Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Watch Hillary Clinton's Campy Country Music Tribute, 'Stand With Hillary'

While Hillary Clinton has not yet officially announced her expected candidacy in the 2016 presidential election, someone out there is eager to get the country music audience on her side early. Whether it'll work or not is another matter.

Katy Perry Offers to Write Hillary Clinton Campaign Theme Song

We all know that most states where country music is most popular also tend to lean right politically, so a new Super PAC called Stand With Hillary has released a country ballad bearing the same name with a video targeting working families. And, well, it's kind of odd.

Watch it here:

Though the clip was released last month, today it got the Internet's attention and Twitter users have been ready to make a mockery of it.

The track is written by Miguel Orozco, who's only other writing credit with ASCAP is the Obama Spanish Reggaeton track "Como Se Dice...Como Se Llama (Obama, Obama)." And as TMZ directs us, the clip's country musician is played by actor Jason Tobias, who is convincing in the role but will probably hold little weight with true country music fans.

Bill and Hillary Clinton Musical to Make U.S. Debut

The super PAC is run by Daniel Chavez, reports Fusion, a longtime Democratic operative with experience in former President Bill Clinton's administration and Hillary Clinton's 2008 campaign. He told the website that the PAC's intent is to promote Clinton to working-class people, young people and Latinos, and the country ballad was geared towards men specifically. There will be at least four more similar videos, as well, with one aimed at Latinos and others at millennials. So be sure to look out for those too.

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Watch Hillary Clinton's Campy Country Music Tribute, 'Stand With Hillary'

All of Me John Legend Parody With Lyrics – All The Weed – Video


All of Me John Legend Parody With Lyrics - All The Weed
All The Weed thanks: Rihanna, Chris Brown, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Snooki, Miley Cyrus, Katy Perry, Lady GaGa, Joan Rivers, Charlie Sheen, Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore, Craig Robinson,.

By: Trulyish

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All of Me John Legend Parody With Lyrics - All The Weed - Video

Hillary Clinton’s demands for her $300,000-fee speaking appearances On The Record (11.28.14) – Video


Hillary Clinton #39;s demands for her $300,000-fee speaking appearances On The Record (11.28.14)

By: Independent Women #39;s Forum

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Hillary Clinton's demands for her $300,000-fee speaking appearances On The Record (11.28.14) - Video

Clinton camp says long-shot Democratic challengers still …

Backers and allies of Hillary Rodham Clinton are increasingly worried about the threat posed by a motley field of Democratic presidential hopefuls who could complicate, or even derail, a Clinton candidacy in 2016 by focusing attention on her weaknesses.

All of the possible challengers are long shots against Clinton and would face a steep climb against the well-known former secretary of state. Many Clinton supporters also say competition would help her by honing her campaigning skills and discouraging the sense of entitlement that damaged her White House bid in 2008.

But each of the emerging challengers also appeals to a constituency within the Democratic Party that Clinton has struggled with in the past. And unlike Clinton who has yet to formulate a clear message for a potential campaign each has distinct issues to build a campaign around.

Jim Webb, the former senator from Virginia who just formed an exploratory committee, is a populist native of Appalachia with potential appeal to working-class and Southern whites. Maryland Gov. Martin OMalley has been laying the groundwork of a campaign for months, focusing his energies on wooing the kind of progressive activists who view Clinton with suspicion. Sen. Bernard Sanders (I-Vt.), the gadfly socialist who is also pondering a run in the Democratic primaries, represents the antiwar left still bitter with Clinton over the war in Iraq.

Longtime Clinton family political adviser Harold Ickes said it would be a mistake to dismiss such challengers and the dangers they pose.

[What if] this were 2007 before Obama got into the race and youd said, Do you think Senator Obama is a threat to Hillary? Ickes asked rhetorically. The clear answer, he suggested, is that most would have dismissed Obama as little more than an annoyance.

But the biggest concern among many Clinton acolytes is someone who says she is not running Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), an economic populist who has come to personify a longing among liberal Democrats for someone further to Clintons left.

Warren especially interests and worries Bill Clinton, the unofficial top strategist for his wifes shadow campaign, according to two people who know the former president well. Bill Clinton admires Warrens stemwinder speaking style, and Hillary Clinton echoed parts of Warrens sticking-up-for-the-little guy economic message during midterm speeches this year.

