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Hillary Clinton: "No one had a bigger influence" on me than my mom

Int his file photo, then-Democratic presidential hopeful and New York Senator Hillary Clinton (R), her mother Dorothy Rodham (C) and daughter Chelsea Clinton (L) campaign 02 January 2008 at the First United Methodist Church in Indianola, Iowa, just one day before the January 3rd state caucus. STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reflects on her own experiences as a mother and daughter in an excerpt of her upcoming memoir obtained by Vogue Magazine just in time for Mother's Day.

The book, titled "Hard Choices," has been billed as a chronicle of Clinton's time in public life, but in it, Clinton also discusses some more private moments, including the lessons she learned from her own mother, Dorothy Rodham, and how she passed them along to her daughter Chelsea.

"From the moment I first held Chelsea in my arms in the hospital in Little Rock, I knew my mission in life was to give her every opportunity to thrive," Clinton writes. "As she's grown up and stepped out into the world in her own right, my responsibilities have changed."

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Hillary Clinton's anticipated announcement on whether or not she will run for president was preceded by a much different one -- that she will be ...

Chelsea Clinton recently announced that she and husband Marc Mezvinsky are expecting a baby, and Hillary Clinton writes in the book that she's been looking forward to being a grandmother for many years. "And I've found myself thinking a lot about my relationship with my own mom, as an adult as well as in childhood, and what lessons I learned from her," she says.

"When I became Secretary of State, Mom was just about to turn 90," Clinton writes. "She had been living with us in Washington for the past few years, ever since being alone in her apartment overlooking the zoo on Connecticut Avenue became too much. Like so many Americans of my generation, I felt both blessed to have these extra years with an aging parent and very responsible for making sure she was comfortable and well cared for. Mom gave me so much unconditional love and support when I was growing up in Park Ridge, Illinois; now it was my turn to support her. Of course I never would have let her hear me describe it that way. Dorothy Howell Rodham was a fiercely independent woman. She couldn't bear the thought of being a burden to anyone."

"Having her so close became a source of great comfort to me, especially in the difficult period after the end of the 2008 campaign," Clinton recalls. "I'd come home from a long day at the Senate or the State Department, slide in next to her at the small table in our breakfast nook, and let everything just pour out."

Clinton says she could not recall her mom ever looking happier than she did on the day of Chelsea's wedding in 2010. "She proudly walked down the aisle," Clinton writes, "and exulted over her joyful, radiant granddaughter."

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Hillary Clinton: "No one had a bigger influence" on me than my mom

Hillary Clinton: How will her roles as mother and grandmother play in 2016?

Vogue magazine has published an excerpt from Hillary Clintons upcoming memoir, Hard Choices, focusing on her mother. Opponents likely will look elsewhere for political targets.

Its Mothers Day, so not surprising that the arc of the personal narrative for 2016 presidential front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton would be motherhood and her impending grandmotherhood.

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At least thats what Vogue magazine has done with what it describes as an exclusive excerpt from Mrs. Clintons new memoir,Hard Choices, to be released next month.

Her own mothers childhood was marked by trauma and abandonment, she writes, including apparent treatment that today likely would have brought intervention by social service agencies. It may help explain Clintons faith Methodism and the social gospel as well as her liberal outlook on governments role in healthcare, which she took on as first lady when her husband was president.

Even in her 90s, Mom never lost her commitment to social justice, which did so much to mold and inspire me when I was growing up, Clinton writes.

Dorothy Howell Rodham (who died in 2011 at age 92)left the not-so-tender care of abusive relatives when she was 14, working as a nanny and housekeeper for room and board plus $3 a week. Her life got better with help from kind adults, including school teachers a history of collective upbringing no doubt influencing Clintons earlier book It Takes a Village.

Will any of this make a difference if she chooses to run for the White House? Perhaps. Personal history did for Barack Obama a kid of mixed race raised by a single mother and loving grandparents as indeed it did for Bill Clinton, also raised by a single mother in less than silver-spoon circumstances, then acquiring an Ivy League education as did Obama.

But its what has transpired in more recent years that her opponents and most voters will be considering for the most part.

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Hillary Clinton: How will her roles as mother and grandmother play in 2016?

First Excerpt of Hillary Clinton's Memoir Released

May 11, 2014 1:20pm

Caption: Chelsea Clinton, right, is joined by her grandmother, Dorothy Rodham, center, and her mother, Hillary Rodham Clinton, on her wedding day, Saturday, July 31, 2010 in Rhinebeck, N.Y.

Hillary Clinton writes in her upcoming memoir that no one person has had a bigger influence on her life or shaped her more as a person than her mother, who died nearly three years ago by her side.

Vogue Magazine today released the first excerpt of Clintons much anticipated memoir, Hard Choices a heartfelt and personal Mothers Day tribute to her mother, Dorothy Howell Rodham.

In the piece, Clinton, who says she has been reflecting more about motherhood lately as she prepares to be a grandmother, gives touching and humanizing anecdotes about her relationship with own mother, the struggles her mother overcame and the lessons she passed along.

Like so many Americans of my generation, I felt both blessed to have these extra years with an aging parent and very responsible for making sure she was comfortable and well cared for, she writes about her mother, who lived with the Clintons in Washington, D.C. until she died at the age of 92. Mom gave me so much unconditional love and support when I was growing up in Park Ridge, Illinois; now it was my turn to support her.

