Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Election 2014: Campaign Surrogates Hit the Trail – Video


Election 2014: Campaign Surrogates Hit the Trail
On the Webcast Extra, with less than 2 weeks to Election Day top campaign surrogates like Hillary Clinton, Sarah Palin and Michelle Obama are hitting the trail. What #39;s the motivation for these...

By: PBS

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Election 2014: Campaign Surrogates Hit the Trail - Video

Michaud welcomes Hillary Clinton to Scarborough – Video


Michaud welcomes Hillary Clinton to Scarborough
Hillary Clinton did not mention Gov. Paul LePage by name at Scarborough High School, but criticized his leadership style while campaigning for Congressman Mike Michaud. "You don #39;t need a lot...

By: WMTW-TV

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Michaud welcomes Hillary Clinton to Scarborough - Video

Hillary Clinton;s Cup of Coffee Yields Pot Joke – Video


Hillary Clinton;s Cup of Coffee Yields Pot Joke
Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Al Hunt offers his political wisdom on the Bloomberg Politics/Des Moines Register Iowa Poll. (Source: Bloomberg) --Subscribe to Bloomb...

By: Murphy Deena

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Hillary Clinton;s Cup of Coffee Yields Pot Joke - Video

Hillary Clinton campaigns for Democrats – and herself

Mrs Clinton warned that once in power Republicans would try to restrict abortion rights and mount a discriminatory and insulting effort to block legislation guaranteeing equal pay for women.

Mrs Hagan is depending on a large turnout among women and African-Americans to see off a challenge from Thom Tillis, the Republican speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives.

Many in the crowd wore Ready for Hillary teeshirts and Hillary 2016 campaign buttons urging their heroine to again run for president. Mrs Clinton gave them no outright confirmation but as is her wont she dropped a few suggestive hints of her ambitions.

She joked that a month after the birth of her first grandchild, Charlotte, I still have that grandmother glow.

But she added that theres nothing that gets your mind concentrated more about the future than the birth of a new child - a line that sparked cries of Run, Hillary, run! from some in the crowd.

Mclean Harper, a Clinton supporter who attended the rally with her wife, Riki Harper, said afterwards: I feel like we will be able to look back at this and say: we saw the President right before she was elected.

Mrs Clinton and Mrs Hagan spoke for a cumulative 34 minutes but neither one mentioned President Barack Obama, whos low approval ratings are seen as a drag on Democrat candidates.

Mrs Hagan, who was first elected in 2008, the year Mr Obama led a wave of Democrats to victories across the US, has studiously avoided any association with the current occupant of the White House.

While the President has largely stayed on the sidelines during this years election, Mrs Clinton has criss-crossed the country in support of Democrats candidates.

Larry Sabato, director of University of Virginia Center for Politics, said Mrs Clinton was campaigning so vigorously partly to build up goodwill in the party ahead of the 2016 election.

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Hillary Clinton campaigns for Democrats - and herself

Hillary Clinton's 2008 supporters see a second chance to make history

Standing a few feet from Ms Mannlein-Hochman, Riki Harpers face darkens as she remembers the day in 2008 when Mrs Clinton admitted defeat.

The 39-year-old was in a noisy Florida restaurant and barely able to hear as Mrs Clinton conceded she was unable to break that highest, hardest glass ceiling that kept women from the White House.

"I just felt so lost," Mrs Harper remembers. "I wasn't for Obama then and I'm still not really now. I thought it was Hillary's time."

Some Hillary loyalists vented their anger by forming a group called PUMA (Party Unity My A**) and refusing to accept anyone but Mrs Clinton as their party leader. Others went out to actively campaign for John McCain in 2008.

Most, like Mrs Harper, grudgingly cast their ballots for Mr Obama, if only to keep Sarah Palin from becoming vice-president. But as they watched the current president lurch through crises at home and abroad, many returned to a persistent conclusion: Hillary would be doing this better.

Hillary Clinton addresses her supporters as her daughter Chelsea and her husband Bill Clinton watch in 2008 (AP)

Lee Calvert, a 51-year-old gay man wearing a teeshirt emblazoned with a Hillary H wrapped in a rainbow flag, said he felt Mrs Clinton would have been stronger on foreign policy than the current occupant of the Oval Office.

He sort of steps back and hes more professorial, Mr Calvert said. I think Hillary Clinton would have been more forceful.

Like many others in the crowd, he said Mrs Clinton would be an even stronger candidate in 2016 than she was in six years ago, brushing aside concerns about her age - 67 - or that her political skills had rusted over time. If she wants to run, its hers. The only thing that will stop her is herself.

Both he and his friend Mark Donahue, who wore a matching shirt, said they had donated to the Clinton campaign in 2008 and were prepared to do so again.

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Hillary Clinton's 2008 supporters see a second chance to make history