MIAMI — The dark cloud of controversy hanging over Hillary Clinton isn’t moving on quite yet.
The former secretary of state’s critics came out swinging during the Sunday political talk shows this week, taking aim at Clinton amid revelations that she used her private email exclusively during her tenure at the State Department.
South Carolina Republican Rep. Trey Gowdy, chair of the House Select Committee on Benghazi that is investigating the Obama administration’s handling of the 2012 attacks in Libya, said he had lost confidence in the State Department for overseeing the situation and allowing Clinton to use a private email server.
“It’s not up to Secretary Clinton to decide what’s a public document and what’s not,” Gowdy said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”
Related: Hillary Clinton speaks out on Selma, from Miami
Clinton has called on the State Department to release 55,000 pages of emails that she had selected to be turned over to the government. More than 900 of those pages have been handed out to Gowdy’s special committee — but the Republican leaders are saying those efforts are not quite enough.
Rep. Darrell Issa, a California Republican who has led a charge in keeping the Benghazi controversy alive, said Sunday that it would be a crime if investigators were to find out that Clinton knowingly withheld emails from congressional investigators.
“She, in fact, hid the very existence of this until she was caught,” Issa said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”
In his first Sunday show interview since becoming the Senate’s top Republican, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he was unsure whether Clinton violated any federal laws, but he still had concerns. “I am a little bit worried about the security of those emails,” McConnell said on “Face the Nation.” “They would have been prime targets for cyber attacks.”
The former secretary of state is currently weathering a pair of controversies. On top of the criticism over her emails, Clinton’s family’s foundation — the Clinton Global Initiative — is under tough scrutiny for accepting contributions from foreign governments over the same period.
Clinton addressed the criticism this week by offering a window of transparency to her emails. “I want the public to see my email. I asked State to release them. They said they will review them for release as soon as possible,” she wrote on Twitter.









