![]() ![]() "The press treated our warnings about Russia like it was spin we'd cooked up to distract from embarrassing revelations - a view actively encouraged by the Trump campaign," she writes. It spells out Clinton's version of Russia's involvement in our election and her staff's attempts to get the media to turn away from her emails long enough to give it some attention. The final quarter of "What Happened" reads like a spy novel. Those divisions, she points out, are not just detrimental to the party's election odds, they're ripe to be exploited by hostile foreign powers. ![]() (Who, by the way, also wrote a book about his run for the presidency, "Our Revolution." I guess Eichenwald missed it.)Ĭlinton addresses their rivalry within the context of the divisions it caused - and continues to cause - in the Democratic Party. Much pre-emptive hay has been made about her using the book to blame her defeat on Bernie Sanders. "The lessons we draw from 2016 could help determine whether we can heal our democracy and protect it in the future, and whether we as citizens can begin to bridge our divides," she writes. And Clinton's book does more than look backward. ![]()
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