Bill Clinton delivers defense of his
foundation's 'profound' work
Send a link to a friend
[September 22, 2016]
By Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Former U.S. President
Bill Clinton on Wednesday called running his family's charitable
foundation one of the great honors of his life in a passionate defense
against criticism of its work as his wife, Hillary Clinton, campaigns to
become president.
Speaking onstage in a New York City hotel ballroom for about an hour, he
told supporters of the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation that
it had brought about "a profound advance in the conduct and impact of
modern philanthropy."
"Don't give up what brought you here," he said, closing out the 12th and
final annual conference organized by the foundation, called the Clinton
Global Initiative. "You have done something good and noble and worthy."
The foundation, which Clinton founded as he prepared to leave the White
House in 2001, has come under intense scrutiny brought about by a long
presidential campaign.
Journalists have scoured newly released email records from Hillary
Clinton's tenure running the State Department from 2009 to 2013, which
show foundation officials seeking meetings with Clinton or other
diplomats on behalf of donors.
Donald Trump, Clinton's Republican opponent for the presidency, has
called for a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of breaching
government ethics rules.
The Clintons have said that even if some of their wealthiest donors,
which include corporations and foreign governments with interests before
the U.S. government, may have hoped for special favors in return, none
were granted.
To avert suggestions of conflicts of interest, the foundation has said
it will drastically limit its operations if Hillary Clinton, the
Democratic Party's presidential candidate, wins the election to succeed
Barack Obama on Nov. 8.
It would stop accepting money from foreign and corporate donors,
foundation officials say, and much of its work would be spun off into
independent entities not controlled by the Clintons.
[to top of second column] |
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton puts his hand over his heart
after the closing of the Clinton Global Initiative 2016 (CGI) in New
York, U.S., September 21, 2016. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Bill Clinton, 70, has expressed frustration that political
journalists covering his wife's campaign have written more about the
foundation's donors, which include the government of Saudi Arabia
and foreign billionaires, than the charitable programs it runs.
He spoke at length about how he had been moved by meeting children
with HIV in Cambodia, orphans left behind by the 2004 tsunami that
struck Indonesia and victims of the earthquake in Haiti in 2010.
He made only oblique references to the 2016 election campaign.
"Everywhere today there is a temptation to say that everything I
just told you is wrong, 'Life is a zero-sum game and I'm losing; no,
you're wrong, our differences matter more than our common
humanity,'" he said. "These are not the right choices."
(Refiles to make clear in paragraph 5 that foundation officials were
seeking the meetings on behalf of donors.)
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Alan Crosby)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|