Hillary Clinton enthusiastically rejected concerns about her ties to Wall Street in a fiery interview on Sunday.
On ABC’s “This Week,” George Stephanopoulos asked Clinton to respond to charges that campaign contributions and paid speeches have influenced her political stances. This concern was raised earlier this week during Thursday’s MSNBC debate, in which Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders sparred over whether Clinton was too close to corporations. The Sanders campaign revived charges made by Sen. Elizabeth Warren in 2004 that Clinton changed her position on a 2001 bankruptcy bill due to corporate persuasion.
Clinton said her work on the bill was an effort to advocate for women and children, whose financial circumstances could have been adversely affected by an early version of the bankruptcy legislation. She denied that money influenced her position before noting that the bill never passed.
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“When the next bill came up, 2005, women’s issues were taken care of because I had made that a point back in 2001,” Clinton continued, referring to a later piece of legislation. “And so then, I was against that bill. I didn’t get a chance to actually vote against it because Bill was in the hospital having a heart procedure, but I put a statement out. I was against it. So I’m happy to set this record straight. And I really want to once again call out the Sanders campaign, which claims they like to run a positive campaign, but they have been quite artful in raising questions and trying to cast doubts about my record. And I really am not going to sit and take it anymore.”









