- CLINTON, HILLARY RODHAM
-
3.437 user reviews
- Experience: Member, Democratic Policy Committee
- Home State: New York
- Person Website: https://www.hillaryclinton.com/
- Running: President, United States, 2016
- Total Raised: $238,182,000Coverage End: Tuesday, May 31, 2016
- Winning: Won with 0.00%
- Write a Review
Personal
- Full Name: Hillary Rodham Clinton Gender: Female
- Family: Husband: William; 1 Child: Chelsea
- Birth Date: 10/26/1947
- Birth Place: Chicago, IL
- Home City: Chappaqua, NY
- Religion: Methodist
Education
- JD, Yale University, 1973
- BA, Wellesley College, 1969
Political Experience
- Member, Democratic Policy Committee
- United States Secretary of State, 2009-2013
- Sworn In, United States Secretary of State, January 21, 2009
- Senator, United States Senate, 2001-2009
- Candidate, United States President, 2008
- First Lady, President Bill Clinton, 1992-2000
- First Lady, State of Arkansas, 1978-1980, 1982-1992
Caucuses/Non-Legislative Committees
- Former Chair, Arkansas Educational Standards Committee
- Former Commissioner, Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe
- Former Co-Chair, Congressional E-911 Caucus
- Former Member, Democratic Technology and Communications Committee
- Former Chair, Legal Services Corporation
- Former Member, Senate National Guard Caucus
- Former Member, Senate Rural Health Caucus
- Former Member, Senate Steel Caucus
- Former Chair, Steering and Coordination Committee
- Former Chair, Task Force of National Health Care Reform
- Appointed, Board Member, Legal Services Corporation, 1977
Professional Experience
- Author
- Former Staff Attorney, Children's Defense Fund
- Former Board Member, Wal-Mart
- Attorney, Rose Law Firm, 1976-1992
- Assistant Professor, University of Arkansas Law School, 1975
Religious, Civic, and other Memberships
- Member, American Bar Association's Commission on Women in the Profession
- Co-Founder, Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families
- Former Board Member, Arkansas Children's Hospital
- Former Board Member, Children's Defense Fund
- Board Member, The Country's Best Yogurt Company
- Founder, Vital Voices
Additional Information
Awards:
- Humanitarian Award, Elie Wiesel Foundation
- Women Who Make A Difference Lifetime Achievement Award, Family Circle
- President's Award, League of United Latin American Citizens
- International Women's Philanthropy Award, Lion of Judah Conference of Combined Jewish Philanthropies
- Distinguished Bridge Builder Award, Leon H. Sullivan Foundation
- Recognition, Military Order of the Purple Heart
- Distinguished Service Award, National Association of Elementary School Principals
- Bully Pulpit Award, National Council for Adoption
- Black Women of Courage Award, National Federation of Black Women Business Owners
- Martin Luther King Jr. Award, Progressive National Baptist Convention
- Secretary of Defense Medal for Outstanding Public Service
- Woman of Steel - Role Model of the Year, United Steel Workers of America
- Arkansas Woman of the Year-1983
- Arkansas Mother of the Year-1984
- First woman to be elected into the New York Senate
- She won a Grammy for Best Spoken Word Album for the audio of her book "It Takes a Village"
Publications:
- Living History. (Simon & Schuster, 2003)
- An Invitation to the White House: At Home with History (Simon & Schuster, 2000)
- It Takes A Village: and Other Lessons Children Teach Us (Simon & Schuster, 1996)
About Hillary Clinton
Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton is a woman who needs no lengthy introduction. Originally from Chicago, Illinois, she attended Wellesley College for a degree in Political Science, then went on to Yale Law School. It was during her schooling at Yale that she met her now-current husband and then-future President of the US, Bill Clinton. Although she was raised Republican and held to a right-wing political ideology for most of her academic career, she would ultimately change her views, and today has amassed an impressive resume of political accomplishments as a decidedly leftist liberal Democrat. This history – which includes her passive roles as First Lady of Arkansas and then of the United States, as well as active positions such as her two terms as a Senator for the state of New York and four years as US Secretary of State under President Obama – has led her to the present when, now a declared candidate for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 2016, she is easily the favorite in her party.
Clinton is well-known and generally liked amongst a large percentage of the American citizenry. With a serious chance at becoming the first female President in the nation's history, she has carefully nurtured her image for decades, with some believing she began planning an eventual White House run during her days as her husband's First Lady – if not earlier. Her intense preoccupation with always presenting herself favorably to the public (and, perhaps more cynically, her skill at playing the game of politics) has sometimes led her to bouts of questionable sincerity. For instance, she is known to have claimed that her parents named her in honor of Sir Edmund Hillary, an intrepid mountaineer famous for leading the first expedition to successfully climb Mount Everest. In reality, Edmund's life-defining accomplishment took place in 1953; while alive, he was unknown in 1947, when Hillary Clinton was born and presumably named.
