Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks at the Clinton Global Initiative on June 13, 2013 in Chicago. /Scott Olson/Getty Images
WASHINGTON
Hillary Rodham Clinton mused aloud about the significance of America
electing its first female president. Left unsaid: whether she might try
again to be the one.
In a video of a private Clinton speech posted to YouTube on Friday,
Clinton told a Canadian audience that she hoped the U.S. would elect a
woman to the White House because it would send "exactly the right
historical signal" to men, women and children. She said women in
politics need to "dare to compete" and the nation needs to "take that
leap of faith."
"Let me say this, hypothetically
speaking, I really do hope that we have a woman president in my
lifetime," Clinton said at a women's conference in Toronto on Thursday
night. "And whether it's next time or the next time after that, it
really depends on women stepping up and subjecting themselves to the
political process, which is very difficult."
The former secretary of state told the cheering audience that she would "certainly vote for the right woman to be president."
Should
she run for president in 2016, Clinton would emerge as the Democratic
Party's leading contender to succeed President Barack Obama, but she has
not said whether she will seek the White House again. Clinton has said
she is enjoying time off since departing the State Department in
February but has taken a number of steps that could enhance a future
presidential bid, speaking to a variety of groups around the country,
working on a book and outlining her agenda at the foundation started by
her husband, former President Bill Clinton.
In remarks
during an interview at the "Unique Lives and Experiences" conference,
Clinton mused about the possibility of a woman winning the White House
and what it would mean for the nation — but she avoided identifying
herself as the leading prospect. The event was not open to the media,
but a person in attendance posted a clip of Clinton's interview on
YouTube on Friday.
Clinton spoke in an interview with Samantha Nutt, the founder and
executive director of War Child Canada, a nonprofit that works with
war-affected communities to help children. The former first lady was
asked if women lead differently than men and whether she thought the
next U.S. president would be a woman.
Clinton cited former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who said that women in politics needed skin as "thick as a rhinoceros."
"I
think there is still truth to that, so you have to step up, you have to
dare to compete, you have to get into the process and then the country,
our country, has to take that leap of faith," she said.
The
former New York senator noted the U.S. made history in 2008 by electing
Obama, who defeated her in the Democratic primary on his way to
becoming the nation's first black president. "I hope that we will see a
woman elected because I think it would send exactly the right historic
signal to girls, women as well as boys and men. And I will certainly
vote for the right woman to be president," Clinton said with a smile.
Both parties are already preparing for another Clinton campaign, well before the former first lady makes a decision.
A
group of Clinton supporters has started a super PAC, called Ready for
Hillary, to lay the groundwork for a Clinton campaign among
rank-and-file Democratic supporters.
A Republican super
PAC, America Rising, released a new website on Thursday called
"StopHillary2016.org." It urges supporters to contribute to the PAC,
saying, "We can't afford another Clinton administration after eight
years of President Obama."
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