Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Hillary Clinton Gets Standing Ovation as She Presents at 2024 Tony Awards: I Know ‘How Hard It Is to Make Change’ – Yahoo Entertainment

Hillary Clinton is a co-producer of the Broadway musical 'Suffs,' which received six nominations at the 77th Tony Awards on Sunday, June 16

Theo Wargo/Getty

Hillary Clinton is highlighting the historical importance behind the musical Suffs.

Clinton, 76, appeared at the 2024 Tony Awards on Sunday, June 16, to introduce Suffs, the musical from Shaina Taub that the former U.S. senator and secretary of state is credited as co-producer on.

"What a great evening. Now, I have stood on a lot of stages, but this is very special. And I know a little bit about how hard it is to make change, so I'm extremely proud of this original American musical by Shaina Taub now a two-time Tony winner," Clinton said as she received a standing ovation while taking the stage at Lincoln Center's David H. Koch Theater in New York City.

"And of course, it is about some American originals: the suffragists who fought so valiantly for so long to give women in our country the right to vote," she said. "It's almost impossible to think about what a challenge that was, but now it's an election year, and we need to be reminded about how important it is to vote, so please welcome the company of Suffs!"

Related: Tony Awards 2024: See the Complete List of Winners (Live Updates)

Theo Wargo/Getty

Suffs received six nominations at the 77th Tony Awards, with composer Taub, 36, scoring wins in the best book of a musical and best original score categories. The production was nominated for best musical alongside fellow nominees Hell's Kitchen, Illinoise, The Outsiders and Water for Elephants.

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The musical takes place in 1913 and follows suffragists as they organize to ensure American women gain the right to vote, which was granted when Congress passed the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1920. "Reaching across and against generational, racial, and class divides, these brilliant, flawed women entertain and inspire us with the story of their hard-won victory in an ongoing fight," an official synopsis for the musical reads. "So much has changed since the passing of the Nineteenth Amendment over a century ago, and yet were reminded sometimes we need to look back, in order to march fearlessly into the future."

Related: The 2024 Tony Awards: Daniel Radcliffe Is a Winner, JAY-Z Raps from the Lobby and More from Broadway's Big Night

Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

Clinton is listed as a co-producer on Suffs along with Malala Yousafzai, Jill Furman and Rachel Sussman, according to the musical's website.

The 2024 Tony Awards are airing live fromLincoln Center's David H. Koch Theater in New York City on Sunday, June 16, on CBS and Paramount+.

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Hillary Clinton Gets Standing Ovation as She Presents at 2024 Tony Awards: I Know 'How Hard It Is to Make Change' - Yahoo Entertainment

Opinion | Democrats are wrestling with an age-old problem – The Washington Post

Seemingly unrelated news items collided midweek to suggest a possible solution for a vexing problem: President Bidens age.

Ive touched on this topic in recent weeks, but with no clear vision for a fix. To sum up, Americans, including Democrats, are concerned about Bidens age and the increasing probability that he wouldnt be able to complete a second term. If he wins reelection, Biden will be 82 on Inauguration Day.

The problem isnt his numerical age. People age in different ways. In some cases, people hardly age at all, theyre so physically fit and mentally astute. But even the most robust 80-year-old would be challenged to keep pace with the White House job. Far younger presidents have turned gray in the Oval Office.

Bidens steady decline the past few years his stumbles, his search for words, his occasional blank stare has been impossible to ignore. Such change isnt a reflection of character; its part of the natural order of life, and it isnt ageist to take note. But Biden and former president Donald Trump, 78, have forced the issue to the forefront of our politics.

Thus, we see North Dakotas recently approved ballot measure to establish an upper age limit for congressional candidates the nations first serious attempt to grapple with Americas perceived gerontocracy. Until someone challenges the measure as unconstitutional, as expected, you cant run for Congress in North Dakota if you would turn 81 during your term. Neither Biden nor Trump could run for Congress in North Dakota.

For now. Under a 1995 Supreme Court ruling, states cannot create eligibility restrictions beyond whats in the Constitution. Of course, a solid argument can be made that elections take care of the age question. If candidates are deemed too old, voters dont elect them.

Inarguably, a significant obstacle to a Biden win is Kamala Harris, whose low popularity has not been improved by her lackluster performance as vice president. More independents and disenchanted Republicans might swing for Biden if it werent for the prospect of a President Harris not because of her sex, race or any other demographic category, but because of her competency, or lack thereof.

