Transcripts of Clinton's Wall Street
talks released in new Wikileaks dump
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[October 17, 2016]
By Emily Stephenson and Luciana Lopez
(Reuters) - U.S. Democratic presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton's full remarks to several Wall Street
audiences appeared to become public on Saturday when the controversial
transparency group Wikileaks dumped its latest batch of hacked emails.
The documents showed comments by Clinton during question-and-answer
sessions with Goldman Sachs Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein and Tim
O'Neill, the bank's head of investment management, at three separate
events in 2013 in Arizona, New York and South Carolina.
Some excerpts of Clinton's speeches had already been released. For more
than a week, Wikileaks has published in stages what it says are hacked
emails from the account of John Podesta, Clinton's campaign chairman.
Clinton's campaign has declined to verify the emails. Goldman Sachs did
not immediately provide any comment on Saturday.
Clinton came under fire for months for not releasing full details of her
paid speeches to big business audiences, as opponents accused her of a
cozy relationship with bankers and other members of the U.S. financial
system.
The excerpts that have surfaced so far angered voters who backed
Clinton's former Democratic opponent, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, who
endorsed her after losing the party's primary.
Few of these voters are expected to vote for Republican nominee Donald
Trump, who is dealing with his own larger scandal after the release last
week of a 2005 video in which he bragged about making unwanted sexual
advances toward women.
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Democratic presidential
nominee Hillary Clinton greets people at a campaign office in
Seattle, Washington, U.S. October 14, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
But Democratic strategists worry that disappointment with Clinton
could hurt turnout in the Nov. 8 election among liberals and younger
voters, posing a potential problem for the former secretary of
state.
In the email released on Saturday containing the transcripts,
Clinton campaign staff highlighted sections that could pose
problems, including saying "political reasons" factored into passing
the 2010 Dodd-Frank law on Wall Street reforms and, while talking
about regulation, saying the people who work in the industry know it
best.
(Reporting by Emily Stephenson and Luciana Lopez; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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