Foreign governments can continue donating to an outfit controlled by the former First Family and friends.
This week the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation announced that it will continue accepting donations from six foreign governments. Other governments can continue to pay the Clinton Foundation, but only to attend meetings. A related enterprise, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, is leaving the door open to accepting large donations from any government on the planet. Given the potential conflicts of interest that donations are sure to create for Hillary Clinton as she runs for President—and especially if she wins—the obvious question is why.
The Clinton Foundation’s website features a helpful series of questions and answers on its new policy. Here’s one that addresses the issue: “Since Secretary Clinton is running for President, why don’t you ban foreign government contributions altogether?” The answer, according to the foundation, is that “Secretary Clinton resigned from the board of the Clinton Foundation when she announced that she is running for President.” The foundation elaborates that it does great work around the world, including helping farmers in Malawi and Rwanda, and notes that many of its programs “are funded by multi-year government grants.” The lucky six governments that can continue to write checks for these programs are Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, and the United Kingdom.
Mrs. Clinton may have resigned from the board, but of course her name remains on the door and her husband and daughter remain on the board, along with other family friends and associates. If the former Secretary of State’s resignation really solved the conflict problem, there would be no reason to limit donations to just the big six.
But more fundamentally, the question is why the Clinton Foundation is an essential conduit for government aid from large industrialized nations to the Third World.