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Clinton: I’m Feeling So Much Better

Ms Clinton, the Democratic nominee, was forced to cancel a campaign trip to California on Monday after she became ill at a 9/11 memorial service in New York City just one day prior.

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“I’m feeling so much better”, she said on “Anderson Cooper 360”.

Several hours later, the campaign revealed that Hillary Clinton received a pneumonia diagnosis on Friday, but said the Democrat had hoped to power through the illness.

On Sunday, Clinton attended the 9/11 memorial ceremony at Ground Zero but left around 9:30 a.m. ET because she was feeling unwell.

Clinton left the outdoor ceremony in NY early amid a late-summer heat wave and could be seen buckling and needing help getting into her van, where she said the air conditioning helped to revive her. But there was no more information given, besides confirmation that she had arrived home almost two hours after leaving her daughter’s, until after 5 p.m. “That’s the sort of diagnosis family doctors and internists make regularly and can treat very successfully”, said William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert.

Former U.S. president and Clinton’s husband, Bill Clinton, in an interview on Monday with PBS’ Charlie Rose said that Hillary was doing fine.

Unfortunately for Trump, the Clinton team has just raised the level of disclosure even higher; we now know the candidate has a troubled relationship with water. She said she felt dizzy and overheated and lost her balance, but she never lost consciousness.

Former President Obama adviser David Axelrod rapped Clinton Monday on her “penchant for privacy”. Asked whether she fainted, Clinton replied: “No, I didn’t”. “It is brutal and you have to be on all the time, all the time and it takes a toll”, said Goldstein. “But I think after yesterday’s incident, everybody was agreed that she should take a couple of days off the trail”. “And, obviously, that did not work out so well”, she said.

Clinton later received the all-clear but rumors about her health are sometimes cited by her opponent, Republican nominee Donald Trump. An aide also told the cable news station that until Sunday morning, Clinton “thought she could push through this. she was feeling better”.

Trump dismissed suggestions the Democratic Party may be considering replacing the 68-year-old Clinton as its standard bearer in November’s elections, but added: ‘Whatever it is, it is; I’m ready’.

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Trump latched on to the comment again in North Carolina, saying Clinton is running a “hate-filled and negative campaign”.

I didn't think it was a big deal' Clinton says of pneumonia bout