Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Hillary Clinton: Trump cant win the next election… people are onto him – The Independent

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Hillary Clinton has insisted Donald Trump would not be re-elected even if he wins the Republican nomination to run for president next year.

The former Democratic candidate said people are more onto him than during the last two elections.

Ms Clinton added that he has a hard core of support which will help him secure the Republican nomination. But, speaking to Sky News, she said: In a general election against president Joe Biden, I do not believe he can win.

People are more onto him and his behaviour than they were before.

Ms Clinton went on to say she believes Mr Biden will be re-elected no matter who he comes up against. The 75-year-old branded Mr Trumps main Republican rival Ron DeSantis unproven, adding that nobody really outside of Florida knows very much about him.

She added: In Florida they are watching him do crazy things. So I actually believe that president Biden will be re-elected regardless of who the Republican nominee is.

Ms Clinton praised Mr Bidens record in office, including garnering support for Ukraine, uniting Asian countries against Chinese aggressiveness and passing major legislation through congress. She said: Look what hes getting done.

She said: We are living back in a time when a lot of people expect their leaders to be performers, not producers. Ms Clinton added that Mr Biden is not a performer like Boris Johnson or Mr Trump, and thank God for that.

Dismissing criticism of Mr Biden, who would be 86 at the end of a second presidential term, as too old to run for re-election, Ms Clinton said: I feel like I could do the job. Im in my mid-seventies.

Ms Clinton lost the 2016 presidential election to Mr Trump after a campaign dubbed the most bitter in recent American history by The New Yorker.

She spoke to Skys Beth Rigby at Belfasts Queens University, where she is chancellor, for a three-day conference to mark 25 years of the Northern Irish peace deal.

Former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, former UK prime minister Tony Blair and former Irish PM Bertie Ahern spoke on Monday, addressing the anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement.

Ms Clinton, Barack Obamas former secretary of state, also urged the US and Nato to do much more to supply the planes and anti-aircraft missiles Ukraine needs amid Russias ongoing invasion.

Ukraine is getting enough help to be able to withstand the Russian invasion. It needs to get enough help to repel the Russian invasion, she said.

Ms Clinton warned that Russian president Vladimir Putins brutality knows no bounds. The Russians are taking enormous losses. I want to keep the pressure up and make it even more on the Russians because as we now look at the available information, they could get more brutal in terms of the air defence, she said.

Thats why the Ukrainians need more help to repel that, she added.

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Hillary Clinton: Trump cant win the next election... people are onto him - The Independent

Hillary Clinton: Trump cannot win election – but Biden will – Sky News

By Alix Culbertson, Political reporter @alixculbertson

Wednesday 19 April 2023 01:27, UK

Hillary Clinton has told Sky News that Donald Trump will not win the next election - and Joe Biden will be re-elected whoever the Republican candidate is.

The former Democratic presidential candidate and secretary of state said "more people are onto him [Trump] and his behaviour than they were before".

Mrs Clinton has been subjected to multiple claims by Mr Trump, including accusations of spying on him and rigging the 2016 presidential election in her favour - despite him beating her.

But Mrs Clinton said her former rival will see his comeuppance as he tries to run again for president.

Speaking to the Beth Rigby Interviews programme while in Northern Ireland, she said: "I always thought about him, if you follow him you can see it - he accuses people of things he himself is doing, it's a form of psychological projection.

"I always thought his record in business in particular, but then as we saw him in politics and government, he was someone who cared nothing about rules. He cared nothing about the law."

Mrs Clinton added that despite Mr Trump being indicted and becoming the first former president to face criminal charges, there is nothing in the US legal system that would prevent him from running for president again.

"But even if he gets the Republican nomination, he cannot, in my view, be re-elected president," she said.

"I think more people are on to him and his behaviour than they were before.

"He has a hard core of support that is likely to help him win the Republican nomination.

"But in a general election against President Biden, I do not believe he can win."

'Biden will be re-elected'

She also said Florida governor Ron De Santis, who is expected to run for president as a Republican candidate, will be unsuccessful as he is "unproven".

"Nobody really outside of Florida knows very much about him, and in Florida, they're watching him do crazy things," Mrs Clinton added.

"So I actually believe that President Biden will be re-elected regardless of who the Republican nominee is."

She dismissed suggestions Mr Biden, who is 80 years old, would be too old to be president.

