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From Homeland to hair: Hillary Clinton’s emails peek into the personal

Hillary Clinton will be joined by 13 of the 14 Democratic women of the U.S. Senate at a fundraiser Monday night in Washington, D.C., an attempt by the front-runner’s campaign to flex its establishment muscle as the first caucuses and primaries draw closer.

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The July 2012 e-mail to Clinton is a prime example: Reines appeared to be suggesting that the secretary of state of the United States should visit additional countries merely to increase the total number of places where she had touched down on the job.

Two-thirds of Clinton’s 30,000 work-related emails are now at least partially in the public eye – minus numerous redactions by the State Department.

Clinton herself has come under fire recently for privately acknowledging the fact that the September 11 raid was a premeditated attack while publicly speculating that the diplomatic compound could have simply been overrun during a protest over an inflammatory YouTube clip.

Despite signing a letter that urged Clinton to run for president in 2013, Warren has so far declined to officially endorse her campaign.

It’s just “Hillary Clinton” now. The only troubling sentence relates to the investigation, specifically: “‘And we’ll see when the investigation unfolds whether what was – what transpired in Benghazi might have unfolded differently in different circumstances.’ But she got pushed there”.

“Very hard day and I fear more of the same tomorrow”, Clinton wrote. She went on to praise the “strong soldiers and fighters in pursuit of that behind me”.

Clinton top aide Huma Abedin emailed the then secretary of state in December 2011, informing her of the death of the American soldiers, who were serving in the Middle East. Clinton’s response was: “Is Dalton Brody off Conn or Wisconsin?” “I’m a life-long Democrat”, O’Malley said, taking subtle digs at Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, and Clinton, who identified as a Republican in high school. She has since apologized for the use of private email while on the campaign trail. But it won’t take a lot to reignite the controversy – conservative critics expect a finding that she transmitted classified material, perhaps knowingly – and that could shift the narrative back to “Can you trust Hillary?” in a heartbeat.

After Rep. Diane Watson announces her retirement, Clinton wants to call her but is unable to call directly after the operator doesn’t believe she is who she says she is.

Clinton, the frontrunner for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination, has faced questions about whether her unusual email setup was sufficient to ensure the security of government information and retention of records.

In 2012, Clinton talked politics with longtime aide Sidney Blumenthal and former Secretary of State Madeline Albright.

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The inspectors general of the State Department and intelligence community have said that some contained classified information when they were generated, but they were not marked that way at the time.

MICHAEL REYNOLDS  EPA  The State Department put out the newest bundle of Hillary Clinton's emails Monday