The question now is, how risky would it be for Democrats to replace her? Some worry that a change would jeopardize Black votes. It was never clear, however, that Harris was a draw for Black American voters, even if some Black women celebrated her rise. When she dropped out of the presidential race in 2019, she was polling below Pete Buttigieg in South Carolina.

Moreover, does anyone really think any Democrats are going to suddenly turn to Trump because Biden changes running mates to improve his chances of reelection? Herein lies one of the problems with identity politics. Bloc voting by skin color is among our most racist assumptions. Democrats, regardless of pigmentation or cultural heritage, want to win elections, presumably to advance a worldview consistent with their values.

Im not alone in suggesting that Biden replace Harris, perhaps in exchange for a key role in his administration. Serving as attorney general at least would be in her wheelhouse. Several alternative candidates have been suggested, including Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth and, needless to say, Taylor Swift. (Kidding, though her outspoken contempt for Trump isnt nothing.)

By now, youve probably forgotten about the second part of the news collision earlier mentioned. It was a brief story Wednesday alleging a controversial development in a New York congressional race: Hillary Clinton had endorsed Westchester County Executive George Latimer for the House seat currently held by incumbent squad member Jamaal Bowman.

In a post on X, Clinton wrote: With Trump on the ballot, we need strong, principled Democrats in Congress more than ever. In Congress, @LatimerforNY will protect abortion rights, stand up to the NRA, and fight for President Bidens agenda just like hes always done.

The controversy seems to stem mostly from the vitriol between the two candidates. Bowman has alleged that Latimer is an anti-Muslim racist controlled by Republican billionaires who want to end voting rights. (Now thats a mouthful.) During a recent debate, Latimer claimed that Bowman looks out only for people of color and ignores other constituents.

These volleys have come amid divisions over Israels continued military operations in Gaza. Latimer is supported by the pro-Israel AIPAC, while his supporters accuse Bowman of using antisemitic tropes. As for Clinton, the question is, why now? Why would she suddenly get involved in a congressional race?

We are left to speculate about motive, but the effect of Clinton inserting herself into the news cycle is to remind voters that, but for her defeat in 2016, we wouldnt be stuck in this old-White-men dilemma. She is also reminding people of her relative centrism, her support for Israel and her broadly respected role as secretary of state.

No one has mentioned her as a possible running mate for Biden far as I know, but why not replace Harris with Clinton? At 76, she might want no part of it, but its hard to retire when you feel your job isnt done. If Biden needs to step down, even those who didnt vote for Clinton would have confidence in her ability to keep the country on track. Its just a thought, but worse ideas have met with regrettable success.

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Opinion | Democrats are wrestling with an age-old problem - The Washington Post

Hillary Clinton Hints at Trump’s Guilty Verdict with New Merch: ‘Turns Out She Was Right About Everything’ – Yahoo Singapore News

We recently had some new merch made based on a phrase I hear a lot, Clinton shared on Instagram after Trump's guilty verdict

Paolo Blocco/WireImage; Angela Weiss - Pool/Getty

Hilary Clinton is seemingly poking some fun at Donald Trumps felony conviction.

The former presidential candidate, 76, appeared to address the former presidents guilty verdict on Thursday, May 30 after taking the podium at the Vital Voices Global Leadership Awards in Washington D.C.

In a video shared on X (formerly known as Twitter) of the event, Clinton could be seen getting applause as she took the stage. She thanked the audience before quipping, Anything going on today? appearing to reference his criminal trial. The audience could be heard cheering in response.

She also shared an Instagram post promoting a mug that featured a painted version of herself sipping tea with the words turns out she was right about everything printed on top.

Related: Donald Trump Found Guilty on All Counts in Historic Criminal Trial, Making Him a Convicted Felon

We recently had some new merch made based on a phrase I hear a lot, she captioned the photo of the mug. The design happened to be finalized today.

The words seemingly stemmed from Clintons previous comments. She previously called Trump an illegitimate president in a CBS Morning interview in 2019 and suggested that he may have had a hand in rigging the 2016 elections in his favor.

ANGELA WEISS/POOL/AFP via Getty

Related: Is Donald Trump Going to Jail After Guilty Verdict? What to Know About Sentencing on July 11

I believe he understands that the many varying tactics they used, from voter suppression and voter purging to hacking to the false stories he knows that there were just a bunch of different reasons why the election turned out like it did, she said at the time.

