What is hillary doing now




















Should the company come to fruition, Clinton will already have some experience under her belt in the TV arena. While the ranks of potential democratic presidential candidates have continued to grow, Clinton has firmly established that she won't be throwing her hat into the ring. In March , the former candidate confirmed in a TV interview that she wouldn't be running for the election, but that she's not just walking away from politics.

Just a few months after the election, Clinton made her first big return to the spotlight in the spring of when she announced that she is launching a new political organization called Onward Together with a focus on "encouraging people to organize, get involved, and run for office. We're launching Onward Together to encourage people to get involved, organize, and even run for office. In a twitter post announcing the new platform, Clinton said, "This year hasn't been what I envisioned, but I know what I'm still fighting for: a kinder, big-hearted, inclusive America.

Per the organization's website , "By encouraging people to organize, get involved, and run for office, Onward Together advances progressive values and works to build a brighter future for generations to come. The announcement of the PAC came after Clinton had reportedly "all but ruled out" resuming work at her family's foundation. According to multiple sources at the time, the former Secretary of State had made no plans to return to the non-profit, which proved to be so controversial during her presidential campaign.

Martin Luther King, Jr. The march across the bridge ultimately contributed to the passage of the Voting Rights Act of , and the event marked the 54th anniversary of the history day. Don't just join hands and sing. We've got to get to work. That means registering each person and persuading them that their future depends on them showing up to vote. Clinton became increasingly vocal in the second half of , speaking out about the violence in Charlottesville, and against her former opponent and the Republican party as a whole, specifically regarding her concern over the healthcare bill and LGBT rights.

My heart is in Charlottesville today, and with everyone made to feel unsafe in their country. But the margin is really narrow, and you have to be very clear going into it as a woman candidate that it is a burden you bear and have to overcome. I do think that it will remain a problem at the presidential level. I think it helped to have more than one woman on the stage in the Democratic primary this year. Women come in all sizes and shapes and hairstyles, and all that is helping to normalize women seeking the presidency.

Clinton: I really did feel sometimes like the tree falling in the forest. I believed he was a puppet of Putin. I believed that there was relevant, important information in his tax returns. I believed he did not have the temperament to be president, he was unfit—not a partisan comment, but an assessment of him.

And it was just really difficult to get the press to take any of that seriously. I would have been hounded mercilessly. But I felt like I had a duty, and I kept raising it and pointing out what I thought of as his real dangers to our country. And so it was kind of a revelation even to me to learn that, yeah—I was kind of picking up the signals. It was even worse than I thought it was. Clinton: Well, look—I think some of it is guilt on the part of people who are promoting that.

Get her off the stage before anybody remembers that I ridiculed her about that. I understand that. But it has no impact whatsoever on me. I can go back to kind of having a normal life. I spoke out about the real dangerous things [Trump] was doing, starting with alternative facts on Inauguration Day going forward.

Because I feel like I had maybe more of an insight into this guy as president than most people could, until enough time had passed that there was enough clear evidence about what he was doing and what kind of person he was. Bush] was elected, even though it was contentious and decided by the Supreme Court. No, there was a widespread understanding that this election [in ] was not on the level.

History will discover. He had every opportunity in his inaugural address to reach out to the entire country. And he chose not to. Have you read these stories? Gayatri Prajapati gets life term in rape case Why Delhi Declaration on Afghanistan matters Railways to drop special train tag, revise fares Rs 89 cr donation to TRS top for a regional party. ET NOW. Brand Solutions. Video series featuring innovators. ET Financial Inclusion Summit.

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