Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Just where is Hillary Clinton from?

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Washington (CNN) -- Hillary Clinton is a New Yorker. And an Arkansan. And an Illinoisan. And at times also even a Pennsylvanian.

While the question -- Where is Hillary Clinton from? -- may seem simple, the answer was made harder as Clinton traveled the country over the last six months stumping for Democratic candidates during the midterms and peddling her memoir. People from at least four states like to lay claim to Clinton, and the former secretary of state never shied away from those signs of citizenship.

Born in Park Ridge, Illinois in 1947, Clinton rose to prominence during her 20-year stay in Arkansas from 1974 to 1992. After living in Washington, D.C., for eight years as first lady, Clinton moved to Chappaqua, New York and represented the Empire State for eight years in the Senate.

Geographical identity politics are a core part of the American campaign trail from local offices all the way up Pennsylvania Avenue -- just ask Dick Lugar or Scott Brown -- and having home roots that are considered authentic by voters is a key part of messaging for any presidential hopeful, and that includes Clinton.

At times, she plays up her Arkansas roots and slight southern accent. In other forums, she is the former senator from New York and resident of Chappaqua. And when she is anywhere in the Midwest, Clinton is the Chicago Cubs-loving child from Park Ridge, Illinois.

The Clintons currently maintain their primary residence in New York and another home in Washington, D.C.

Clinton's returning to one of these "home" states this weekend -- Arkansas -- for a 10th anniversary celebration of the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock.

Here is how Clinton is linked to four states -- Illinois, Arkansas, New York and Pennsylvania -- and why it matters.

Illinois:

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Just where is Hillary Clinton from?

5 pieces of unsolicited advice people are throwing at Hillary Clinton

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Little Rock, Arkansas (CNN) -- Hillary Clinton is the prohibitive favorite for the Democrats' presidential nomination in 2016. And there are countless political operatives with opinions on how she should run her all-but-certain campaign.

That combination has led to tons of unsolicited advice thrown at the former secretary of state, some of it counter intuitive and a lot of contradictory. Here are the five pieces of unsolicited advice being volleyed regularly at Hillary Clinton:

1.) Run from Obama

President Barack Obama took most of the blame for Democrats' losses on Nov. 4. So shortly after Election Day, a cacophony of anonymous allies were telling Clinton to run away from the president she served under for four years.

"She is not President Obama. Let's not forget, they were a team of rivals," one ally told The Hill. "Now is the time to further enunciate these differences."

Clinton allies expressed similar sentiments to CNN. The thinking goes that if the president is unpopular, Clinton should start distance herself now, as opposed to months down the road when it may be harder.

2.) Run to Obama

Clinton allies have also been telling reporters that because Republican pickups in Senate create a larger target for both her and the President, it would make sense for them to join forces.

"President Obama's legacy is now entirely dependent on the election of a Democratic successor as president who will protect and extend it, not demolish it," David Brock, the chairman of a pro-Clinton super PAC, told the Washington Post. "Should she run, they both now have a common enemy in a Republican Congress that will define politics through 2016."

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5 pieces of unsolicited advice people are throwing at Hillary Clinton

Secret Emails of Potential Clinton Campaign Managers Revealed

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For the past five years, a prominent Democratic operative who is a leading contender to manage a Hillary Clinton presidential campaign has maintained a private email listserv for friends and associates that carries a provocative name: the Mook Mafia.

The listserv, which one member said reaches more than 150 fellow campaign veterans, has been a means for Robby Mook and a close friend Marlon Marshall to stay connected with many of the operatives who would likely populate a Democratic presidential campaign in 2016. Mook and Marshall have both been mentioned as possible Hillary Clinton campaign managers.

Emilys List/Flickr

PHOTO: DCCC's Robby Mook speaks with members of Emily's List in this Oct. 25, 2010 file photo.

Pete Souza/The White House/Flickr

President Obama receives an update on the Affordable Care Act in the Oval Office, April 1, 2014. With the President, from left, are: Phil Schiliro, Tara McGuinness, Marlon Marshall, Jeanne Lambrew, DKristie Canegallo and Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett.

Copies of a cache of the emails obtained by ABC News, and revealed publicly for the first time, show Mook and Marshall demonstrating an aggressive tone in rallying their friends behind political causes, in exchanges that are often self-mocking and sometimes border on being profane.

