“Haha, nope.”
That’s the response that Hillary Clinton gave when asked if she is planning to run for president in 2024.
While speaking with MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski, Clinton downplayed rumors that she may seek the White House in the next cycle.
“No, no,” Clinton said. “But I am certainly going to be active in supporting women running for office, and other candidates who I think should be reelected or elected, both women and men.”
“There’s a big debate going on about the future of democracy,” Clinton said. “I will stay active in all those debates.”
Clinton was interviewed from Abu Dhabi, where she is addressing an International Women’s Day forum.

According to
and“A perfect storm in the Democratic Party is making a once-unfathomable scenario plausible: a political comeback for Hillary Clinton in 2024,” they begin.
“Several circumstances—President Biden’s low approval rating, doubts over his capacity to run for re-election at 82, Vice President Kamala Harris’s unpopularity, and the absence of another strong Democrat to lead the ticket in 2024—have created a leadership vacuum in the party, which Mrs. Clinton viably could fill,” they add.
Schoen, a founder and partner in Schoen Cooperman Research, a polling and consulting firm whose past clients include Bill Clinton and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and Stein, a former New York politician and founder of Democrats for Trump, both believe that Clinton is angling for the nomination already.
In addition, she is younger than Biden, experienced on the national stage, and can present a candidacy that is different “from the disorganized and unpopular one the party is currently taking” — which includes mass spending, a vast expansion of government entitlements, no border control, and overseeing historically high inflation.
What’s more, they argue that should Democrats go on to lose Congress later this year during the midterms — which looks increasingly likely — Clinton could use those losses as a springboard for a third presidential bid portraying herself as a “change candidate.”
They write:
Based on her latest public statements, it’s clear that Mrs. Clinton not only recognizes her position as a potential front-runner but also is setting up a process to help her decide whether or not to run for president again. She recently warned of the electoral consequences in the 2022 midterms if the Democratic Party continues to align itself with its progressive wing and urged Democrats to reject far-left positions that isolate key segments of the electorate.
This is an excerpt from Conservative Brief.
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