"I feel like I could do the job. I'm in my mid-70s," she added.

"I think it really should be a matter of what he has done as president."

Read more on Sky News:What you may have missed during an important week in US newsAnalysis: Biden's trip to Ireland proves he has his eye on re-election

'A matter of time before anti-abortion laws overturned'

Mrs Clinton also addressed the issue of abortion in the US, where 13 states have banned terminations following the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v Wade last June.

This week, Mr DeSantis banned abortions in Florida after six weeks and Mrs Clinton said she thinks Republican politicians will continue to do so - to the detriment of women and the party's own success.

She said efforts to try to limit abortion, even in cases of rape, incest and when a mother's life is at risk, is "not only a terrible policy that should be rejected on its merits" but is also a "bad political decision".

Click to subscribe to Beth Rigby Interviews wherever you get your podcasts

The former secretary of state said when people are given the chance to vote against anti-abortion laws they will.

"So I am quite unbothered by the political consequences, but extremely bothered by the real-life consequences of the fact that women will die because they are not being given appropriate reproductive health care," she added.

"We know that the people of Ireland, the Republic of Ireland, overturned their long-time ban on abortion because of the consequences.

"So it's only a matter of time when that will also happen in the United States."

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Hillary Clinton: Trump cannot win election - but Biden will - Sky News

Is Biden too old to be US President? Hillary Clinton’s I can do the job reply – Hindustan Times

Hillary Clinton said that former US President Donald Trump will not win the next election but Joe Biden will be re-elected no matter who the Republican candidate is. Former Democratic presidential candidate and secretary of state Hillary Clinton said, more people are onto him [Trump] and his behaviour than they were before, as per Sky News.

I always thought about him, if you follow him you can see it - he accuses people of things he himself is doing, it's a form of psychological projection. I always thought his record in business in particular, but then as we saw him in politics and government, he was someone who cared nothing about rules. He cared nothing about the law, Hillary Clinton said.

There is nothing that the US legal system can do to prevent Donald Trump from running for president again despite the hush money payment indictment, she said, adding, "But even if he gets the Republican nomination, he cannot, in my view, be re-elected president. I think more people are on to him and his behaviour than they were before. He has a hard core of support that is likely to help him win the Republican nomination. But in a general election against President Biden, I do not believe he can win.

On Florida governor Ron De Santis, who is expected to run for president as a Republican candidate, Hillary Clinton said that he will be unsuccessful as he is "unproven".

Nobody really outside of Florida knows very much about him, and in Florida, they're watching him do crazy things. So I actually believe that President Biden will be re-elected regardless of who the Republican nominee is, she said.

Dismissing suggestions that Joe Biden is too old to be president, Hillary Clinton said, I feel like I could do the job. I'm in my mid-70s.

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Is Biden too old to be US President? Hillary Clinton's I can do the job reply - Hindustan Times

For Hillary Clinton, ‘jury is out’ on whether Good Friday Agreement needs to be adjusted – Sky News

One of America's pre-eminent political figures for three decades, Hillary Rodham Clinton has been present at, and helped shape, some key moments in modern history.

This week the former US secretary of state, presidential candidate and first lady travelled to Belfast to commemorate the Good Friday Agreement (GFA).

A feat of international diplomacy that ended 30 years of sectarian violence and brought peace on the island of Ireland, it was a seismic event for Ireland and Great Britain and a defining moment in her husband's presidency.

I used the first part of our sit-down interview to ask the 75-year-old stateswoman about her reflections of that "hand of history" moment.

"I feel privileged to have been a witness to history, starting with my first visit with my husband, then the first sitting president to come to Northern Ireland in 1995 all the way to today," Mrs Clinton tells me in our interview at Queen's University in Belfast, where she has been chancellor since 2020.

She has travelled to Belfast with the other leaders who helped secure the Agreement - Tony Blair, Bertie Ahern, Gerry Adams, George Mitchell - to both reflect on what happened and think about, in her words, "what needs to continue to take place in order for Northern Ireland to have the best possible future".

Because while the Good Friday Agreement was hailed by former president Bill Clinton as a "work of genius" when it came to delivering peace, as politicians' mark its' 25th anniversary, there are obvious questions over whether it has delivered good government for the people of Northern Ireland.

For nine of the 25 years since the agreement was signed, Stormont has been shut down, with both unionists and nationalists consistently showing their willingness to collapse the Assembly when they don't get their own way.

