The Commercial Appeal

Clinton won’t apologize for emails

- By Catherine Lucey

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday she does not need to apologize for using a private email account and server while at the State Department because “what I did was allowed.”

In an interview with The Associated Press during a Labor Day campaign swing through Iowa, the front-runner for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination also said the lingering questions about her email practices while serving as President Barack Obama’s first secretary of state have not damaged her campaign.

“Not at all. It’s a distractio­n, certainly,” Clinton said. “But it hasn’t in any way affected the plan for our campaign, the efforts we’re making to organize here in Iowa and elsewhere in the country. And I still feel very confident about the organizati­on and the message that my campaign is putting out.”

Yet even in calling the inquiry into how she used email as the nation’s top diplomat a distractio­n, Clinton played down how it has affected her personally as a candidate.

“As the person who has been at the center of it, not very much,” Clinton said. “I have worked really hard this summer, sticking to my game plan about how I wanted to sort of reintroduc­e myself to the Amer-

ican people.”

As she has often said in recent weeks, Clinton told AP it would have been a “better choice” for her to use separate email accounts for her personal and public business. “I’ve also tried to not only take responsibi­lity, because it was my decision, but to be as transparen­t as possible,” Clinton said.

Part of that effort, Clinton said, is answering any questions about her email “in as many different settings as I can.” She noted she has sought for nearly a year to testify before Congress about the issue, and that she is now slated to do so in October.

The one-on-one interview with AP was the second for Clinton in the past four days. On Friday, she did not apologize for using a private email system when asked directly by NBC, “Are you sorry?” Asked Monday by the AP why she won’t directly apologize, Clinton said: “What I did was allowed. It was allowed by the State Department. The State Department has confirmed that.

“I did not send or receive any informatio­n marked classified,” Clinton said. “I take the responsibi­lities of handling classified materials very seriously and did so.”

Clinton’s efforts to address the email issue come as her chief rival for the Democratic nomination, independen­t Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, exits the summer surging in still-quite-early public opinion polls and drawing massive crowds to his rallies and events.

Asked for an example of how she differs with Sanders on policy, Clinton demurred. “I’m going to keep laying out what I would do as president, what I stand for. ... I’m very much looking forward to the debates that we’re going to have and we’ll have plenty of time to draw those contrasts.”

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, posing at the annual Hawkeye Labor Council AFL-CIO Labor Day picnic Monday in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, called the email controvers­y “a distractio­n.”
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, posing at the annual Hawkeye Labor Council AFL-CIO Labor Day picnic Monday in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, called the email controvers­y “a distractio­n.”

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