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среда, 27 февраля 2019 г.

«Breaking News» Hillary Clinton says she 'can't imagine' running for president again

Hillary Clinton is squashing any rumors or hopes that she'll run in the 2020 presidential race, saying she 'can't imagine' running for office again. 


'I can't imagine that, no,' she said when asked if she'd consider entering the 2020 presidential race on British journalist Tina Brown's podcast TBD on Monday. 


'I’ve had a terrific experience in public life and in politics. I care deeply about this country,' she said. 'So I will continue to speak out and fight for our basic rights, particularly when it comes to how we treat each other and also the rule of law.' 


Just last month it was reported that the former Secretary of State had not ruled out making another run for the presidency, but this interview placed all those rumors to rest. 




Hillary Clinton said 'I can't imagine' entering the 2020 presidential race in an interview on British journalist Tina Brown's podcast TBD on Monday


Hillary Clinton said 'I can't imagine' entering the 2020 presidential race in an interview on British journalist Tina Brown's podcast TBD on Monday



Hillary Clinton said 'I can't imagine' entering the 2020 presidential race in an interview on British journalist Tina Brown's podcast TBD on Monday


Clinton said that although she won't run for office, she will still use her voice to critique today's White House leadership.  


In the interview she criticized the Donald Trump's administration, bashing their 'level of inhumanity' over the 'most outrageous' policy of separating migrant children from their parents at the border. 


In the podcast she also discussed the challenges women in politics face and the obstacles Sens. Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris, Kirsten Gilibrand and Amy Klobuchar will have to confront in the presidential race. 



In the interview she said 'I’ve had a terrific experience in public life and in politics. I care deeply about this country' and will continue to be vocal and critical of the powers in office


In the interview she said 'I’ve had a terrific experience in public life and in politics. I care deeply about this country' and will continue to be vocal and critical of the powers in office



In the interview she said 'I’ve had a terrific experience in public life and in politics. I care deeply about this country' and will continue to be vocal and critical of the powers in office





Tina Brown pictured left with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in April 2017


Tina Brown pictured left with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in April 2017



Tina Brown pictured left with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in April 2017





She warned the women running for president in 2020 that they'll face serious challenges including intense scrutiny from the media and political opponents. Clinton pictured in 2016 at the second presidential debate with Trump standing behind her 


She warned the women running for president in 2020 that they'll face serious challenges including intense scrutiny from the media and political opponents. Clinton pictured in 2016 at the second presidential debate with Trump standing behind her 



She warned the women running for president in 2020 that they'll face serious challenges including intense scrutiny from the media and political opponents. Clinton pictured in 2016 at the second presidential debate with Trump standing behind her 


Speaking on the backlash she faced in presidential debates where she was slammed as angry and intense - she says that's the kind of scrutiny all the female presidential hopefuls will have to face.  


'How does a woman stand up for herself on the biggest stage in the world without ... looking aggressive, maybe a little bit angry, that somebody is behaving like that, being willing to go toe-to-toe when there are so few memories embedded in our collective DNA where women do that?' she said on the podcast. 


'So yes, I'm willing to stand up for what I believe in ... but that is still kind of scary for some people,' she added. 


She did not that the influx of women running in the White House 2020 race should make it a 'bit easier'.  


'So how do you get on this kind of Goldilocks path where you're not too strong and you're not too weak, you're not too aggressive and you're not too passive? This is still a problem for women on the public stage,' Clinton said. 



EVERYONE AND EVERYTHING HILLARY CLINTON HAS BLAMED FOR LOSING THE ELECTION - 43 AND COUNTING



JAMES COMEY


Clinton is furious that Comey, then the FBI director, publicly revealed the re-opening of the secret email server investigation just before election day - and has said so time after time after time.

THE FBI  


Comey's entire organization does not escape her wrath. 


'The FBI wasn't the Federal Bureau of Ifs or Innuendoes. Its job was to find out the facts,' she writes in What Happened.


VLADIMIR PUTIN


'There's no doubt in my mind that Putin wanted me to lose and wanted Trump to win,' she told USA Today in September last year while promoting What Happened. 


It was hardly a new theme. As early as December the New York Times obtained audio in which she told her donors: 'Putin publicly blamed me for the outpouring of outrage by his own people, and that is the direct line between what he said back then and what he did in this election.'  


