Bill Clinton Sex Scandal And Hillary Heckled by NH Lawmaker
Bill Clinton Sex Scandal And Hillary Heckled by NH Lawmaker
Katherine Prudhomme O'Brien shouted questions at Hillary
Clinton during City Hall
"You are very rude, and I never am not ever going to
invite you," Clinton said
Derry, New Hampshire:
Hillary Clinton addressed frankly Republican state
representative argues her about the alleged irregularities Bill Clinton of
sexual Sunday in New Hampshire, telling the woman she was "very
rude."
When Clinton began to questions in Derry City Hall,
Catherine O'Brien Prud'homme, the representative of the Republican Party of
Rockingham, he stood feet of Clinton and began screaming. Clinton sent after
protesters once, O'Brien tried again during another lull in the program.
"I am very rude, and I do not ever call you that,"
Clinton said firmly, looking directly at the woman. "Thank you."
The O'Brien shouts inaudible to most of the audience in a
chorus of Clinton supporters chanted over and over again to her, but after the
event, the legislator said she was trying to ask the candidate about 2016
contracts nationality of her husband irregularities before.
"I asked her how in the world it can be said that
Juanita Broaddrick and Kathleen Willey lying when he has no idea who is Juanita
Broaddrick" said O'Brien. "She told me this summer that they do not
know who she is, and do not want to know who they are and how to evaluate the
position they are lying, and that person said last month?"
Rolled Clinton's plan to address the sexual abuse campaign
in 2015, he said in a speech in Iowa that rape victims "have the right to
be believed."
"Today I want to send a message to all survivors of
sexual assault," Clinton said. "Do not let anyone silence your voice.
You have the right to be heard. You have the right to believe and we are with
you."
But some, especially the Republicans who bothered alleged
sexual offenses Bill Clinton, saw those statements as hypocrisy.
", Says that rape victims should be believed,"
said O'Brien. "I agree with it, and this is true, it should be believed,
and we evaluate what they say, she does not even what to get him."
This is not the first time that the questioning Clinton are
directly like this, but the former foreign minister of this magnitude has never
responded to the questions.
A woman asked her last month for Juanita Broaddrick,
Kathleen Willey and Paula Jones, every woman who accused Bill Clinton of
improper sexual.
"I would say that everyone should be thought of in the
beginning until they disbelieved based on the evidence," Clinton said
quietly before moving on to other questions.
Bill Clinton with the appointment of the first to make a
solo appearance on the campaign trail on Monday in New Hampshire, some
Republicans have sought to make the issue date.
He said the Republican front-runner Donald Trump last week
that Monica Lewinsky, Paula Jones and "a lot" of other women who
accused Bill Clinton and the presence of affairs was "fair game" in
the election campaign.
Since the line has been restored repeatedly in interviews
and on the trunk.
Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, the top Democratic rival
Clinton in the nomination battle Sunday on CNN and said that he will not be
bringing up Bill Clinton's sexual history.
"No, I think we have more important to worry about in
this country from the life of Bill Clinton's sex things," said Sanders.
O'Brien has a history of presidential candidates argue.
Boasted to reporters after the event in an attempt to put Clinton on the issue
late last year, the New Republic dubbed her "the most annoying voters in
New Hampshire" in 2007 after being interrupted by former New York Mayor
Rudy Giuliani.
Many of the upset with O'Brien attendees after the event,
complaining that it ruined the event, and it is only interrupted by Clinton as
a way to get attention.
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