Under the power-sharing arrangement enshrined in the Good Friday Agreement, any government must have representatives from both the nationalist community - who favour unity with the Republic of Ireland - and unionists, who want Northern Ireland to remain part of the UK.

That idea is that both communities have a vested interest in the system, but it also means either side has the power to collapse the government, as the DUP have done over their discontent with post-Brexit trading arrangements for Northern Ireland.

DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson has said his unionist party will not nominate any ministers to an executive until its concerns are resolved by the UK government.

With a political system that keeps stalling, against the backdrop of a Northern Ireland that is less sectarian, there is an obvious question about whether the Good Friday Agreement might adapt to make it harder for politicians to bring down the institutions of power sharing.

Tony Blair thinks so. The former prime minister has argued that the GFA needs to "amend and adjust" in order to better reflect a changing, less sectarian Northern Ireland.

For Mrs Clinton, the "jury's is out" on whether the agreement needs adjustment, as she urged the unionists to restore power sharing on the back of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's Windsor Agreement, designed to improve the post-Brexit trade deal for Northern Ireland.

"I do think [the GFA] was a work of genius to end the conflict and create the structure for self-governance within the appropriate relationship with the UK. And I think that it has worked, except when leaders decided it would no longer work for their own reasons," she told me.

"The question is whether leaders themselves, the current generation of leaders, can restore confidence in the ability of the people of Northern Ireland to elect a government that will then actually govern or whether there does, as former prime minister Blair said, have to be some adjustments within the agreement itself. I think the jury is out on that because right now we're all hoping that they will stand up.

"I think it's very much in [the DUP's] interest [to get back to Stormont]."

Read more Beth Rigby Interviews:Mike Pompeo says China's Xi is bigger threat than PutinRev Al Sharpton says stop and search should be banned

But beyond the current crisis, there is a broader question on whether an arrangement that gives effective power to either unionists or nationalists and entrenches sectarianism is still fit for purpose a generation on from its inception.

The non-sectarian Alliance Party - the third-largest in Northern Ireland - says the Agreement needs to move towards a more conventional democratic model involving simpler majorities and coalitions. Does Mrs Clinton agree?

"I'm a little bit 'wait and see', because all of these decisions should be made by the people of Northern Ireland themselves," she said.

"I do think that, you know, the Alliance Party, as you say, which has now become the third most popular party in terms of the numbers elected for the assembly has an important role to play. But the first order of business and I would urge the UK government to make it the first order is to get the government going again."

An international politician careful not to wade into the domestic affairs of the people of Northern Ireland.

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But the Good Friday Agreement anniversary punctuated by the collapse of power sharing has undoubtedly put reform on the agenda at this special event in Belfast to commemorate not just the deal but how power sharing and peace in Northern Ireland evolves from here.

When it came to the politics of the US ahead of the 2024 presidential race, Mrs Clinton was far more forthright, telling me in our interview that Donald Trump cannot win in 2024.

"I think more people are on to him and his behaviour than they were before," she explained when I asked her what she thought about Mr Trump running for president while under criminal indictment.

"He has a hardcore of support that is likely to help him win the Republican nomination, but in a general election against President Biden, I do not believe he can win."

Mrs Clinton also told me that the age of the "showman" was over as she weighed in behind President Joe Biden in a dig at not just Mr Trump but former prime minister Boris Johnson too.

Praising President Biden's work on Ukraine, his handling of China and him pushing through big pieces of domestic legislation, the former presidential candidate said he should be judged on substance rather than style.

"We're living in a time when a lot of people expect their leaders to be performers, not producers," she said.

"And so is he a performer, as we think of maybe one of your prior prime ministers or one of our prior presidents? No, that's not who he is. And thank God for that, because look at what he's getting done."

And as for her adversary Donald Trump, how does Mrs Clinton feel about the prospect of the man who back in 2016 accused her of lawbreaking - remember the "lock her up" chant - now facing the possibility of ending up behind bars?

Click to subscribe to Beth Rigby Interviews wherever you get your podcasts

"I always thought about him - and if you follow him, I think you can see this as well - he accuses people of doing things he himself is doing," she said. "It's a form of psychological projection. And I always thought that his record was someone who cared nothing about rules. He cares nothing about the laws."

