WASHINGTON – Hillary Clinton has no immediate plans to release the transcripts of her $675,000 Goldman Sachs speeches, despite telling a debate audience Thursday she’d consider it.

Clinton told ABC’s This Week the contents of her three paid speeches for the Wall Street investment firm will remain hidden until all her opponents share their private speeches.

“Let everybody who’s ever given a speech to any private group under any circumstances release them,” Clinton said Sunday. “We’ll all release them at the same time. You know, I don’t mind being the subject in Republican debates, the subject in the Democratic primary. That kind of goes with the territory. I’ve been around long enough. But at some point, you know, these rules need to apply to everybody.”

Chief rival Bernie Sanders encouraged Clinton to be transparent.

“I think it would be a positive thing for the American people to know what was said behind closed doors to Wall Street. But, ultimately, that is her decision,” the Vermont senator told CBS’ Face the Nation.

Sanders has dinged Clinton for her cozy financial ties to Wall Street and argued he’s the one to reform a fraudulent system because he’s not beholden to big-money donors. Clinton and her allies have taken $21.4 million from Wall Street for her presidential campaign so far, according to an analysis by Washington Post.

Clinton Sunday bashed Sanders for continuing his “artful smear” against her campaign.



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“I have never, ever been influenced in a view or a vote by anyone who has given me any kind of money,” Clinton said on ABC’s “This Week.”

The former Secretary of State pushed back on the criticism that she shouts, whereas a hoarse-voiced Sanders doesn’t face the same scrutiny.

“We are still living with a double standard and I know it,” Clinton told CNN’s State of the Union when asked whether the critique is sexist. “Every woman I know knows it.”

Sanders Sunday condemned his supporters, known as Bernie Bros, who have gone after Clinton with sexist attacks.

“I have heard about it. It’s disgusting. Look we don’t want that crap….Anybody who is supporting me that is doing the sexist things — we don’t want them. I don’t want that. That is not what this campaign is about.”

Sander took a shot at one of Clinton’s biggest allies, David Brock who had pressured Sanders to release his medical records and implied black lives don’t matter to Sanders because African Americans weren’t adequately represented in his commercials.

“He is a political attack dog and I happen to like Hillary Clinton but I am astounded by some of the people that she has hired including David Brock,” Sanders said on CNN.

Sanders and Clinton have tussled over their differing votes on the Iraq War, whereas as Clinton maintains Sanders’ one vote against the war doesn’t translate into a foreign policy plan.

Sanders shot back on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

“If you go back to 2008, this is exactly what the Clinton people were doing to Senator Barack Obama. They were attacking him, he didn’t have the experience, et cetera, et cetera,” Sanders said.

“But it is not just experience that matters, it is judgment,” added Sanders.

Clinton implied that Sanders’ is worse on foreign policy than Obama.

“There’s a very big difference. In 2008, Senator Obama had really done his homework in the Senate,” Clinton said. “There really isn’t any kind of foreign policy network that is supporting and advising Senator Sanders.”

The two will face off Tuesday in New Hampshire primary where Sanders has maintained a double-digit lead in the polls.