Chorus grows for Clintons to shutter
charitable foundation
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[August 25, 2016]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Clinton
Foundation, the family philanthropy of Democratic U.S. presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton, should shut down or transfer operations to
another charity despite its good work to avoid perceptions of
"pay-for-play," The Washington Post and USA Today said in editorials on
Wednesday.
Despite plans announced earlier this week to reorganize the Clinton
Foundation if Hillary Clinton wins the Nov. 8 election, USA Today said
the global charity must close for the Democratic candidate to avoid any
appearance of unethical ties.
"The only way to eliminate the odor surrounding the foundation is to
wind it down and put it in mothballs, starting today, and transfer its
important charitable work to another large American charity such as the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation," the paper's editorial board wrote.
The Gates Foundation declined to share its thoughts on the idea. "We
really can’t speculate about the future of the Clinton Foundation," Amy
Enright, a Gates Foundation spokeswoman, wrote in an email.
The newspaper also published an editorial by Donna Shalala, the Clinton
Foundation's president, in which she argued that the foundation helps
millions of people, especially in developing countries, and so scaling
down its work was not simple.
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"This suggestion ignores how global philanthropy works, and the reality
that there are human beings around the world who would be affected by
these decisions," Shalala wrote.
The foundation announced on Monday that it would stop accepting at least
some foreign and corporate donations if Clinton wins the presidency and
that her husband, former President Bill Clinton, would resign from the
foundation's board.
The Washington Post said in its editorial that these changes were
insufficient and should have happened sooner, before Hillary Clinton
served as secretary of state from 2009 to 2013.
"The foundation undoubtedly does worthwhile work," the Post's editorial
board wrote. "Should Ms. Clinton win, all of that work and all of the
foundation's assets should be spun off to an organization with no ties
to the first family." The Clintons' daughter, Chelsea Clinton, remains
on the board of the charity, the full name of which is the Bill, Hillary
& Chelsea Clinton Foundation.
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Hillary Clinton waves to the crowd with her husband Bill at in
Pittsburgh. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
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The call from two leading U.S. news organizations came as Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump and other members of his party
have taken to calling for a special prosecutor to investigate what
they say is corruption. The Clinton campaign has dismissed such
calls as groundless political smears.
Republicans see attacking Clinton over the organization as a way of
unifying conservatives divided over Trump, who has never held
elected officer and who often deviates from conservative orthodoxy.
Democrats hope the controversy comes too late to make a difference
in the election, in which most national public opinion polls show
Clinton ahead.
The foundation has said Hillary Clinton was not involved with the
group while serving as the nation's top diplomat. The Clinton
campaign denies Clinton ever took any action because of donations to
the foundation.
Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook told MSNBC on Wednesday that
Clinton does not have a conflict of interest with charitable work,
and pointed to her rival's business interests with Wall Street,
China and Russia.
"Donald Trump and his bottom line and his networks are directly
connected to all kinds of international entities ... and nobody's
asking him to disclose or divest," Mook said of the New York
businessman. Trump has responded by saying it is Clinton, not he,
who has close ties to Russia.
(Writing by Susan Heavey; Additional reporting by Mohammad Zargham;
Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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