Monday’s WikiLeaks email drop included fresh evidence that Hillary Clinton’s paid speeches to Wall Street bankers caused worry among her campaign staff and advisers.

Longtime confidante Mandy Grunwald warned campaign Chairman John Podesta and other staffers in January that Clinton’s comments in three paid speeches to the investment banking powerhouse Goldman Sachs could pose political problems.

“It’s pretty bad. She is critical to some extent of what led to the crash but the more memorable stuff is totally accomodationist.”

“It’s pretty bad,” she wrote. “She is critical to some extent of what led to the crash but the more memorable stuff is totally accomodationist [sic]: ‘I’m not interested in pointing fingers’ Dodd-Frank was just because ‘people needed to do something for political reasons’ Suggesting that people in the industry know best how to regulate it.”

Pressed to release transcripts from her Wall Street speeches during the Democratic primary campaign, Clinton steadfastly refused to do so — all while maintaining that she spoke truth to power when she addressed bankers and investors.

Previously leaked emails included some of those transcripts — making it clear why Clinton fought so hard to keep them secret.

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Tony Carrk, the campaign’s research director, highlighted troublesome passages from the speeches:

  • On the Dodd-Frank financial regulations passed in response to the 2008 meltdown: “But there was also a need to do something because for political reasons, if you were an elected member of Congress and people in your constituency were losing jobs and shutting businesses and everybody in the press is saying it’s all the fault of Wall Street, you can’t sit idly by and do nothing, but what you do is really important.”
  • On the “big disconnect” between Main Street and Wall Street: “So I’m not interested in, you know, turning the clock back or pointing fingers, but I am interested in trying to figure out how we come together to chart a better way forward and one that will restore confidence in, you know, small and medium-size businesses and consumers and begin to chip away at the unemployment rate.”
  • On regulating Wall Street: “And the people that know the industry better than anybody are the people who work in the industry.”
  • On her relationship with Wall Street: “I represented all of you for eight years. I had great relations and [we] worked so close together after 9/11 to rebuild downtown, and [I have] a lot of respect for the work you do and the people who do it.”
  • On why credit remained tight five years after the collapse: “I mean, right now, there are so many places in our country where the banks are not doing what they need to do because they’re scared of regulations, they’re scared of the other shoe dropping.”

In addition to revealing a cozy relationship with Wall Street one-percenters, Grunwald also worried that Clinton speeches were insufficiently supportive of the Affordable Care Act and could be perceived as weak on Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“There are also some very tepid comments about Obamacare,” Grunwald wrote. “And a ton of foreign policy stuff, including some naive sounding comments about Putin — that could cause a whole separate set of issues — but Jake [Sullivan, Clinton’s chief foreign policy adviser] should review all that.”

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Prior to WikiLeaks — with those speeches safely locked away — Clinton used Obamacare as a sword to attack primary rival Bernie Sanders for his call for universal health care, arguing that he risked overturning President Obama’s signature achievement. And Clinton has relentlessly attacked Republican nominee Donald Trump for inadequate belligerence toward Putin, contradicting what she said in private speeches and her own public “reset” policy toward Russia as secretary of state.

In a separate email in January, Gunwald complained about Sanders’ attacks on the “Establishment,” including Clinton.

“Planned Parenthood, labor, HRC, the Des Moines Register, Sherrod Brown — everyone who isn’t for him is the political establishment?” she wrote. “Ridiculous.”