Hillary Clinton has blamed FBI director James Comey for her loss in the US presidential race, claiming that re-opening the probe into her email use broke the momentum towards victory.
Mrs
 Clinton told fundraisers and donors in a conference call that Mr 
Comey's two letters to Congress on the probe had tilted crucial states 
towards Republican Donald Trump, US media including Quartz and CNN 
reported.
"There are lots of reasons 
why an election like this is not successful," Democrat Clinton told her 
national finance committee, a person on the call told online magazine 
Quartz.
COMEY'S LETTER
"But
 our analysis is that Jim Comey's letter raising doubts that were 
groundless (and) baseless — and proven to be — stopped our momentum."
On
 October 28 — less than two weeks before Election Day — Mr Comey dropped
 a bombshell by informing Congress the FBI was looking once more into 
Clinton's controversial email practices as secretary of state after new 
messages were uncovered.
His second letter, on November 6, just three 
days before the election, stated that the FBI's review of the new emails
 had uncovered no wrongdoing, and that the bureau had not changed its 
July recommendation not to charge Clinton.
OLD WOUNDS
While
 the first letter reopened old wounds and reminded voters of the 
controversy, the second letter, according to Clinton, had the perverse 
effect of energising rival Donald Trump's base, Quartz reported.
The
 letters came just as Clinton was building momentum following strong 
performances at all three presidential debates, and after the release of
 a damaging recording of Trump boasting about groping women.
"After
 the third debate we felt so good about where we were," Clinton said, 
according to Quartz's source, who chose to remain anonymous. 
The
 campaign analysis "showed that we were up in all but two of the 
battleground states, where we were tied or one point behind. In Arizona 
we were even. We felt real wind at our back."
CRIMINAL CHARGES
But she said the FBI's last-minute role was too much to "overcome," a donor on the call told CNN.
In
 July Comey said that the FBI would not recommend criminal charges 
against Clinton for handling classified documents and sensitive 
information on a private email account.
Comey, however, slammed the practice as "extremely careless."
The
 FBI chief came under fierce criticism for effectively reopening the 
Clinton probe so close to the November 8 vote, without knowing whether 
the new emails were relevant. 

No comments:
Post a Comment