Hillary Clinton says she should not
have let a senior campaign adviser keep his job after a female staffer
accused him of sexual harassment in 2007.
"The most important work of my life has been to support and empower
women," Clinton wrote on Facebook Tuesday night . "So I very much
understand the question I'm being asked as to why I let an employee on
my 2008 campaign keep his job despite his inappropriate workplace
behavior. The short answer is this: If I had it to do again, I
wouldn't."
Clinton said that senior campaign staff and legal counsel confirmed that
the behavior by faith-based adviser Burns Strider had occurred after the
woman came forward. Her campaign manager recommended that Strider be
terminated, but Clinton said she instead demoted him, docked his pay,
required counseling, separated him from the victim, and warned him that
he'd be fired if he did it again.
The Times reported that Strider declined to attend the counseling
sessions. He did not immediately respond Wednesday to a call and email
requesting comment. Strider told BuzzFeed News that he didn't consider
his behavior "excessive, but that doesn't mean it wasn't to" the woman.
Clinton said that there were no further complaints against Strider
during the rest of the campaign, but that she is troubled that he was
terminated from a job leading an independent political action committee
supporting Clinton for inappropriate behavior several years later.
"I believed the punishment was severe and the message to him
unambiguous. I also believe in second chances," Clinton said in the post
published shortly before the start of President Donald Trump's State of
the Union address. "But sometimes they're squandered."
She said that the reoccurrence of the behavior "troubles me greatly" and
leads her to question whether it would have been better if she had fired
him.
"There is no way I can go back 10 years and know the answers. But you
can bet I'm asking myself these questions right now."
Clinton said that her first thought after the Times report "was for the
young woman involved" and that she reached out to her "to see how she
was doing, but also to help me reflect on my decision and its
consequences."
"She expressed appreciation that she worked on a campaign where she knew
she could come forward without fear," Clinton said. "She was glad that
her accusations were taken seriously, that there was a clear process in
place for dealing with harassment, and that it was followed. Most
importantly, she told me that for the remainder of the campaign, she
flourished in her new role. "
She said the woman "read every word of this and has given me permission
to share it." |
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