The Daily Telegraph

Trump and Clinton in health records clash

- By Ruth Sherlock in Washington

Hillary Clinton, 70, has rejected a challenge by Donald Trump, 68, for the two candidates to release their medical records, amid an escalating row over the health of the nominees. “I think that both candidates, Crooked Hillary and myself, should release detailed medical records. I have no problem in doing so! Hillary?” Mr Trump wrote on social media. He has made unsubstant­iated remarks about Mrs Clinton medical history and current health in campaign speeches.

HILLARY CLINTON has rejected a challenge by Donald Trump for the two candidates to release their medical records, amid an escalating row over the health of the elderly nominees.

Mr Trump and Mrs Clinton, aged 70 and 68 respective­ly, would both be among the oldest politician­s to assume the presidency. “I think that both candidates, Crooked Hillary and myself, should release detailed medical records. I have no problem in doing so! Hillary?” Mr Trump wrote on social media.

Mr Trump has made unsubstant­iated remarks about Mrs Clinton’s medical condition in campaign speeches, frequently asserting that the former first lady does not have the “stamina” to be America’s commander in chief.

Mrs Clinton was hospitalis­ed in 2012 when doctors discovered a blood clot after suffering from concussion.

But Trump surrogates – people chosen by the campaign to speak on his behalf – have told voters that Mrs Clinton suffered a stroke and has seizures.

The Clinton campaign has dismissed the attacks as “deranged conspiracy theories”.

A spokespers­on for the Clinton campaign said yesterday that they would not rise to Mr Trump’s challenge, noting that Mrs Clinton had already released more detail on her health than the Republican nominee.

Last month Mrs Clinton published a two-page letter from her doctor, who pronounced the Democratic candidate to be in “excellent physical condition and fit to serve as President of the United States”.

Mr Trump’s attack came after the Clinton campaign suggested that he had falsified his own certificat­ion of health.

“We have some questions about this letter from Donald Trump’s doctor,” the campaign wrote, with a 13-point takedown in which they implied the document had been written by, or presided over, by Mr Trump.

The letter, which Mr Trump published last year, is a four paragraph assessment that proclaims the 70-yearold’s health “astonishin­gly excellent” and asserts that he would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency”.

Harold Bornstein, Mr Trump’s doctor, last week admitted that he had written the letter in “five minutes” and that he had specifical­ly chosen language that he knew Mr Trump would like.

Despite the row, both presidenti­al candidates have provided the American public with less medical informatio­n than is customary in a presidenti­al campaign.

The row came as Mrs Clinton faced fresh questions over whether her office gave preferenti­al treatment to donors of her family’s charity while she was secretary of state.

A “firewall” was supposed to have been in place to ensure that the Clinton Foundation, which distribute­s hundreds of millions in funds domestical­ly and overseas, remained completely separate from Mrs Clinton’s role as America’s top diplomat.

But a set of state department emails, obtained by Citizens United, a conservati­ve group, and published by ABC News, provided fresh evidence of direct contact between the two institutio­ns.

The emails, which were revealed as part of a public records lawsuit, show Huma Abedin, Mrs Clinton’s closest adviser, coordinati­ng with Doug Band, who was then a top executive at the Clinton Foundation, to secure favours for donors. In one email chain in December 2010, Mr Band suggested that Mrs Abedin include three donors, who had all given several million dollars to the foundation, in a state department lunch with Hu Jintao, the then Chinese president.

Nearly two weeks later, Mr Band followed up on email, specifical­ly requesting Judith Rodin, the president of the Rockefelle­r Foundation, and one of the three named donors be seated at the table of Joe Biden, the vice president. “I’ll ask,” Mrs Abedin replied. The correspond­ence follows another set of emails published last week showing the foundation lobbying Mrs Abedin on behalf of donors including rock star Bono and a Bahraini prince.

The Clinton campaign has rejected the suggestion of foul play, calling the allegation­s political attacks.

 ??  ?? Clinton: her camp calls Trump’s health allegation­s ‘deranged conspiracy theories’
Clinton: her camp calls Trump’s health allegation­s ‘deranged conspiracy theories’

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