Hillary Clinton was once the face of the Democratic Party, a celebrity name who could draw thousands to rallies and was the all-but-certain first female president of the United States. Now, she is viewed as "the kiss of death" for candidates.
As the midterm election campaigns enter the home stretch, the former secretary of state, first lady, senator, and 2016 Democratic nominee is almost completely absent from the campaign trail. Most Democrats are keen to keep it that way, fearing that her reappearance could cost them a golden opportunity of winning back control of Congress.
Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, are due to go back on the road next month, embarking on a 13-city tour in which they will conduct “one-of-a-kind conversations" about "the most impactful moments in modern history". But Democratic strategists are relieved that their first event will be 12 days after Americans go to the polls on Nov 6.
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Just think of all the tax dollars wasted by the secret service protecting these two. Security should be denied for former politicians who campaign. A simple endorsement should be enough. Not for the Democrats. They never lose the feeling that I must do it or it won't get done. Similar to the way Dems feel about taxpayers.
ReplyDeleteOh c'mon, let her and Creepy Biden hold hands in the air, to show a sign of unity in the dumbocrat party.
ReplyDeletePlease
ReplyDeleteLove to see trump tear her up