They include rallying cries to, in Mooks words, smite Republicans mafia-style, and, to quote Marshall, punish those voters. Mook sometimes calls himself Deacon in the emails, while Marshall, now a senior White House aide, refers to himself as Reverend in many of the exchanges.

Their inside jokes sometimes come at the expense of fellow Democrats, including former President Bill Clinton. A November 2009 mock news release announcing the listserv in addition to a new website and an upcoming reunion for the Mook Mafia included a fabricated quote from the former president.

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Secret Emails of Potential Clinton Campaign Managers Revealed

Clinton Alums Remember the Past, Look to Future

Former President Bill Clinton's political family reunited Friday in Arkansas, reminiscing about his two terms in office and relishing the prospect of a first for Hillary Rodham Clinton.

"In the world of Clinton, there is not an end. There is always tomorrow," said Skip Rutherford, dean of the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service. He first met Bill Clinton in 1973.

What the future might mean for the couple depends heavily on Hillary Clinton's decision on whether to make a second bid for president and if so, the degree to which she would defend or distance herself from President Barack Obama and her husband's terms in office.

Presidential politics in 2016 swirled around the reunion. In an hourlong address capping the first day, Bill Clinton made no mention of the possibility of another Hillary Clinton campaign but said his two terms had accomplished the goals that it had set.

"At the end, on foreign and domestic policy, economic and social, you could honestly say that people were better off when we quit," Clinton said.

Even as the Clinton alumni streamed to Little Rock, the former first couple took a touch of friendly fire from Vice President Joe Biden, a potential Clinton presidential rival, on her husband's record of creating jobs during the 1990s.

The Clintons often speak of having created 23 million jobs and cutting the poverty rate during Bill Clinton's presidency. But in a speech Thursday, Biden highlighted that how that period is remembered will be important to Hillary Clinton's ambitions.

The "middle class started to get into trouble in the late '80s," Biden said. "All through the '90s ... the middle class was declining except the last two years."

Republicans, still giddy about their midterm election triumph that handed them complete control of Congress, are busily preparing for 2016.

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul assembled his political team at a Washington hotel this week for strategy sessions while former President George W. Bush has encouraged his brother, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, to run. Govs. Chris Christie of New Jersey, Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Bobby Jindal of Louisiana will head to Florida next week for an annual Republican Governors Association meeting replete with presidential overtones.

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Clinton Alums Remember the Past, Look to Future

Hillary Clinton snubbed by progressives; Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren on guest list

Vice President Joseph R. Biden, check. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, check. But noticeably absent from the guest list of the annual meeting of the Democracy Alliance, a progressive-minded group that funds similarly liberal causes, was former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The meeting isnt explicitly designed to drum up support for the next presidential contender for the Democratic Party but past gatherings have indeed included debates and discussions about the emerging field of presidential hopefuls, Politico reported.

The fact that Mrs. Clinton wasnt invited to the gathering is raising eyebrows among some of her supporters who also recall the Democracy Alliances perceived jump to then-candidate Barack Obamas bandwagon in 2008, and abandonment of the former first lady, with a similarly sour taste, Politico reported.

On top of that, the Democracy Alliances former executive director, Kelly Craighead a loyalist of the Clinton family is no longer with the group. She was replaced by Gara LaMarche, whos not as cozy with the Clintons, after group members raised concerns that the Democracy Alliance was trending too Democratic and not enough progressive, Politico reported.

Mr. LaMarche, however, said his group wasnt playing favorites and that reading too much into Mrs. Clintons absence would be folly and little more than drummed-up media speculations. Politico said.

None of this has to do with presidential politics, and none of the people you asked about [Warren, Biden] are declared presidential candidates, he told a Politico reporter. Once we have an actual contest, if we do have one, the DA will have to thread carefully through it, since we are scrupulously neutral, and people like you are always looking for signs.

He also said we invited Sen. Warren because, as Secretary Clinton herself has said, she is a leading progressive voice on the economy and she is kicking off an economics discussion, Politico reported.

At the same time, some in attendance called it very surprising that Mrs. Clinton wasnt invited.

Ms. Warren a rock star among progressives, who see her as the solution to Mrs. Clintons perceived too-conservative approach to Wall Street and on U.S. military missions was due to speak on Thursday on An Economy That Works For All A Progressive Plan and the Path to Making It Happen.

Neither Mrs. Clinton nor Ms. Warren have announced candidacies for the White House in 2016. But a super PAC called Ready for Warren has been formed to convince her to run.

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Hillary Clinton snubbed by progressives; Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren on guest list