In what had come to be regarded by many as a mere – but important – formality, Clinton officially announced her candidacy for President on April 12th, 2015. Now that she has declared, barring some major upset in American politics, she will almost certainly receive the Democratic presidential nomination. With her vast popularity across many sectors of the American electorate, especially among female voters, Clinton promises to be a formidable opponent for any prospective Republican challenger. Though she once enjoyed double-digit leads over some of the GOP's biggest names (numbers which have since ebbed), she still wields even standing to slight advantages over the best the Republican party has to offer. Of course, with a Democratic President on his way out in the 2016 elections and tides favoring Republicans, there are no sure bets, but any serious GOP contender would do well to train for battle against Hillary Clinton.
“I’ll do anything I can if Hillary’s elected to help her, but I don’t want to remain in the administration.”
Meet the Peggy Noonans of 2016.
Meanwhile, the RNC sits on money rather than spend for Donald Trump.
A top Democratic senator also piled on, calling the timing of the FBI’s revelation “appalling.”
Which means Donald Trump is losing.
Just a reminder: Giuliani dumped his wife in a press conference.
Trump has accused Clinton of not having enough stamina.
But what other word is there for Trump’s behavior?
Hillary Clinton spoke forcefully, so she’s obviously unhinged.
The goal: Derail the #TrumpTrain.
Women are often seen as overly aggressive when arguing their point or judged on the basis of their appearance.
“Having a small business owner for a dad may not get you multi-million-dollar bailouts, but it does teach you the value of hard, honest work.”
It “must be something really important, even terrible, that he’s trying to hide,” she said.
The tension and stakes of the contest, could not be any higher.
An awful lot has been written about walking pneumonia, and the entire nation is having a teach-in about the condition.
“The information is out there. You can’t say the same thing about Donald Trump,” she said.
“I had to learn as a young woman to control my emotions. And that’s a hard path to walk.”
But seriously, she smiled more than Trump. We counted.
Read this before you vote in November.
Labor Day is a time to celebrate the essential contributions workers make to our collective wealth and wellbeing. It is well past time that American workers receive their fair share of that wealth.
Introduced Date | Bill Number | Bill Title | Last Action |
---|---|---|---|
06/24/2004 | S.2577 | Broadband Rural Research Investment Act of 2004 | 06/24/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. (All Actions) |
06/24/2004 | S.2573 | Gold Star Parents Annuity Act | 06/24/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Veterans' Affairs. (All Actions) |
06/24/2004 | S.2572 | Positive Aging Act of 2004 | 06/24/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. (All Actions) |
06/22/2004 | S.2133 | A bill to name the Department of Veterans Affairs medical center in the Bronx, New York, as the James J. Peters Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center. | 06/22/2004 Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Hearings held. (All Actions) |
06/14/2004 | S.Res.377 | A resolution congratulating the Le Moyne College Dolphins men's lacrosse team on winning the 2004 NCAA Division II men's lacrosse National Championship. | 06/14/2004 Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (All Actions) |
06/14/2004 | S.Res.376 | A resolution congratulating the Syracuse University Orange men's lacrosse team on winning the 2004 NCAA Division I men's lacrosse National Championship. | 06/14/2004 Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Unanimous Consent. (All Actions) |
06/01/2004 | S.2482 | Long Island Sound Protection Act | 06/01/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works. (All Actions) |
05/20/2004 | S.2471 | SAFE-ID Act | 05/20/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (All Actions) |
05/18/2004 | S.2430 | Medical Readiness and Tracking Act of 2004 | 05/18/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services. (All Actions) |
05/11/2004 | S.2406 | A bill to promote the reliability of the electric transmission grid through the Cross-Sound Cable. | 05/11/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. (All Actions) |
04/29/2004 | S.2368 | Military Family Morale and Welfare Protection Act of 2004 | 04/29/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services. (All Actions) |
04/29/2004 | S.2360 | Nontraditional Student Success Act | 04/29/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (All Actions) |
04/28/2004 | S.Res.345 | A resolution expressing the Sense of the Senate that Congress should expand the supports and services available to grandparents and other relatives who are raising children when their biological parents have died or can no longer take care of them. | 04/28/2004 Referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. (All Actions) |
04/23/2004 | S.1108 | 225th Anniversary of the American Revolution Commemoration Act | 04/23/2004 Executive Comment Requested from Interior. (All Actions) |
04/08/2004 | S.2312 | SAFE-ID Act | 04/08/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. (All Actions) |
02/26/2004 | S.2139 | Residual Radioactive Contamination Compensation Act | 02/26/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. (All Actions) |
02/25/2004 | S.2111 | A bill to amend part C of title XVIII of the Social Security Act to prohibit the comparative cost adjustment (CCA) program from operating in the State of New York. | 02/25/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (All Actions) |
01/22/2004 | S.2021 | Domestic Defense Fund Act of 2004 | 01/22/2004 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Governmental Affairs. (All Actions) |
12/09/2003 | S.2003 | Health Information for Quality Improvement Act | 12/09/2003 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (All Actions) |
12/09/2003 | S.1986 | Protecting American Democracy Act of 2003 | 12/09/2003 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Rules and Administration. (All Actions) |
- Newest
- Hottest
- 7 Comments