Clinton Foundation health project still
mulling foreign donations
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[August 20, 2016]
By Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The largest program of
the Clinton Foundation, the family philanthropy of U.S. Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, is still weighing whether to
continue accepting foreign donations should Clinton be elected, a
spokeswoman said on Friday.
It was reported on Thursday that the Clinton Foundation would no longer
receive donations from foreigners or corporations if Clinton wins the
election in November, an effort to defuse criticism that donors to the
globe-straddling charity might inappropriately seek White House favors
in return.
But representatives of the charities confirmed on Friday that the new
guidelines would only apply to a small portion of the foundation's
activities, including its work on climate change and some of its work on
economic development.
The Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), the foundation's flagship
project credited with reducing the cost of life-saving HIV medicines in
the developing world, is yet to decide if it will similarly introduce
new limits on donors.
"CHAI is a separate legal entity from the Clinton Foundation with its
own Board," Regan Lachapelle, a CHAI spokeswoman, said in an email. "The
CHAI Board will be meeting soon to determine its next steps."
CHAI accounts for nearly 60 percent of the $250 million the foundation
spent in 2014, according to the foundation's most recent annual report
posted on its website. CHAI files separate tax returns from the Clinton
Foundation, but is included in the foundation's audited expenses, annual
reports and other promotional literature.
Similarly, a Canadian offshoot of the foundation, the Clinton Giustra
Enterprise Partnership (Canada), or CGEP, will not be bound by the
foundation's donor limits, but said it will instead become an
"independent entity" if Hillary Clinton becomes president.
CGEP, which says Canadian law prevents it from disclosing its donors'
names without their permission, was founded by Bill Clinton, the former
U.S. president, and Canadian businessman Frank Giustra in 2007 to
improve work opportunities for people in poor countries.
"If Secretary Clinton wins the election, we plan to spin CGEP into an
independent entity to continue this important work," Giustra said in a
statement. "President Clinton and I believe it is important that we
continue the work of alleviating poverty around the world." The
statement did not specify Bill Clinton's future role.
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Clinton Foundation water bottles are seen for sale at the Clinton
Museum Store in Little Rock, Arkansas, United States April 27, 2015.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
A spokesman for Clinton's campaign declined to answer questions
about the foundation. The charities have received praise from public
health experts for their work alleviating the spread of HIV, and
Clinton's campaign has said any donor expecting political favors in
return would be misguided.
The family renamed their foundation the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea
Clinton Foundation in 2013, although Hillary Clinton stepped down
from her board position last year after announcing her presidential
bid. Her husband and daughter remain board members.
In 2008, Hillary Clinton signed an ethics agreement governing her
family's charities in order to become President Barack Obama's
secretary of state. She promised that her family's charities would
name all their donors on an annual basis and seek clearance from the
U.S. State Department before accepting new donations from foreign
government money. Last year, the charities said they did not comply
with these promises, blaming "oversights."
On Tuesday, the Boston Globe said in an editorial that the
foundation should shut down. "Even if they've done nothing illegal,
the foundation will always look too much like a conflict of interest
for comfort," the editorial board wrote.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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