During their one midterm appearance together, Clinton lavished praise on Warren and kept her own remarks brief. Elsewhere, she tried out appeals to working-class and underemployed voters that strategists expect to hear again if Clinton runs.

Many Clinton backers insist that some Democratic opposition is both inevitable and welcome, since it tends to toughen up the eventual winner for the head-to-head contest with a Republican in the general election. Looking at the lessons of Clintons bitter primary contest with Obama in 2008, Democrats also hope that Clinton will be polite, even deferential, to potential opponents such as Webb if she runs.

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Clinton camp says long-shot Democratic challengers still ...

The Fix: Hillary Clinton is definitely running for president. Here are five reasons why.

Hillary Clinton is running for president. Well, not actively -- at least not yet. But, she's running. Here's five reasons why (and make sure to read my colleague Aaron Blake's incorrect-but-interesting counterargument).

1. She has run before. One of the best predictors of future presidential bids is past presidential bids. (Sidebar: This reality is why NO ONE should be surprised that Joe Biden wants to run in 2016; he has already run for president twice!) All politics has an addictive element to it but nothing is more alluring than the presidential race. Hundreds of people cheering for you at every stop you make, chanting your name, doing everything they can to just be near you. A cadre of advisers and hangers-on. (This isn't always so fun.) Scads of media attention. The sheer exhilaration of competition at the highest levels. It's very, very hard to give that up once you know it's out there. And Clinton knows it's out there -- not to mention the fact that she undoubtedly feels as though she has unfinished business after losing in 2008 despite starting that race as a front-runner. (See below for more on that.)

2. She's the biggest non-incumbent front-runner in modern presidential history. Clinton knows better than almost anyone the fragility of front-runner status in a presidential race. At the same time, she is a considerably bigger favorite in 2016 than she ever was in 2008 -- both because of her increased strengths but also because of the weakness of the field beneath her. In a new Quinnipiac University poll, Clinton took 57 percent to 13 percent for Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), who continues to insist she isn't running. No one else gets double-digit support. Is it likely that at some point over the next year a poll (or polls) might come out in Iowa, New Hampshire or South Carolina that shows Clinton as less than certain to be the nominee? Absolutely. But there has never been a path as clear as this one for a non-incumbent looking at the presidential race. And it won't ever come along again. Clinton knows that.

3. She has let 1,000 flowers bloom. There's Ready for Hillary. There's Correct the Record. There's Priorities USA. That trio of groups -- all aimed at Clinton's 2016 bid -- have steadily added former and current confidants of the former secretary of state to their ranks. It's hard to imagine people such as Harold Ickes orJeremy Bird, Obama's swing state director, signing on to such an effort without some sort of wink from Clinton that, yes, she is going to do this. She could have, at any point in the past few years, shut down all of these groups with an indication -- private or public -- that she wasn't so sure about how she would spend her future days. She didn't. That's telling.

4. Her memoir was blah. Clinton's reflection on her time at the State Department -- "Hard Choices" -- was the book of a politician who is not yet done being a politician.Despite the title, Clinton took very few risks in the re-telling of her time as the nation's top diplomat and, unlike former Cabinet officials such as Leon Panetta and Robert Gates, didn't blow up any of her former colleagues including the man in the Oval Office at the moment. It was written, at least in part, to help shape the narrative of her time at State for the campaign to come. This from David Ignatius's review of "Hard Choices" for The Post: "This is a careful book, written tactically to burnish friendships and avoid making enemies. Perhaps thats inevitable for an autobiographer who is considering running for president, but there are times when the reader feels he is being 'spun' rather than enlightened." Yup.

5. She wants to redeem herself. Think back on Clinton's life; it has been a relentless series of successes at increasingly high levels, right up until 2008. That loss to Obama is the only real blemish on a resume stocked with accomplishments up the wazoo. For someone as goal-oriented and achievement-focused as Clinton, it's hard to imagine she hasn't spent some decent amount of time thinking about how she could have done things differently in 2008. So, when presented with a golden opportunity to "make things right," how does Clinton not do it? She doesn't not. (Double negative for the win!)

Chris Cillizza writes The Fix, a politics blog for the Washington Post. He also covers the White House.

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The Fix: Hillary Clinton is definitely running for president. Here are five reasons why.