Monday, January 4, 2016

lawmaker heckles Hillary Clinton over Bill Clinton's sex scandals

lawmaker heckles Hillary Clinton over Bill Clinton's sex scandals






















An audience member tries to interrupt Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton as she takes a question at a campaign town hall meeting in Derry, New Hampshire on January 3, 2016.Today in Derry, New Hampshire, GOP state Rep. Katherine Prudhomme O'Brien hollered from the crowd at Clinton.You are very rude and I’m not never ever going to call on you,” Clinton said forcefully, looking directly at the woman. “Thank you.”O’Brien’s shouts were inaudible to most in the audience because a chorus of Clinton supporters repeatedly booed her, but after the event, the lawmaker said she was trying to ask the 2016 candidate about her husband’s sexual impropriety decades ago.“I asked her how in the world she can say that Juanita Broderick and Kathleen Wiley are lying when she has no idea who Juanita Broderick is,” O’Brien said. “She told me this summer she doesn’t know who she is and doesn’t want to know who she is. How can she access that they are lying, which she told someone last month?” Derry, New Hampshire (CNN)Hillary Clinton bluntly addressed a Republican state representative heckling her about Bill Clinton's alleged sexual impropriety on Sunday in New Hampshire, telling the woman she was "very rude." When Clinton began taking questions at a Derry town hall, Katherine Prudhomme O'Brien, a GOP state representative from Rockingham, stood up feet from Clinton and began shouting. After Clinton dispatched the protestor once, O'Brien tried again during another lull in the program.

"I would say that everyone should be believed at first until they are disbelieved based on evidence," Clinton said calmly before moving onto other questions.With Bill Clinton set to make his first solo-appearance on the campaign trail on Monday in New Hampshire, some Republicans have sought to make his history an issue.Republican front-runner Donald Trump said last week that Monica Lewinsky, Paula Jones and the "many" other women who have accused Bill Clinton of having affairs were "fair game" on the campaign trail.He has since revisited the line repeatedly in interviews and on the stump.Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Clinton's top Democratic rival in the nomination fight, said Sunday on CNN that he would not be bringing up Bill Clinton's sexual history.


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