Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
International

Email Saga Dogs Hillary Clinton; Ben Carson Stumps Trump

Darpan News Desk, 01 Sep, 2015 11:23 AM
    As the release of some 7,000 new emails brought a fresh headache for Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton, neurosurgeon Ben Carson caught up with Donald Trump in new poll to challenge his frontrunner status among Republicans.
     
    But long shot Indian-American presidential contender Bobby Jindal, languishing at the bottom of the polls, boasted Monday that the real estate mogul's popularity is part of a "summer of silliness" and it was he would eventually emerge as the Republican nominee.
     
    Clinton may not be in legal trouble yet, but the new emails with information redacted from 150 of them is bound to add fresh fuel to the controversy over the use of her own private server that has roiled her presidential campaign for over five months.
     
    Information was redacted from her emails because it has now been deemed to require classification, the State Department said Monday night in releasing the material to meet a federal court direction to make public 25 percent of Clinton's emails by end August.
     
    A State Department official said that the approximately 150 emails from Clinton's four year tenure as secretary of state that are being upgraded and subsequently classified are all at the "confidential" level - the lowest level of classification.
     
    Newly-classified emails include correspondence Clinton had with an aide about an Iran speech she delivered at American University in 2010, and another from the minister counselor for public affairs in Pakistan with the subject "Facebook Freed in Pakistan," according to NBC News.
     
    None are "Top Secret" as were two of the emails released last month, it said. In a 2010 note, Clinton asks colleague Philippe Reines if he can help her learn to use her new iPad, or "hPad," as Reines dubbed it.
     
     
    Meanwhile, in the Republican camp, Carson caught up with Trump in Iowa, one of the first four nominating states in the party primary.
     
    A new Monmouth University poll found the two tied at 23 percent. It was the first time since July 26 that a poll in the first four states to select a Republican nominee did not find Trump substantially ahead of all other candidates.
     
    Farther behind Trump and Carson were former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, at 10 percent; Texas Senator Ted Cruz, at 9 percent; Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, at 7 percent and former Florida governor Jeb Bush at 5 percent.
     
    Louisiana's Indian-American governor Jindal polled below one percent. Yet during a campaign stop at Storm Lake, Iowa, he suggested Trump's popularity is part of a "summer of silliness".
     
    "We don't need another talker in the White House," said Jindal. "We need a doer, not a talker. So I think voters are going to focus on who can do this job."
     
    Jindal said Trump and other candidates have tapped into frustrations that voters have with insiders in Washington.
     
    Given his low poll numbers, Jindal may again be relegated to a separate second tier for CNN's live televised debate, in California, on September 16 as he was for the first on Fox News.
     
    Some fun things in Hillary emails
     
    It wasn't all serious stuff that Hillary Clinton was doing as America's top diplomat for years. There were a few fun things too as revealed by the latest cache of 7,000 emails released by the State Department.
     
    For instance, in a March 5, 2010, email to Richard Verma, now the US ambassador to India, and another State Department staffer, Clinton asked: "Where are we on this?" about gefilte fish, the famously controversial Jewish delicacy.
     
    The Time magazine citing Tablet magazine writer Yair Rosenberg said Clinton was asking about a blocked US shipment of carp to Israel.
     
    In a February 27, 2010, email, a State Department help desk analyst asked if she could receive email.
     
    Clinton's Indian American assistant Huma Abedin clarified in a follow-up that the help desk hadn't recognised Clinton's private address while troubleshooting.
     
     
    "They had no idea it was YOU, just some random email address so they emailed," Abedin wrote.
     
    In a January 3, 2010, email to State Department staffer Monica Hanley, Clinton asked when two TV shows aired -- "Parks and Recreation" and "The Good Wife".
     
    "Can you give me times for two TV shows?" she asked.
     
    In an August 20, 2010, email to a State Department staffer, movie producer Harvey Weinstein pushed for Clinton to watch "The King's Speech", his film about how King George overcame his stuttering problem.
     
    "It's a fun movie that is much in the tradition of SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE, again I think you would both like it (and Hillary would approve because it's PG-13 with not too many swear words," he wrote.
     
    Finally in a December 2010 email thread, Clinton, staffer Cheryl Mills and lawyer David Kendall joked about a news story about a man who robbed a bank wearing a Hillary mask.
     
    "Should I be flattered? Even a little bit?" Clinton asked.
     
    Mills dug into it and found 11 times bank robbers wore Richard Nixon masks "perhaps not surprisingly".

    MORE International ARTICLES

    HIV virus rebound in 'Mississippi Baby' dashes hope

    HIV virus rebound in 'Mississippi Baby' dashes hope
    In a major blow to the scientific community, the HIV virus that was once vanquished in the 'Mississippi baby' by administering aggressive anti-retroviral therapy before she was barely 30 hours old has rebounded.

    HIV virus rebound in 'Mississippi Baby' dashes hope

    Rio's Christ the Redeemer restored to former glory

    Rio's Christ the Redeemer restored to former glory
    The Christ the Redeemer statue that crowns Corcovado mountain here, being repaired since February after being damaged by lightning, has been completely restored two days before this Brazilian metropolis hosts the 2014 World Cup final between Argentina and Germany.

    Rio's Christ the Redeemer restored to former glory

    Pakistani TV shows: Breaking down walls of mistrust, delusions

    Pakistani TV shows: Breaking down walls of mistrust, delusions
    "Mulk taksim huye, dil to abhi ek hai/Isi liye hamne khidkiyan kat rakhi hai deewaron mein (The nations were divided, but hearts are still one/That is why we've cut windows into the walls (between us))", wrote an Urdu poet. Divided amid bloodshed, experiencing long spells of adverse relations punctuated by armed conflict, Indians and Pakistanis have however never lost their fascination for each other - despite the prevalent stereotypes.

    Pakistani TV shows: Breaking down walls of mistrust, delusions

    Indian woman arrested for child abduction in US

    Indian woman arrested for child abduction in US
    An Indian woman was arrested in the US when she arrived at the Dallas-Fort Worth airport eight years after she apparently forcibly took her son away to India and brought him back again.

    Indian woman arrested for child abduction in US

    What makes cities warmer than countryside

    What makes cities warmer than countryside
    Variation in how efficiently urban areas release heat back into the lower atmosphere - through the process of convection - is the dominant factor in the daytime "urban heat island" (UHI) effect, a phenomenon that makes urban areas significantly warmer than the surrounding countryside.

    What makes cities warmer than countryside

    Indian-origin woman run over by truck in Australia

    Indian-origin woman run over by truck in Australia
    An Indian-origin woman in Australia died after being run over by a tipper truck, media reported Thursday.

    Indian-origin woman run over by truck in Australia