UNITED NATIONS — Hillary Clinton faced reporters Tuesday to answer questions about her exclusive use of a private email account while she served as secretary of state. But she didn’t answer all the questions out there about her electronic correspondence — and she may have even created a few new ones.
Clinton carefully explained that she used only a personal email address out of convenience, though she now acknowledges that it probably would have been “smarter” to do things differently. Clinton she did not preserve half of the 60,000 emails she sent during her tenure because they were personal and dealt with things like planning her daughter’s wedding and her mother’s funeral, and contain personal correspondence with her husband and friends. And, she said, she won’t turn over her private email server.
Her message – including the talk of her personal correspondence on things like “yoga routines, family vacations [and] the other things you typically find in in-boxes” – seemed intended for an audience beyond the reporters in the room, and perhaps especially for women, who make up her core support base and might empathize with Clinton’s desire for privacy.
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“No one wants their personal emails made public, and I think most people understand that and respect that privacy,” she said Tuesday following a speech here at a U.N women’s event.
Clinton’s staff also sent a nine-page fact sheet to reporters with potential questions and answers about her email.
Nonetheless, Republicans are clearly not satisfied, and the press may not be either not either. Here as some lingering questions that Clinton and her allies are likely to field in coming days, even after clearing up many others.
Clinton noted she was going “above and beyond” what is required of federal officials by releasing her emails to the public — an “unprecedented” step towards transparency.
1. Why delete the personal emails? Clinton said that she went through her entire email archive after the State Department requested that she turn over any documents that could be considered federal records. “At the end [of that process], I chose not to keep my private, personal emails,” Clinton said.
But why delete private emails, even if they had no work value? In Silicon Valley two weeks ago, she said, “I don’t throw anything away, I’m like two steps short of a hoarder.”
2. How long can she keep her email server private? Clinton was adamant that she will not turn over her family’s private email server set up first for her husband, former President Bill Clinton. “The server contains personal communications from my husband and me, and I believe I have met all of my responsibilities and the server will remain private,” she said.
But Republicans have made it clear they will not relent without it. “I see no choice but for Secretary Clinton to turn her server over to a neutral, detached third-party arbiter who can determine which documents should be public and which should remain private,” said Rep. Trey Gowdy, who chairs the House investigative panel that discovered Clinton’s private account.
Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus agreed: “Anything short of Hillary Clinton releasing her secret server to an independent arbiter would demonstrate that she’s not interested in being transparent with the American people,” he said.
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3. Was Clinton’s email as secure as if she used a State Department account? Clinton said she did not use her personal email account to send any classified information, but her correspondence could be confidential nonetheless — was it safe?
In the fact sheet, Clinton’s office said, “the security and integrity of her family’s electronic communications was taken seriously from the onset,” but declined to go into details, citing security concerns. “[S]uffice it to say, robust protections were put in place and additional upgrades and techniques employed over time as they became available, including consulting and employing third party experts,” the fact sheet said. Clinton added that her system was never compromised.








