Hillary Clinton finally announced her White House candidacy Sunday, a
move that empowers her to parry Republican attacks as she seeks to
become the United States’ first female president.
Seven years
after her bitter nomination defeat to Barack Obama, the former secretary
of state and first lady jumps into the race as the Democratic Party’s
overwhelming favorite, as Clinton and her rivals gird for a bruising
18-month campaign.
“I’m running for president,” a beaming Clinton
said in a video on her campaign website that went live at about 3:00 pm
(1900 GMT) Sunday.
“Everyday Americans need a champion, and I
want to be that champion, so you can do more than just get by. You can
get ahead, and stay ahead,” she said, after a two-minute clip featuring
middle-class and working-class couples and families sharing their
aspirations.
Her nascent campaign emailed supporters saying
Clinton will spend “the next six to eight weeks in a ‘ramp up’ period,”
building a grass-roots organization and “engaging directly with voters.”
Her first rally and the speech that kicks off her campaign will not take place until May, her team said.
Clinton will first head to Iowa, the state that holds the debut vote
early next year to determine the parties’ nominees. “I’m hitting the
trail to earn your vote,” she said.
The announcement, which meets
no substantial challenge from other Democrats, will no doubt trigger a
donor deluge from supporters who have long waited for her to officially
enter the race, a move that would allow them to contribute directly to
her 2016 election effort.
But it also brought an immediate wave
of Republican opposition, including from the Republican National
Committee, which said Clinton “has left a trail of secrecy, scandal, and
failed policies that can’t be erased from voters’ minds.”
“Our
next president must represent a higher standard, and that is not Hillary
Clinton,” RNC chairman Reince Priebus said in a statement.
“We
must do better than Hillary,” tweeted former Florida governor Jeb Bush,
just one minute after Clinton posted her own announcement to her 3.2
million Twitter followers, in a likely foreshadowing of the intense
back-and-forth expected to play out on social media in the run up to the
November 2016 election.
– ‘Barnstorm through Iowa’ –
Clinton’s campaign-in-waiting has quietly organized for months, bringing
on key staffers and advisors, plotting outreach operations and
strategizing.
On Saturday, she earned praise from Obama, although
experts warn she will have to tread a fine line in how closely she
aligns herself with the incumbent.
“She was a formidable
candidate in 2008…. She was an outstanding secretary of state,” Obama
said at a regional summit in Panama. “I think she would be an excellent
president.”
The soft approach — a folksy video, small, low-key
gatherings with heartland voters — would mark a deviation from the
Clinton Inc. juggernaut that ultimately failed in 2008.
After the
campaign launch, Clinton, 67, should “jump on a bus and barnstorm
through Iowa touching all 99 counties and meet with people in cafes and
other small venues” as she reintroduces herself to Americans, Iowa State
University professor Steffen Schmidt told AFP.
The one-time US
senator and wife of former president Bill Clinton leads opinion polls
among Democrats, some 60 percent of whom say they would vote for her in
the primaries, according to website RealClearPolitics.
A humble
approach may help dispel doubts about Clinton raised in recent weeks,
after it was revealed she used a private email account while secretary
of state from 2009 to 2013.
But she could face uncomfortable
questions about the issue from voters, including why she deleted
thousands of emails that she described as personal, then wiped her
server clean.
– ‘Unfit’ to serve? –
Clinton, who has been
in America’s political spotlight for a quarter-century, has endured
heavy criticism from Republican rivals, and launching her campaign gives
her a platform to aggressively counter their punches.
“There is
sort of a history of the Clintons… feeling like they’re above the law,”
Senator Rand Paul, who announced last week he is running for president,
told CNN Sunday.
On his website, Paul called Clinton “unfit to serve as president.”
Conservative Senator Ted Cruz made his own splashy presidential
campaign launch last month, while fellow Senate Republican Marco Rubio
is scheduled to make his own all-but-certain campaign declaration on
Monday.
On Sunday, Jeb Bush teased his own expected campaign rollout.
Just hours before Clinton’s announcement, the son and brother of two
former presidents released a video saying he would soon lay out his
policy proposals.
“We must do better than the Obama-Clinton
foreign policy that has damaged relationships with our allies and
emboldened our enemies,” he said.
Clinton leads against her GOP
rivals in nearly all polls, but famed political prognosticator Nate
Silver on Sunday called the 2016 election a “toss-up.”
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