The Free Press Journal

Was victim of broad assumption that I was going to win: Clinton

- LALIT K JHA

Hillary Clinton has blamed her unexpected defeat in the US presidenti­al elections on a variety of factors including Russian meddling, her own party, the FBI, the media and "a very broad assumption that I was going to win".

Clinton, in a lengthy interview at a tech conference in California, for the first time went into detail about the reasons behind her loss to Republican Donald Trump.

She said she took responsibi­lity for every decision she made during her campaign, "but that's not why I lost."

The former secretary of state said Russian interferen­ce in the election and the "weaponisin­g" of informatio­n and fake news were among the key reasons behind her defeat. She said it was likely that Trump's associates had a hand in it.

"The Russians, in my opinion, and based on the intel and counter-intel people I've talked to, could not have known how best to weaponise that informatio­n unless they had been guided," Clinton said. Some of those people helping the Russians, she said, had access to "polling and data informatio­n."

Asked who those persons could be, Clinton said: "We're getting more informatio­n about all of the contacts between Trump campaign officials and Trump associates with Russians before, during and after the election. So I hope that we'll get enough informatio­n to be able to answer that question."

"I'm leaning Trump," she added. "I think it's pretty hard not to."

The 69-year-old Democrat said her party had fallen behind the Republican­s in using technology and data to target voters. She also attacked the media for covering her e-mail controvers­y "like it was Pearl Harbour" and not following up on the Russian interferen­ce. "At some point it sort of bleeds into misogyny," she said.

Clinton, the first woman presidenti­al candidate for a major political party in the US, was widely expected to win the November 8 election as per poll projection­s and political pundits.

The high expectatio­ns for her candidacy also did her in, she felt. "I was the victim of a very broad assumption I was going to win."

Clinton also pointed to ex-FBI director James Comey, who was recently fired by President Donald Trump, for re-opening an investigat­ion into her use of a private email account and server, just over a week before the election.

"Remember, Comey was more than happy to talk about my emails, but he wouldn't talk about the investigat­ion of the Russians. So people went to vote on November 8th having no idea that there was an active counter intelligen­ce investigat­ion going on of the Trump campaign," she said.

Clinton said she always thought the election would be a close affair, but she ended up winning three million more votes than Trump. "And let's just be honest, people who have a set of expectatio­ns about who should be president and what a president looks like, they're going to be much more skeptical and critical of somebody who doesn't look like and talk like and sound like everybody else who's been president," she said.

Trump was quick to slam Clinton for her comments.

"Crooked Hillary Clinton now blames everybody but herself, refuses to say she was a terrible candidate. Hits Facebook & even Dems & DNC," he tweeted.

 ?? AFP ??
AFP

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