Hillary Clinton: The Reticent Revolutionary

How Hillary Clinton went from First Lady to America’s first lady President

Hillary Clinton. If that name sounds familiar, it’s because you’ve been hearing it for the better part of the last 20 years. In America’s efforts to quell political dynasties, she’s found herself in rare company as a member of family who has at least one member that has held the highest office in the country; her husband Bill Clinton was the 42nd President of the United States. Presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush, father and son, presidents 41 and 43 respectively, are the only family members who have both held the office of the presidency, and Hillary will make the Clintons the second.

Through her advocacy efforts as First Lady of both Arkansas and the United States, and positions in Congress and the Cabinet, as a New York Senator and President Obama’s Secretary of State, Hillary has amassed a political repertoire that could rival anyone’s in American history, all while being a woman. It would be no small feat to be elected president just a few years shy of it being only 100 years since women earned the right to vote, and judging her solely on experience, she has earned it. She’s played a man’s game, bested her rivals, and been a symbol of American political expertise for decades, all of which will land her in the Oval Office, as the first Madam President.

Hillary’s story starts long before she was born. Her mother, Dorothy, took up housekeeping and babysitting as a means to support herself early on in her high school years as a teenager. Hillary has said that her mother’s experience was a large source of inspiration for her fight to defend the rights and needs of children. She grew up in the comfortable life that her parents had built for her as working-class citizens in Chicago. In her youth, Hillary got to see Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. deliver a speech that invigorated her passion for social justice.

Hillary attended Wellesley College, a small liberal arts private school west of Boston, Massachusetts. There she became an increasingly vocal student leader and her activism came into central focus. Based on a peer vote, she became the first-ever student speaker for the college’s commencement ceremony. An excerpt from her speech made her future intentions clear:

“We arrived at Wellesley and we found, as all of us have found, that there was a gap between expectation and realities. But it wasn’t a discouraging gap, and it didn’t turn into cynical, bitter old women at the age of 18. It just inspired us to do something about that gap.”

Hillary would enroll in Yale Law School, one of only 27 women to so, and there she met her eventual husband – and president – Bill Clinton. After school, Hillary choose to pursue her passions, so she joined the Children’s Defense Fund, a nonprofit organization focused on child advocacy and research. She went door-to-door gathering stories about children with disabilities, and this work would contribute heavily to the passage of historic legislation that required the state to provide high quality education to those children living and struggling with disability.

This commitment to fighting for children and families has stayed with her her whole life.

As a lawyer, she served on the congressional committee that investigated Richard Nixon in the wake of the Watergate scandal, she continued her work through law and education, and co-founded the group Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. As First Lady of Arkansas after marrying Bill Clinton, she continued to champion education standards and access to health care. As First Lady of the United States, following the election of Bill Clinton, she achieved a huge victory in creating the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which now provides over 8 million children with health care.

As a senator from the state of New York, she was applauded for working across the aisle with other senate leaders to fight for job creation and healthcare. And as Secretary of State, only the third women to hold the Cabinet’s highest office, she laid the ground work for the Iran Nuclear Deal, and opened up America’s diplomatic agenda to include the issues of poverty, women’s rights, and the environment.

She has also been plagued by her time as Secretary in which an attack on a U.S. embassy in Benghazi, Libya resulted in the deaths of 4 Americans.

On the issues, Hillary calls herself a progressive that “gets things done”. She is a proponent of stricter gun control measures, she advocates for the closure of the pay gap that women in America face, and she has said she would like to expand the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, to be able to cover all Americans as a form of universal health care. She ran for the presidency in 2008 in a field that included would-be-winner, Barack Obama. Her campaign failed to maintain momentum as Obama surprised everyone by winning both the Iowa Caucus and the New Hampshire Primary. In 2015, she began the primary season as the clear-cut frontrunner for the Democratic Nomination, but has faced a formidable challenger in Senator Bernie Sanders, who has pushed her further to the left, and pushed the Democratic nomination process well into May, which is longer than most expected.

Through it all, Hillary has maintained that she is a fighter for the defenseless. She’s made space to create conversations and initiatives that focus on the disenfranchised and perennially underrepresented, mostly the poor, women, and children. She has drawn criticism for being an assertive female leader, mostly from men attempting to undermine her competence. She is a mother, now a grandmother, she has been by her husband’s side through intense scrutiny and turmoil, and she has done so while being a visible and vocal woman in a man’s space.

Even now, as women make up over 50% of the population of the U.S., women’s representation in elected office is around 20%. Hillary Clinton has proved that she can play the game, better than most, and unapologetically made a path for herself through activism and a politically savvy that can be counted among the best in American history. Hillary Clinton has been polarizing, galvanizing, and effective in a way that will position her to be in a place that women have only ever seen from the side – at the podium, in the White House.

I’m a Sanders Supporter, but Clinton Has My Vote

(This post was originally published for Slant News online – February 21, 2016 3:05pm)

Chances are, if you’re a voter on the left side of the aisle in this Presidential election, you’ve envisioned what it would be like to have Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders as your nominee. You know for a fact that a Republican cannot take the White House, but you’re not so much in the anyone-as-long-as-it’s-a-Democrat camp.

I’ll admit I was in that camp too, but when it came time to represent myself and elect my best interests, the choice I landed on was Hillary Clinton. I’m sure I’ll receive large amounts of vitriol for not only being a traitor, but for specifically being with her.

I’ve already written about why Bernie Sanders is the president America deserves, so my opinion is not from a standpoint of “electability.” I believe in Bernie, his message, and I think his voice is so very needed in today’s political landscape, but if I had someone ask me, “Who is the most qualified person to become the next president of the United States?” It would undoubtedly be Hillary, regardless of her opponent.

We exist in a society still very much anti-woman, so I’ll sidestep the myriad negative comments geared towards Clinton that are focused on her gender; and her record is also worrisome, but what other person has amassed the kind of political clout that Hillary has over her multiple-decade career? You would have to dive into American history, and still be lost, to find a candidate that before assuming the office of the President had also been:

First Lady (to President Bill Clinton),

a U.S. Senator (New York),

and

Secretary of State (like… in the actual Cabinet).

No, I do not think Hillary is infallible–  she is very much a politician­– but as far as her ability to control and comprehend the intricacies of the Executive Branch, I would consider anyone that voted against her to be uninformed. Look, I get that people are looking for something new and transient of American politics but I don’t think now is the time. Bernie Sanders is a fiery populist, but if you think Obama floundered in the first few years of his administration, even with reelection, Sanders may hit the stride Obama currently has with less than a year to go.

Hillary is a woman. And if you think that is unimportant, please raise your head from the sand. Women have been maligned for “voting with their vaginas” but if you think we’ve achieved post-feminist status in 2016, you are sorely mistaken.

A woman, Hillary Clinton, becoming the leader of America would embody a significance that we have not seen in America historically-so, period. No, I would not advocate women vote for her just because she’s a woman, but because she means so much for a country still dogged by anti-racial and other sentiments.

Hillary Clinton is a proven leader, as an activist, lawyer, mother, stateswoman, and politician, and to say now is not her time is to feed into the misogyny that is heaped upon her by those that simply do not want to see her – a woman – in power. She is the right choice as the next holder of the title Commander in Chief, and she is the right person to take America to a place it has never been; eyes on the future, feet on the ground, with a woman, steadily and assuredly at the helm.