THE RUSSIANS

Putin's entire apparatus gets a name-check. In May she told the Codecon convention how '1,000 Russian agents' had filled Facebook with 'fake news'.


She told NPR 'my path toward November was being disrupted with Russians'.


WIKILEAKS 


The 'transparency website' is consistently ranked along with Comey by Clinton at the top of her blame list.


She told NPR : 'Unfortunately the Comey letter, aided to great measure by the Russian WikiLeaks, raised all those doubts again.'


And she writes of its founder Julian Assange in What Happened: 'In my view, Assange is a hypocrite who deserves to be held accountable for his actions.'


LOW INFORMATION VOTERS


'You put yourself in the position of a low information voter, and all of a sudden your Facebook feed, your Twitter account is saying, "Oh my gosh, Hillary Clinton is running a child trafficking operation in Washington with John Podesta.",' she told the Codecon convention in May.


'Well you don't believe it but this has been such an unbelievable election, you kind of go, 'Oh maybe I better look into that.''


THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE


'We have an electoral college problem. It's an anachronism,' she told Vox. 


ANTI-AMERICAN FORCES


'I think it's important that we learn the real lessons from this last campaign because the forces that we are up against are not just interested in influencing our elections and our politics, they're going after our economy and they're going after our unity as a nation,' she told Codecon in May.


'What is hard for people to really accept - although now after the election there's greater understanding - is that there are forces in our country - put the Russians to one side - who have been fighting rear guard actions for as long as I've been alive because my life coincided with the Civil Rights movement, with the women's rights movement, with anti-war protesting, with the impeachment.


EVERYONE WHO ASSUMED SHE WOULD WIN


'I was the victim of a very broad assumption that I was going to win,' she told the Codecon convention.


BAD POLLING NUMBERS


Clinton says polls in key states did not serve her. 


'I think polling is going to have to undergo some revisions in how they actually measure people,' she told the Codecon convention.


'How they reach people. The best assessments as of right now are that the polling was not that inaccurate, but it was predominantly national polling and I won nationally.'


BARACK OBAMA 


Clinton has two beefs with Obama: one of them being that he won two terms. Clinton says that succeeding an incumbent is almost impossible for a Democrat.


'No non-incumbent Democrat had run successfully to succeed another two-termer since Vice President Martin Van Buren won in 1836,' she writes in What Happened.


But she also says his response to the Russian campaign of interference wasn't enough.


'I do wonder sometimes about what would have happened if President Obama had made a televised address to the nation in the fall of 2016 warning that our democracy was under attack,' she writes in What Happened. 


WHITE WOMEN


'I believe absent Comey, I might've picked up 1 or 2 points among white women,' she told Vox in September.


'White woman... are really quite politically dependent on their view of their own security and their own position in society what works and doesn't work for them.'


'What happened in my election is I was on the way to winning white women until former director of the FBI Jim Comey dropped that very ill-advised letter on Oct. the 28th and my numbers just went down,' she said in a March 2018 speech in India.


'All of a sudden white women who were going to vote for me, and frankly standing up to the men in their lives and the men in their work places were being told, "She's going to jail, you don't want to vote for her. It's going to be terrible you can't vote for that." It stopped my momentum and it decreased my vote enough. Because I was ahead and I was winning and I thought I had fought my way back. '


THE NEW YORK TIMES


The newspaper was blamed as early as May at the Codecon conference in Rancho Palos Verde, California.


She singled out its managing editor Dean Baquet - the paper's most senior editor - and said of coverage of her email issue under his direction: 'They covered it like it was Pearl Harbor.'


JOE BIDEN


Biden could have run against her and didn't. But Clinton writes: 'Joe Biden said the Democratic Party in 2016 'did not talk about what it always stood for—and that was how to maintain a burgeoning middle class.'


'I find this fairly remarkable, considering that Joe himself campaigned for me all over the Midwest and talked plenty about the middle class.'


BERNIE SANDERS


'His attacks caused lasting damage, making it harder to unify progressives in the general election and paving the way for Trump's 'Crooked Hillary' campaign,' she writes in What Happened.


'I don't know if that bothered Bernie or not.'


BERNIE BROS 


'Some of his supporters, the so-called Bernie Bros, took to harassing my supporters online. It got ugly and more than a little sexist,' she writes in What Happened. 


