Last summer, former President Bill Clinton pledged that if Hillary Clinton
won the presidential election, he would avoid conflicts by stepping
aside from many of his duties at the Clinton Foundation, restricting
foreign donations to the charity and spinning off certain programs.
Now,
nearly three months after Mrs. Clinton’s defeat, the foundation is
still grappling with its place in the era of President Trump. It faces
some daunting challenges: a drop in fund-raising during the campaign;
uncertainty about the scale of the former president’s ambitions; and
questions about leadership, including how long its president, Donna E.
Shalala, will stay, and whether Mrs. Clinton might rejoin the charity.
Mr.
Clinton, in a letter to be released with the foundation’s annual report
this week, went so far as to ask supporters for advice on its future.
“We seek both your input and your ideas,” he wrote, noting that the
organization would work to expand its impact.
Ms.
Shalala, in an interview on Thursday, acknowledged the difficulties.
“Last year was a tough year,” she said, “because people were beating on
us with nonsense,” a reference to bruising political attacks claiming
that donors were using the foundation to curry favor with the Clintons.
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Source: The New York Times (via The Empire Report)
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