A politician who suffered a crushing election defeat at the hands of an adversary that she believes has sown the seeds for his own downfall is no doubt satisfying for Mrs Clinton, who next year will have another ringside seat - and role - in an election of great consequence not just for the US but the rest of the world.

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For Hillary Clinton, 'jury is out' on whether Good Friday Agreement needs to be adjusted - Sky News

Good Friday Agreement: Hillary Clinton urges NI parties to return to power sharing – BBC

16 April 2023

Hillary Clinton is in Belfast for a series of events marking the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement

Hillary Clinton has urged political parties in Northern Ireland to return to power sharing.

The former US Secretary of State is in Belfast for a conference marking 25 years since the Good Friday Agreement.

She addressed an audience at the Washington-Ireland Program headquarters in the city centre on Sunday.

There, she said the post-Brexit deal, the Windsor Framework, provides an economic boost that should not be missed.

Asked about the future of Northern Ireland, she said: "Part of what I hope happens is that people from every part of the political system here will decide that the government needs to get back into business."

She added: "Given the Windsor agreement, this is an opportunity unlike any for economic development growth, investment, business expansion - because Northern Ireland now has a unique and privileged position."

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will pay tribute to the contribution young people have made to peace when he returns to Northern Ireland this week to take part in events to mark the 25th anniversary of the agreement.

Among those events will be a gala dinner to honour those who signed the 1998 deal and the "remarkable" young people continuing peace efforts.

Joe Biden met young people when he opened Ulster University's new Belfast campus last week

The PM visited Northern Ireland last week when he welcomed US President Joe Biden to Belfast.

Ahead of his forthcoming trip, Mr Sunak said he was due to meet some of the "leading architects" of the peace deal.

He will acknowledge their "courage, imagination and perseverance" when he gives the closing speech at a Queen's University Belfast conference about the agreement.

"It is a tribute to the 1998 agreement that we also see a younger generation of inspirational people across Northern Ireland today," Mr Sunak said on Sunday.

Image source, Niall Carson

Joe Kennedy III, US Special Envoy for Northern Ireland, attended a service to mark the 25th anniversary of the agreement in Clonard Monastery on Sunday

On Sunday, political and Church leaders attended a service at Clonard Monastery in Belfast to mark the agreement anniversary.

Among them were Catholic Archbishop of Armagh Eamon Martin, and the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh, John McDowell.

The US Special Envoy for Northern Ireland, Joe Kennedy III, was also in attendance, as were NIO minister Steve Baker and figures from across NI's political divide.

Queen's University Belfast (QUB) is hosting a conference marking the anniversary, featuring speeches and panel discussions from former and current political leaders over three days, beginning on Monday.

Speaking in Dublin on Sunday, the Tanaiste (Irish deputy PM) Michel Martin said the events could provide an impetus to restore devolved government at Stormont.

"I've met with all of the party leaders over the last year and, irrespective of their positions, they've all resolutely said that they want the institutions back up and running," said Mr Martin.

Former US Senator George Mitchell, who chaired the negotiations that led to the Good Friday Agreement, is in Belfast for the anniversary events.

On Sunday afternoon he attended a play about the 1998 agreement at the Lyric Theatre and received a standing ovation from the audience as he took his seat.

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Richard Croxford, the actor who plays Mr Mitchell in the play, titled Agreement, said before the performance that he felt "emotional and scared" about having to act in front of the man he was pretending to be.

"He is a phenomenal man. I have not got enough good things to say about him," he said.

Ryan Feeney from QUB said the Agreement 25 conference would mark "how far we've come" since the peace deal, as well as considering "how we look to the next 25 years".

Sir Tony Blair, who as UK prime minister in 1998 was one of the signatories to the deal, will also take part in events alongside former Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Bertie Ahern.

Image source, Charles McQuillan

Sir Tony Blair and Bill Clinton, pictured during an event in 2018 to the agreement's 20th anniversary, will speak at Queen's University Belfast this week

Mr Mitchell will open the QUB conference with an address on Monday and was "extremely excited" to do so, Mr Feeney said.

"We're over the moon that our former [university] chancellor and chair of the peace talks is coming here," he added.

"He was invited by President Biden to come [last week] on Air Force One but declined because he had made this commitment with Queen's."

Alistair Campbell, who was Mr Blair's official spokesperson in 1998, was also in the audience.

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Good Friday Agreement: Hillary Clinton urges NI parties to return to power sharing - BBC