The Manhattan District Attorney's Office argued during Trumps criminal trial that he falsified documents in order to mask hush money payments to Stormy Daniels in the final days of his 2016 presidential election. In falsifying the records, the DA's office argued, Trump was more broadly attempting to bury evidence of an illegal conspiracy to influence the 2016 election.

Trump was ultimately found guilty in a New York court on Thursday, May 30, of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records becoming the first president in history to become a convicted felon.

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Following the guilty verdict, Trump told reporters of the trial, "This was a disgrace. This was a rigged trial by a conflicted judge who was corrupt." He also vowed that he was an innocent man and would fight the verdict to the end, per CBS News.

Trump faces up to four years in prison, though he is also eligible for a lesser probation sentence and a fine. He is expected to appeal the verdict.

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Hillary Clinton Hints at Trump's Guilty Verdict with New Merch: 'Turns Out She Was Right About Everything' - Yahoo Singapore News

Hillary Clinton Gets Standing Ovation as She Presents at 2024 Tony Awards: I Know ‘How Hard It Is to Make Change’ – Yahoo News UK

Hillary Clinton is a co-producer of the Broadway musical 'Suffs,' which received six nominations at the 77th Tony Awards on Sunday, June 16

Theo Wargo/Getty

Hillary Clinton is highlighting the historical importance behind the musical Suffs.

Clinton, 76, appeared at the 2024 Tony Awards on Sunday, June 16, to introduce Suffs, the musical from Shaina Taub that the former U.S. senator and secretary of state is credited as co-producer on.

"What a great evening. Now, I have stood on a lot of stages, but this is very special. And I know a little bit about how hard it is to make change, so I'm extremely proud of this original American musical by Shaina Taub now a two-time Tony winner," Clinton said as she received a standing ovation while taking the stage at Lincoln Center's David H. Koch Theater in New York City.

"And of course, it is about some American originals: the suffragists who fought so valiantly for so long to give women in our country the right to vote," she said. "It's almost impossible to think about what a challenge that was, but now it's an election year, and we need to be reminded about how important it is to vote, so please welcome the company of Suffs!"

Related: Tony Awards 2024: See the Complete List of Winners (Live Updates)

Theo Wargo/Getty

Suffs received six nominations at the 77th Tony Awards, with composer Taub, 36, scoring wins in the best book of a musical and best original score categories. The production was nominated for best musical alongside fellow nominees Hell's Kitchen, Illinoise, The Outsiders and Water for Elephants.

Never miss a story sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

The musical takes place in 1913 and follows suffragists as they organize to ensure American women gain the right to vote, which was granted when Congress passed the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1920. "Reaching across and against generational, racial, and class divides, these brilliant, flawed women entertain and inspire us with the story of their hard-won victory in an ongoing fight," an official synopsis for the musical reads. "So much has changed since the passing of the Nineteenth Amendment over a century ago, and yet were reminded sometimes we need to look back, in order to march fearlessly into the future."

Related: The 2024 Tony Awards: Daniel Radcliffe Is a Winner, JAY-Z Raps from the Lobby and More from Broadway's Big Night

Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

Clinton is listed as a co-producer on Suffs along with Malala Yousafzai, Jill Furman and Rachel Sussman, according to the musical's website.

The 2024 Tony Awards are airing live fromLincoln Center's David H. Koch Theater in New York City on Sunday, June 16, on CBS and Paramount+.

For more People news, make sure to sign up for our newsletter!

Read the original article on People.

Originally posted here:
Hillary Clinton Gets Standing Ovation as She Presents at 2024 Tony Awards: I Know 'How Hard It Is to Make Change' - Yahoo News UK

Why Did Suffragettes Wear White? The Color History, Explained – WWD

It took decades of protest, organized demonstrations and more for the U.S. to enshrine in its constitution that a citizen could not be prevented to vote based on sex. The decision, passed in June 1919 and ratified in August 1920, changed history, and continued to ripple throughout the U.S., creating new waves of the feminist movement.

Looking back more than 100 years, women who advocated for the right to vote, called suffragettes, used sartorial statements to magnify their message. The color white became symbolic of the womens suffrage moment.

Ahead, learn more about the history behind suffragette-white and its incarnations throughout history to today.

Before white became the unifying color that brought the suffrage movement together, many women dating back to the mid-19th century who were active in womens suffrage organizations used the color yellow to symbolize the movement.

