Hillary Clinton says she will donate her six-figure speaking fee for an upcoming appearance at a fundraiser at the University of Nevada Las Vegas (UNLV) — but the money won’t go back to the school, as some students had requested.
All the money Clinton has received for appearances at colleges in the past 18 months has been donated to the Clinton Foundation “to continue its life-changing and life-saving work,” the former secretary of state and potential 2016 Democratic presidential candidate told ABC News Friday. “So it goes from a foundation at a university to another foundation.”
Clinton, who is currently promoting her most recent book “Hard Choices,” has faced increasing scrutiny over her speaking fees, which average $200,000 for each appearance. Not all of her speaking engagements are for-profit, and, out of approximately 90 speeches, she was paid for at least two dozen.
The UNLV student government asked that Clinton donate all or part of the $255,000 fee to the students. While her fee was not being taken from the school’s tuition or the university’s administration, they suggested that the action would support her advocacy for students in higher education. In early June, the university announced a four-year plan to increase tuition by 17%. The UNLV petition asking Clinton to donate the money to the students has been signed by 84 people.
Clinton has made no indication that she plans on giving the money to UNLV students. Instead, in her ABC News interview, she focused on how her speeches present new ideas that can help combat income inequality and strengthen the economy.









