HAMPTON, New Hampshire – After declaring in Iowa earlier this week that she wants to be “a small-business president,” Hillary Clinton came to a craft brewery here Friday to slam Republicans for trying to kill what she called a crucial institution for small companies. She also answered questions from reporters on the ongoing controversy over her private email account, moments after the State Department released almost 300 of them. Clinton said all the information in the emails was “handled appropriately.”
Her comments came after a roundtable discussion at Smuttynose brewery here, where she defended the Export-Impact bank, which she said supports 164,000 American jobs.
“It is wrong that Republicans in Congress are trying to cut off this vital lifeline for American small businesses,” she said “Republican candidates for president who really should know better are jumping on this bandwagon, and it seems as though they would rather threaten the livelihood of those 143,000 jobs than stand up to the Tea Party and talk radio.”
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She called the attacks on the Export-Import bank “wrong” “embarrassing” and “absolutely backwards.”
Long a noncontroversial government agency, the Export-Import bank, which helps companies engaged in international trade secure financing, has lately become a top target for some libertarian-leaning conservative. Tea Party activists and others view the bank as “crony capitalism,” and have mounted several attempts to kill it in Congress.
New Hampshire is an exporting state, and Clinton said the Export-Import bank helps many local businesses around the state.
Fred Hochberg, the Obama-appointee who runs the Export-Import bank, is a longtime Clinton donor and was one of her top bundlers during her 2008 presidential campaign. He also ran the Small Business Administration under the presidency of Clinton’s husband.
As she did at a similar event at a bike shop in Iowa Tuesday, Clinton noted that her own father was small businessman. Hugh Rodham owned a tapestry business in suburban Chicago, where Clinton grew up, and taught her the value of hard work and entrepreneurship, she said.
But even as Clinton laid out her message here, questions swirled nationally over her use of a private email account while she served as Secretary of State.








