Hillary Clinton sought to make Jeb Bush and the entire Republican pay for the sins of Donald Trump in her first national television interview of her second presidential campaign.
“They range across a spectrum of being either grudgingly welcome or hostile towards immigrants,” she told CNN of the vast — and still growing — field of 2016 GOP presidential candidates during a break between campaign events in Iowa.
But Clinton spoke in more specific detail about Donald Trump, whose incendiary recent comments on Mexican immigrants have led to almost a dozen companies to cut ties to the businessman. “I’m very disappointed in those comments and I feel very bad and very disappointed with him,” said Clinton of Trump, who has donated to her past campaigns. And in 2005, Clinton even attended Trump’s wedding to his current wife Melania Knauss.
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Clinton added that she was disappointed “with the Republican Party for not responding immediately [to Trump] and saying enough, stop it. But they are all in the, you know, in the same general area on immigration,” she said.
Trump has been ranking in the top tier of recent polls of the 2016 Republican presidential field and is poised to potentially make the cutoff for the party’s first debates later this summer. Her comments were a clear attempt to lump all Republicans in with Trump, whose toxic comments have been disowned even by some Republicans.
Clinton has been calling out Trump in recent campaign stops, elevating him as a means to paint the entire GOP field as extremist.
She wasn’t much kinder towards former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, the GOP frontrunner who has been more amendable to immigration in the past. “He doesn’t believe in a path to citizenship. If he did at one time he no longer does,” she said.
Bush’s campaign spokesperson Emily Benavides responded to Clinton’s criticism in a statement released on Tuesday. “Hillary Clinton has once again changed her position on an issue for politically expedient purposes,” Benavides said before faulting her in part for failing to pass immigration reform as a senator. “Hillary Clinton will say anything to get elected and her numerous flip-flops on immigration prove it,” she added.
As for herself, Clinton reiterated: “I am 100% behind comprehensive immigration reform that includes a path to citizenship.”
Much of the interview focused on controversies that have dogged Clinton for months, and people familiar with the campaign’s thinking say the tough interview may clear the backlog of these thorny issues before Clinton begins to roll out bigger policy issues later this summer.
On her exclusive use of a private email account as secretary of state, Clinton said, “everything I did was permitted.”
“There was no law, there was no regulation, there was nothing that did not give me the full authority to decide how I was going to communicate,” she said.








