CORAL GABELS, Florida — Former president Bill Clinton made his first public comments on the controversy over his foundation’s acceptance of foreign government contributions Saturday evening, even as his wife, Hillary Clinton, avoided discussing a separate controversy over her emails at a joint event.
“We do get money from other countries,” Bill Clinton said the Clinton Global Initiative University Conference at the University of Miami here, explaining the money is used to build an endowment so the foundation’s programs will “run forever.”
“And I think it’s a good thing,” he continued. “For example, the [United Arab Emirates] gave us money. Do we agree with everything they do? No, but they’re helping us fight ISIS.”
RELATED: Liberal group to Clinton: Foreign donors ‘entirely inappropriate’
The foundation has pushed back on charges of conflict of interest since it was revealed last month that it quietly started accepting new contributions from foreign governments.
Clinton defended the donations, saying they do more good than harm. “You’ve got to decide, when you do this work, whether it will do more good than harm if someone helps you from another country,” the former president said. “And I believe we have done a lot more good than harm. And I believe this is a good thing.”
The key, he continued, was to be transparent. “My theory about this is disclose everything, and then let everyone make their judgements,” he said. “So I’m going to tell you who gave this money, and you can make your own decisions.”
The philanthropic organization that bears Clinton’s name curbed foreign contributions when his wife became secretary of state, as part of an ethics agreement with the Obama administration. But the group lifted the prohibitions after Hillary Clinton stepped down in 2013 without alerting the public, until quietly posting fundraising data online earlier this year.
It’s one of two controversies hanging over the former first family as Hillary Clinton prepares for a presidential campaign launch, which could come as early as next month. The other involves Clinton’s exclusive use of a private email account during her tenure as secretary of state, potentially at odds with administration record keeping policies.
The former secretary of state, speaking before her husband, did not address either controversy.
She spoke for less than 20 minutes with her daughter, Chelsea, about a program to study the role of women and girls in the global economy called the No Ceilings project. The Clintons will unveil details about the project’s findings Monday in New York City, but gave students attending the conference here a sneak peek.
President Obama, however, spoke out for the first time on the email controversy more than 1,000 miles away during the event. In an interview with CBS News Saturday evening, the president said he learned of Clinton’s use of a private email account via news reports, and that he was pleased his former cabinet official wanted to make her emails public.
“Let me just say that Hillary Clinton is and has been an outstanding public servant. She was a great secretary of state for me. The policy of my administration is to encourage transparency, which is why my emails — the Blackberry I carry around — all those records are available and archived,” he said. “And I’m glad that Hillary’s instructed that those emails about official business need to be disclosed.”
RELATED: Clinton backers: She did nothing out of the ordinary with email
Republicans, who have seized on both controversies, were quick to knock the all-but-declared presidential candidate for steering clear of the issues here.








