For Clinton, deciding how to prepare for a low-key primary

Carolyn Kaster / AP

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks in Gaston Hall at Georgetown University, in Washington, on Dec. 3, 2014. Neither Hillary Rodham Clinton nor Mitt Romney have yet said theyre running for president. But within a few hours on Friday, the likely candidates previewed a 2016 campaign that appears headed to a debate over who is best able to boost the paychecks of every dayAmericans.

By Ken Thomas, Associated Press

Sunday, Feb. 1, 2015 | 8:47 p.m.

Washington

The challenge ahead for Hillary Clinton is one faced by few White House hopefuls: running a primary campaign in which she faces little competition, if any at all.

Still not officially a candidate, the former New York senator, secretary of state and first lady sits far atop early polls against a small field of potential rivals for the Democratic nomination. None of them seems to be in any hurry to move into the race.

Few Democrats see an insurgent candidate in the mold of Barack Obama on the horizon. That raises the potential of a pedestrian Democratic primary season with few televised debates and little of the drama expected from a crowded and likely combative race on the Republican side.

"No one wants a complete coronation, but it's hard to see who a credible challenger will be," said Steve Westly, a California-based fundraiser for Obama's campaigns who is supporting Clinton.

Clinton has been meeting in New York with a group of advisers that includes longtime loyalists and veterans of Obama's races. But the work of campaign planning involves trying to figure out when to get into the race, how to avoid giving off a sense of inevitability and how to generate enthusiasm among the party's base for the general election without the benefit of a spirited fight for the nomination.

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For Clinton, deciding how to prepare for a low-key primary

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