'What
Happened': Clinton memoir looks at 2016 election,
Russia, sexism
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[July 28, 2017]
By Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Hillary Clinton's memoir about her failed attempt to win
last year's U.S. presidential election will be called
"What Happened," a declaration rather than a question,
her publisher said in the run-up to its September 12
release.
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Among the things the Democratic nominee will
say happened are sexism against the first woman to be the
presidential candidate for a major U.S. party and "an
unprecedented assault on our democracy by a foreign adversary,"
according to publicity material from the publisher, Simon and
Schuster.
Staff in Clinton's campaign and at Democratic party headquarters
saw thousands of their internal emails stolen and published
online last year. U.S. intelligence agencies have said that
Russian intelligence agencies stole the emails as part of an
effort by Russian President Vladimir Putin to foil Clinton's
chances of becoming president.
Putin has denied the charges, and U.S. President Donald Trump
has expressed doubt about the conclusion of intelligence
agencies he oversees.
In a tweet on Thursday, Clinton said, "Writing 'What Happened'
was hard, so is what we see every day. As we move forward &
fight back, I hope this helps."
Clinton has at times faced intense scrutiny by the media and
political opponents for more than 25 years since her husband,
Bill Clinton, successfully sought the U.S. presidency in 1992.
"In the past, for reasons I try to explain, I've often felt I
had to be careful in public, like I was up on a wire without a
net," Clinton wrote in the book's introduction. "Now I'm letting
my guard down."
Despite polls showing the former secretary of state was expected
to triumph in the election last November, Clinton won only 227
electoral college votes to Trump's 304. She won the popular vote
by about 2.9 million votes.
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Since then, she has made a handful of speeches and public
appearances while working on the book.
In April, she told the Women in the World Summit in New York City
that she had no intention of running for another public office and
that she was writing a book that, in part, delves into what derailed
her attempt to become America's first woman president.
"For people who are interested in this, the nearly 66 million people
who voted for me, I want to give as clear and as credible an
explanation as I can," she said.
Clinton has also faulted the manner in which the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, under director James Comey, investigated how she
managed her email, some of which involved classified information,
when she was secretary of state.
Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, told the Washington Post
last week, "When you lose to somebody who has 40 percent popularity,
you don't blame other things — Comey, Russia— you blame yourself."
Clinton and Trump were the most unpopular U.S. presidential
candidates in modern polling history.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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