PEOPLE WANTING CHANGE


'I thought, at end of day, people would say, look, we do want change, and we want the right kind of change, and we want change that is realistic and is going to make difference in my life and my family's life and my paycheck,' she told Vox.


'That's what I was offering. And I didn't in any way want to feed into this, not just radical political argument that was being made on other side, but very negative cultural argument about who we are as Americans.'


MISOGYNISTS


Asked by CNN's Christine Amanpour at the Women for Women International event in new York in May if misogyny was to blame she said: 'Yes, I do think it played a role.'  


TELEVISION EXECUTIVES


'When you have a presidential campaign and the total number of minutes on TV news, which is still how most people get their information, covering all of our policies, climate change, anything else was 32 minutes, I don't blame voters,' she told The View.


'They don't get a broad base of information to make decision on. The more outrageous you are, the more inflammatory you are, the higher the ratings are.'


NETFLIX


Hillary does not do Netflix and chill - or if she does, she doesn't find it very relaxing.


'Eight of the top 10 political documentaries on Netflix were screeds against President Obama and me,' she claimed at the Codecon convention.


FACEBOOK


'If you look at Facebook the vast majority of the news items posted were fake. They were connected to as we now know the 1,000 Russian agents who were involved in delivering those messages,' she told Codecon.


TWITTER


Usually mentioned in the same breath as Facebook, the micro-blogging site is seen by Clinton as one of the reasons for her loss. 


She told the Codecon convention in may that Trump had a method in his tweets.


'They want to influence your reality. That to me is what we're up against, and we can't let that go unanswered,' she said.


CONTENT FARMS IN MACEDONIA


'Through content farms, through an enormous investment in falsehoods, fake news, call it what you will - lies, that's a good word too - the other side was using content that was flat out false,' she told the Codecon convention in May. 


'They were conveying this weaponized information and the content of it, and they were running, y'know there's all these stories, about y'know, and you know I've seen them now, and you sit there and it looks like you know sort of low level CNN operation, or a fake newspaper.'


CAMPAIGN FINANCE


'You had Citizens United come to its full fruition.' she told Codecon in May.


'So unaccountable money flowing in against me, against other Democrats, in a way that we hadn't seen and then attached to this weaponized information war.


THE MEDIA


'American journalists who eagerly and uncritically repeated whatever WikiLeaks dished out during the campaign could learn from the responsible way the French press handled the hack of Macron,' she writes in What Happened. 


Now-president Macron had a massive tranche of his emails hacked and released shortly before the French voted. Many outlets did not report on their contents.  


STEVE BANNON AND BREITBART


'Provided the untrue stories,' she told the Codecon convention in May. 


THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY 


'I set up my campaign and we have our own data operation. I get the nomination. So I'm now the nominee of the Democratic Party. I inherit nothing from the Democratic Party,' Clinton said told the Codecon convention in May.


 'I mean, it was bankrupt. It was on the verge of insolvency. Its data was mediocre to poor, nonexistent, wrong. I had to inject money into it.'


THE REPUBLICAN PARTY


The Republicans were far better prepared for a campaign than the Democrats she claimed, when it came to money and data, telling the Codecon convention: 'So Trump becomes the nominee and he is basically handed this tried and true, effective foundation.' 


CAMBRIDGE ANALYTICA


The data-targeting firm ultimately owned by Robert Mercer, the billionaire Breitbart backer, and his family, is said to have targeted voters to drive them away from Clinton.


'They ultimately added something and I think again we'd better understand that. The Mercers did not invest all that money for their own amusement,' she told the Codecon convention.


WOMEN PROTESTERS


The massive demonstrations in Washington and other cities in the wake of the election were organized as an immediate response to Clinton's shock defeat.


But that did not stop Clinton from writing in What Happened: 'I couldn't help but ask where those feelings of solidarity, outrage and passion had been during the election.'


MATT LAUER


The NBC Today show anchor quizzed both candidates at a 'commander-in-chief forum' on board Intrepid in New York. 


But Clinton - who went first in the back-to-back interviews, complained about Lauer focusing on her secret server and whether it raised questions over her trustworthiness.


'Lauer had turned what should have been a serious discussion into a pointless ambush. What a waste of time,' she writes in What Happened. She later delighted in his firing for sexual misconduct, saying in December: 'Every day I believe more in karma.' 