In 1869, the suffragettes went to Kansas, and the Kansas state flower is the sunflower, Einav Rabinovitch-Fox, a lecturer at Case Western Reserve Universitys Department of History, said. Yellow became the suffragette color and by the 1890s it would be their official color.

At the time, suffragettes were rallying to ratify state constitutions one by one, traveling to each state to make their case for womens right to vote. Simultaneously, women in England were organizing under the colors green, purple and white. Rabinovitch-Fox notes there were several trans-Atlantic conversations between the movements and its representatives, including Alice Paul and Lucy Burns, leaders of the American movement.

When Paul and Burns came back to the U.S., they start looking for those color schemes. Suffragettes, Rabinovitch-Fox says, were very savvy when it came to the media; they knew the power of dressing for the movement.

White is one of the colors but it didnt become so prevalent until very late, partly because suffrage parades were very colorful, Rabinovitch-Fox explained. Because they were so savvy and understood the media, they themselves sent photographs to newspapers. Alice Paul was very good at saying, We need to create this visual contrast. White was useful for them to do that. Streets were very dark, so if you see a bunch of women in white dresses or light dresses, the contrast [in photos] will be great. They understood that. White is just a more practical color.

The argument to make the suffragette movement more egalitarian was wear a white dress and a yellow bow and youre a suffragist, Rabinovitch-Fox said.

In the United States, the color was seen often when women marched for the right to vote in the latter stages of the movement.

Its also important to note that the color white and whiteness played a key role in the womens suffrage movement. The 19th amendment doesnt guarantee the right to vote, it does say you cannot prevent someone from voting on account of sex. But you can prevent them from voting on account of other reasons, Rabinovitch-Fox said. While prominent Black activists like Ida B. Wells voted in the North following the 19th amendment, Black women, Indigenous women and more waited for years to become active participants in the United States democratic process.

We tend to think of the 19th amendment as the end of the story, but its really not.

Other colors incorporated into the womens suffrage movement were yellow gold, purple and green. Each color, like white, symbolized a particular quality. White was often associated with purity, green with hope and purple with royalty.

To this day, green and purple are still seen during suffragette celebrations. To commemorate the 100-year anniversary since women won the right to vote in the United Kingdom in June 2018, women gathered and waved flags with the purple, white and green colors. Many also wore the tricolor scheme.

Suffragette white still appears as a powerful sartorial statement in contemporary politics, but this is a recent phenomenon. Rabinovitch-Fox credits the 2016 election as a time when white dressing surged, especially among female politicians. Once Clinton adopted it, Rabinovitch-Fox says, it became a way of connecting past struggles with current struggles.

Vice President Kamala Harris has worn suffragette white on several pivotal occasions during her political career. During the 2012 Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., the future vice president of the United States wore suffragette-white as a symbol, evoking the power of women in politics.

For her historic victory speech after President Joe Biden won the presidency, and Harris won the vice presidency, she wore suffragette white again. She thanked all the women who have worked to secure and protect the right to vote for over a century 100 years ago with the 19th Amendment, 55 years ago with the voting rights act, and now in 2020 with a new generation of women in our country who cast their ballots and continued the right for their fundamental right to vote and be heard.

Vice President Harris further reflected on the occasion, saying, while I might be the first woman in this office, I will not be the last.

During other political occasions, such as the State of the Union address, women who are members of the Democratic Party wore suffragette white as a sartorial statement to address womens reproductive rights.

White makes you stand out. As a woman you stand out in congress, for sure. But a group of women wearing white in congress, thats a statement of power.

Away from Capitol Hill, women still wear suffragette white on historic occasions and celebrations. During the 131st Rose Parade in Pasadena, Calif., women fashioned white pieces of clothing inspired by the early 20th century to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment. The color purple was also featured on sashes, hats and more.

The musical Suffs is nominated for six Tony Awards at the 2024 awards show on June 16. The musical relays the historic events of the early 20th century, leading up to the ratification of the19th amendmentto the constitution in 1920.

The show celebrated its opening night on April 18 in New York City. Hillary Clinton, who is a producer of the show, attended the event wearing a symbolic sartorial statement. The former first lady and secretary of state chose to wear suffragette white to the show, as a symbol of the work women did, and continue to do, for womens rights.

Although the movement began more than 100 years ago, womens suffrage and the colors that symbolism the political and social goals of women still carry weight. They are a sartorial symbol of progress, hope and the eternal desire for equality the medium is the message.

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Why Did Suffragettes Wear White? The Color History, Explained - WWD