Even so, Clinton, describes the way in which she continued to rely heavily on her mom for emotional support throughout the most challenging moments in her career, specifically the period at the end of her failed 2008 presidential campaign.

Having her so close became a source of great comfort to me, she writes. Id come home from a long day at the Senate or the State Department, slide in next to her at the small table in our breakfast nook, and let everything just pour out.

Hillary Clintons daughter, Chelsea, often speaks about the important role her grandmother had in her life, which Clinton also details in the piece. She describes how her mom, who had a challenging upbringing filled with trauma and abandonment,helped Chelsea navigate the unique challenges of growing up in the public eye, and encouraged her to pursue her passion for service and philanthropy.

In one of the most humanizing moments in the tribute, Clinton writes about the day in 2011 in which her mother took a turn for the worse, causing Clinton, who was secretary of state at the time, to cancel a trip overseas and rush to the hospital.

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First Excerpt of Hillary Clinton's Memoir Released

Hillary Clinton and Michelle Obama Spar to Open SNL as Charlize Theron hosts [video]

A pair of First Ladies opened this week's episode of "Saturday Night Live" with a Mother's Day Message to America.

Michelle Obama and Hillary Clinton had big plans for the holiday, but spent most of their time sniping at and trying to one-up each other. For SNL, this was a bold political step in taking dual digs at two of the most popular national figures among its core audience.

"Tomorrow, Barack and the kids will give me breakfast in bed and then we'll go for a family run," Obama says. "I'm going to put my Blackberry on airplane mode and watch the 'Good Wife' on airplane mode," responds Clinton [Vanessa Bayer], while working in hints about an upcoming presidential run.

When Obama [Sasheer Zamata] says she was honored to give the gift of health care to 8 million Americans, Clinton added she tried it 16 years ago. Then Obama trumped her with "but we delivered." That's subject to debate, as well.

Clinton continued her pitch for the White House and swapped a few not-so-veiled shots with the current First Lady. "I was going around the world," she says. "But I guess it's more difficult to get a fat kid to eat an apple."

The two eventually remained pals.

What's next for Clinton? "I'm meeting Barbara Boxer to work out at Curves."

Charlize Theron returned to host after a 14-year hiatus.

The last time Theron hosted SNL, Hillary was First Lady and the 2000 presidential election was still days away.

Theron is featured in Seth MacFarlane's summer movie "A Million Ways To Die In The West" and showed her comedy chops in "Arrested Development" and her hilarious Funny or Die video from 2012 which included "Game of Therons."

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Hillary Clinton and Michelle Obama Spar to Open SNL as Charlize Theron hosts

Hillary Clinton should prepare herself for a dogfight – not a coronation tour

Mrs Clinton, who is certain to be called to testify, has already described the Benghazi episode as her "biggest regret" while in office, and conservatives will waste no opportunity to remind voters of a security debacle they say the White House deliberately tried to whitewash.

Then there was Boko Haram. Mrs Clinton's tweet drawing attention to Nigeria's kidnapped schoolgirls under the hashtag "#BringBackOurGirls" was initially hailed as a demonstration of her global influence, with Michelle Obama and other influential people joining a spontaneous campaign.

But conservatives were soon rushing to the television studios to point out that Mrs Clinton had repeatedly declined to designate Boko Haram as a terrorist organization while she was Secretary of State. Yet another attempt to question her record.

Despite Republican protestations to the contrary, none of these attacks are even close to killer blows. They might play well with the party's Hillary-hating base, but the Lewinsky scandal is old news, Benghazi has become a partisan hobbyhorse and the Boko Haram "scandal" was actually a decision justified at the time by a perfectly reasonable desire not to internationalise a regional terror outfit.

All the same, they do point to the bare-knuckle nature of the fight that lies ahead. If Mrs Clinton decides to run for president she cannot expect to rise above the fray as she did while serving as Secretary of State.

On occasion recently Mrs Clinton displays a distinctly lofty tone. When she came out in favour of same-sex unions after leaving the State Department's Foggy Bottom headquarters, she equated equality for gay marriages to her own experience of her daughter Chelsea's marriage, adding with regal condescension that "I wish every parent that same joy".

It is not a tone that works well on the stump, and, as she demonstrated when flying off the handle during earlier Benghazi hearings, and in her nasty primary fight with Mr Obama in 2008, Mrs Clinton's record in televised debates is shaky.

She may have no serious challenger for the Democratic nomination this time - polls put her 50 points clear of Joe Biden, the vice president and her nearest rival - but the presidential race will always be close given the structural divisions of modern American politics.

Try as she might to differentiate herself, Mrs Clinton will also be running as a "third term" president, and unless he lifts his rock-bottom approval ratings, Mr Obama will leave her none of the foundation of popularity that Ronald Reagan bequeathed to George H W Bush, or Bill Clinton to Al Gore (who then squandered it).

If Republicans can find a fresh, plausible candidate ruthlessly focused on improving middle class lives rather than the Culture Wars, then Mrs Clinton will have to struggle to explain to voters why they should embrace what Republicans will tout as "four more years" (of failure).

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Hillary Clinton should prepare herself for a dogfight - not a coronation tour