WHITE VOTERS


'White voters have been fleeing the Democratic party ever since Lyndon Johnson predicted they would,' she told Vox.  


DEMOCRATIC DOCUMENTARY MAKERS 


'We're not making the documentaries that we're going to get onto Netflix,' she told Codecon.


She was asked by the interviewer: 'This is because Hollywood isn't liberal enough?'


'No, it's because Democrats aren't putting their money there,' she replied. 


BENGHAZI INVESTIGATORS


The attacks on the U.S. diplomatic compound in the Libyan city of Benghazi on September 11, 2012, happened when Clinton was Secretary of State. It claimed four American lives, and was the focus of intense investigation by Congress.  


Clinton told the Today show: 'Take the Benghazi tragedy - you know, I have one of the top Republicans, Kevin McCarthy, admitting we're going to take that tragedy - because, you know, we've lost people, unfortunately, going back to the Reagan administration, if you talk about recent times, in diplomatic attacks.


'But boy, it was turned into a political football. And it was aimed at undermining my credibility, my record, my accomplishments.'


VOTER SUPPRESSION


Suppressing her voters was named by Clinton as one of the major factors in her defeat in her interview on the Today show when she rattled off her laundry list. 'What was at work here?' she said.


'In addition to the mistakes that I made, which I recount in the book, what about endemic sexism and misogyny, not just in politics but in our society, what about the unprecedented action of the FBI director,  what about the interference of an adversary nation, what about voter suppression?' 


It was a return to a theme - she suggested it was a problem in Wisconsin in an interview in May with New York magazine.


'I would have won had I not been subjected to the unprecedented attacks by Comey and the Russians, aided and abetted by the suppression of the vote, particularly in Wisconsin,' she said. 


'Republicans learned that if you suppress votes you win.'


MITCH McCONNELL


The Senate majority leader is accused of stopping the Obama administration from revealing what Clinton says the Russians were up to, helping tip the balance against her because he did not want a third successive Democratic term in the White House.  


'Mitch McConnell, in what I think of as a not only unpatriotic but despicable act of partisan politics, made it clear that if the Obama Administration spoke publicly about what they knew [on Russia], he would accuse them of partisan politics, of trying to tip the balance toward me,' she told the New Yorker.   


THE SUPREME COURT


Clinton claims the Supreme Court watered down the Voting Rights Act at the Codecon convention.


'You had effective suppression of votes,' she said.


'I was in the senate when we voted 98-0 under a Republican president, George W Bush, to extend the Voting Rights Act and the Supreme Court says 'oh we don't need it any more' , throws it out, and Republican governors and legislatures began doing everything they could to suppress the votes.'


Clinton appears to be referring to Second 4(b) of the Act being ruled unconstitutional by the court in 2013, because it relied on out of date data which meant it was not in line with the 15th Amendment. 


FATHERS, HUSBANDS, BOYFRIENDS, AND MALE BOSSES


Clinton says that James Comey's actions in re-opening the FBI investigation allowed men to influence their wives or girlfriends.


'Women will have no empathy for you because they will be under tremendous pressure - and I'm talking principally about white women - they will be under tremendous pressure from fathers, and husbands, and boyfriends and male employers, not to vote for 'the girl',' she told NPR. 


THE INVISIBLE STATE


Named by her confidante Lanny Davis as the reason she lost at a reading of his book while Hillary nodded along in approval. 


PIZZAGATE


The claim that members of the Democratic party and particularly the Clinton campaign were running a pedophile child trafficking ring out of the basement of a Washington D.C. pizza restaurant first surfaced before the 2016 election. She told an address to a women-only club in New York in April 2018: 'It spread like wildfire. You look and that and think, that's ridiculous. But you have no idea how many people will believe things that are presented as news.' 


 




Link hienalouca.com

https://hienalouca.com/2019/02/27/hillary-clinton-says-she-cant-imagine-running-for-president-again/
Main photo article Hillary Clinton is squashing any rumors or hopes that she’ll run in the 2020 presidential race, saying she ‘can’t imagine’ running for office again. 
‘I can’t imagine that, no,’ she said when asked if she’d consider entering the 2020 presidential ...


It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.

Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.

Dianne Reeves US News HienaLouca





https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2019/02/27/17/10366346-6752145-Hillary_Clinton_said_I_can_t_imagine_entering_the_2020_president-m-34_1551287541303.jpg

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