.

“I look forward to your feedback. (Also, if anyone has a funny email/server joke, please send it my way.),” he wrote on Aug. 13.

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