Clinton Foundation to limit donors

IN this April 14, 2015, photo, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton meets with local residents at the Jones St. Java House in LeClaire, Iowa. The board of the Clinton Foundation says it will continue accepting donations from foreign governments but only six nations, a move aimed at insulating presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton from controversies over the charity's reliance on millions of dollars from abroad.
IN this April 14, 2015, photo, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton meets with local residents at the Jones St. Java House in LeClaire, Iowa. The board of the Clinton Foundation says it will continue accepting donations from foreign governments but only six nations, a move aimed at insulating presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton from controversies over the charity's reliance on millions of dollars from abroad.

WASHINGTON -- The board of the Clinton Foundation said Wednesday night that it will continue accepting donations from foreign governments, but only from six nations, as Hillary Rodham Clinton ramps up her presidential campaign.

Clinton, who resigned from the foundation's board last week, has faced mounting criticism over the charity's ties to foreign governments.

The board of the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation said future donations will only be allowed from the governments of Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and the United Kingdom -- all nations that previously supported the charity's health, poverty and climate-change programs.

While direct contributions from other governments would be halted, they could continue participating in the Clinton Global Initiative, a subsidiary program that encourages donors to match contributions from others to tackle international problems without direct donations to the charity. But the foundation will stop holding Global Initiative meetings abroad after a final session scheduled for Morocco in May. And most foreign governments will no longer be allowed to sponsor programs.

The foundation also will begin disclosing its donors every quarter instead of annually -- an answer to long-standing criticism that the foundation's once-a-year lists made it difficult to view shifts and trends in the charity's funding.

Former President Bill Clinton and other foundation officials have long defended the charity's transparency.

Last month, while she was still a foundation board member, Hillary Clinton defended the family charity against questions about its reliance on donations from foreign governments, saying the foundation had "hundreds of thousands of donors."

An Associated Press analysis of Clinton Foundation donations between 2001 and 2015 showed governments and agencies from 16 nations previously gave direct grants of $55 million to $130 million.

Those governments include the six nations that will be allowed to continue donating. The remaining 10 were Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Kuwait, Italy, Brunei, Taiwan and the Dominican Republic.

Foundation spokesman Craig Minassian said that under the new disclosure policy, "the Clinton Foundation is reinforcing its commitment to accountability while protecting programs that are improving the lives of millions of people around the world."

But he also said the old annual disclosure policy went "above and beyond what's required by voluntarily disclosing our more than 300,000 donors on our website for anyone to see."

Hillary Clinton had previously agreed with President Barack Obama's administration to limit new foreign donations to the foundation while she served as secretary of state, but at least six nations that previously contributed still donated to the charity during her four-year stint.

The foundation's board began discussions over the past two days about altering some of the charity's procedures in an effort that officials said was aimed at improving transparency without harming fundraising for critical programs.

A Section on 04/16/2015

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