Hot topics close

Hillary Clinton Calls Trump Indictments a 'Terrible Moment for Our ...

Hillary Clinton Calls Trump Indictments a Terrible Moment for Our
In an interview on MSNBC, Mrs. Clinton pointed to the investigations into election interference and said that “the only satisfaction may be that the system is working.”
Trump Jan. 6 Case
  • The Indictment
  • The Charges
  • The Judge
  • The Jury Pool
  • The Co-Conspirators
  • Fake Electors Scheme
LIVE See more updates: Trump Indicted in Georgia
Aug. 15, 2023, 3:08 p.m. ET
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Hillary Clinton Says ‘I Don’t Feel Any Satisfaction’ From Trump Indictments

In an interview on MSNBC, Mrs. Clinton pointed to the investigations into election interference and said that “the only satisfaction may be that the system is working.”

  • Share full article
Hillary Clinton, left, and Donald J. Trump, stand looking toward the left side of the frame during a debate.
Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump during their second presidential debate in 2016.Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times
Jazmine Ulloa
  • Aug. 15, 2023Updated 9:54 a.m. ET

Less than an hour after a grand jury in Atlanta returned indictments in the 2020 election interference case in Georgia, Hillary Clinton on Monday called the developments “a terrible moment for our country.”

The indictment, released late on Monday evening, charges former President Donald J. Trump in a sprawling case. Before the charges were made public, Mrs. Clinton gave a previously scheduled late-night interview on MSNBC. She said that she felt “great profound sadness” that the former president had already been indicted on so many other charges that “went right to the heart of whether or not our democracy would survive.”

“Do you feel satisfaction in that you warned the country, essentially, that he was going to try to end democracy?” the anchor, Rachel Maddow, asked Mrs. Clinton, a former secretary of state and former first lady.

“I don’t feel any satisfaction,” Mrs. Clinton responded, adding that she did not know whether “anybody should be satisfied.” “The only satisfaction may be that the system is working, that all of the efforts by Donald Trump, his allies and his enablers to try to silence the truth, to try to undermine democracy have been brought into the light.”

In addition to the Georgia case, Mr. Trump has been charged in federal court with carrying out a concerted effort in six states, including Georgia, to prevent Congress from certifying President Biden’s victory. He has been charged in a federal court in Florida with mishandling classified documents, and in state court in New York in relation to hush-money paid to a porn star during the 2016 campaign.

Mrs. Clinton, Mr. Trump’s Democratic presidential rival in 2016, has been a target of Mr. Trump and his Republican allies as he has come under investigation.

Since Mr. Trump became the first former U.S. president to face federal charges, Republicans have repeatedly referred to the Justice Department’s decision in 2016 not to bring charges against Mrs. Clinton for her use of a private email server when she was secretary of state. But several official investigations have found that Mrs. Clinton did not systematically or deliberately mishandle classified material. In 2018, a report by the inspector general supported the F.B.I.’s decision not to charge Mrs. Clinton.

On Monday night, she praised Mr. Biden’s leadership and fired back at a Republican Party that she suggested had lost its backbone and conscience, saying Americans needed to use the rule of law and elections “to defeat those who want to weaponize divisiveness, who want to undermine democratic values and institutions.”

Mrs. Clinton described the attack on the nation’s election system as the most critical in a long line of efforts to undermine the public’s trust in voting and democracy. “What happened on Jan. 6 — ‘Don’t believe what you saw, believe what I tell you’ — those are all the hallmarks of authoritarian, dictatorial kinds of leaders,” she said, calling 2024 a crucial moment in defeating anti-American political ideas and values.

Jazmine Ulloa covers national politics from Washington. Before joining The Times, she worked at The Boston Globe, The Los Angeles Times and various papers in her home state of Texas. More about Jazmine Ulloa

  • Share full article
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Similar shots
  • Study English with video of Hillary Clinton 4 shorts
News Archive
  • Paulo Costa
    Paulo Costa
    Twitter goes ballistic as Robert Whittaker and Paulo Costa battle in ...
    2 Jun 2024
    5
  • Fyre Festival 2
    Fyre Festival 2
    Fyre Festival 2 tickets are now on sale – and selling out – according ...
    22 Aug 2023
    3
  • Andrea Evans
    Andrea Evans
    Andrea Evans Dead: 'One Life To Live' Star Was 66
    11 Jul 2023
    5
  • Army of the Dead
    Army of the Dead
    Zack Snyder, Netflix Spent Millions Adding Tig Notaro to ‘Army of the Dead’
    21 May 2021
    1
  • Ocean Ramsey
    Ocean Ramsey
    Deep Blue, one of world's largest great white sharks, possibly spotted off Hawaiian coast
    18 Jan 2019
    1
This week's most popular shots