Clinton apologizes for use of private email account

Clinton apologizes for use of private email account

WASHINGTON - Agence France-Presse
Clinton apologizes for use of private email account

AP photo

Hillary Clinton apologized Sept. 8 for using a private email server while secretary of state, calling the decision, which has dogged her Democratic presidential bid, a "mistake." 

The Democratic frontrunner, who is facing eroding support, has long dismissed the email uproar as a manufactured imbroglio.
 
But in an interview Sept. 8 evening, Clinton told ABC's "World News Tonight" that she took full responsibility for the episode, which she regretted.
 
"That was a mistake. I'm sorry about that. I take responsibility," she told the news network.
 
Clinton used her private email account and home server in lieu of the official government email system while she served as top diplomat from 2009 to 2013.
 
Until Sept. 8, Clinton had demurred from issuing a direct apology.
 
"I certainly wish that I had made a different choice," Clinton said last week, adding that she was "sorry" that the controversy was "confusing" for the public.
 
"As I look back at it now, even though it was allowed, I should have used two accounts, one for personal emails, one for work-related emails," Clinton said Sept. 8.
 
The lingering email saga has weighed on Clinton's popularity, with a Gallup poll released Friday showing her favorability rating at 41 percent, compared to 51 percent who view her unfavorably -- the lowest level since 1992.
 
But Clinton maintained she could weather the storm, telling ABC: "I can survive it, because I think I'm running to be president to do what the country needs done."          

However the issue is unlikely to go away soon, since the Department of State, to which Clinton turned over 30,000 official emails in late 2014, is publicly releasing them in batches.
 
Many contain information that has been retroactively classified, raising questions about whether Clinton was inappropriately sending and receiving highly sensitive material, and whether sufficient security measures were in place to protect her server from hackers.
 
Clinton maintained that during her tenure at the State Department she "did not send or receive any information that was marked classified at the time."  

She also added that "everyone" she had emailed with, including "people in the White House, of course across the State Department," knew that she was using a personal email account.
 
"It appeared, you know, as my address," Clinton said.
 
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is examining the server to determine whether the arrangement has compromised government secrets.
 
Meanwhile Clinton made a personal appeal to supporters in an email late Sept. 8, repeating the apology she gave earlier in the day.
 
"As this process proceeds, I want to be as transparent as possible," she said in the message.
         
Amid rising discomfort over the handling of the email fallout, Vice President Joe Biden, a fellow Democrat, has begun publicly discussing the prospect of his own White house bid.
 
Asked whether Biden would make a good leader, Clinton gave her reluctant support for the man with whom she worked closely during the first term of the Obama administration.
 
"I think he could be a good president, there's no doubt about that," Clinton said.
 
Clinton has the backing of 42 percent of Democrats, down from 52 percent one month ago, according to the latest poll from Monmouth University released Sept. 8.
 
Biden, meanwhile, had the support of 22 percent, up 10 points since August.
 
When it came to Republican frontrunner Donald Trump, whose ever-expanding lead atop his party's presidential field has made him a formidable force, Clinton took a harsher tone.
 
"He won't tell you how he would do anything," Clinton said.
 
Americans, she maintained, "need a leader who cares about them again. So -- that's what I'm going to try to do."