Hillary was raised in a middle-class family in the middle of America.
From that classic suburban childhood in Park Ridge, Illinois, Hillary
went on to become one of America's foremost advocates for children
and families; an attorney twice voted one of the most influential in
America; a First Lady of Arkansas who helped transform the
schools; a bestselling author; a First Lady for America who helped
transform that role, becoming a champion for health care and
families at home and a champion of women's rights and human rights
around the world.

Since her path-breaking election to the United States Senate, Hillary
has been a steadfast advocate for middle-class families, working to
help create jobs, expand children's health care and protect Social
Security from privatization. As the Senator representing New York
after 9/11, Hillary has fought to strengthen our approach to
homeland security and to improve our communications and
intelligence operations. As the first New Yorker ever named to the
Senate Armed Services Committee, Hillary has been a tough critic of
the administration's bungling of Iraq and a fierce advocate for proper
equipment, health benefits, and treatment for military families.

The promise of America was very real as Hillary was growing up.
She learned that no matter who you are or where you're from, if you
worked hard and played by the rules, you could provide a good life
for your family.

Hillary's father, Hugh Rodham, was the son of a factory worker from
Scranton, Pennsylvania. He trained sailors in the Navy during World
War II and then returned to Illinois to start a small business selling
draperies. He taught Hillary both a deep sense of patriotism and a
strong belief in fiscal responsibility. He never took a dime of credit
and was so frugal that he used to turn the heat off overnight during
the winter to save money, waking up early to turn it back on so the
house would be warm when everyone woke up.

Hillary's mother, Dorothy, the daughter of a firefighter, had a tough
childhood. Her parents were young and felt unable to care for their
children. So when Dorothy was just eight, she and her three-year-old
sister traveled alone on a four-day train ride to Los Angeles. There
they were raised by a strict grandmother. It was not until Dorothy
was a teenager and worked as a helper to another family that she
finally knew what a loving family could be. The stories of her
mother's difficult childhood imbued in Hillary a fierce sense of justice
and a belief that no child should be mistreated and that every child
deserves to be loved.

The life that Hugh and Dorothy created for Hillary and her two
brothers was a classic 1950s middle-class suburban childhood. Park
Ridge in those days was the kind of place where everyone left their
doors unlocked and the neighborhood kids all played on the block
together. Hillary was a Brownie and then a Girl Scout. She started
her political life as a Republican, like her father. She even
volunteered as a Goldwater girl!

Faith was central to her family. Her mother taught Sunday school,
and Hillary was a regular in her church youth group. She was deeply
influenced by her youth minister who taught her about "faith in
action." There were trips to the inner city, babysitting for the
children of migrant farm workers, and an extraordinary night when
Hillary was fourteen and her youth group went to hear a speech by
Martin Luther King Jr.

Hillary went to Wellesley College, where she was chosen by her
classmates to be the first-ever student commencement speaker. She
talked about the tumultuous times that her generation was living
through and said, "The challenge now is to practice politics as the art
of making what appears to be impossible, possible."

Next came Yale Law School, where Hillary focused on questions
about how the law affected children and began her decades of work
as an advocate for children and families. As a law student, Hillary
represented foster children and parents in family court and worked
on some of the earliest studies creating legal standards for
identifying and protecting abused children. Following graduation, she
became a staff attorney for the Children's Defense Fund.

After serving as only one of two women lawyers on the staff of the
House Judiciary Committee considering the impeachment of Richard
Nixon, Hillary chose not to pursue offers from major law firms.
Instead she followed her heart and a man named Bill Clinton to
Arkansas. They married in 1975 and their daughter Chelsea was
born in 1980.

Hillary ran a legal aid clinic for the poor when she first got to
Arkansas and handled cases of foster care and child abuse. Years
later, she organized a group called Arkansas Advocates for Children
and Families. When she was just 30, President Carter appointed her
to the board of the United States Legal Services Corporation, a
federal nonprofit program that funds legal assistance for the poor.

When Bill was elected Governor of Arkansas, Hillary continued to
advocate for children, leading a task force to improve education in
Arkansas through higher standards for schools and serving on the
board of the Arkansas Children's Hospital, helping them expand and
improve their services. She also served on national boards for the
Children's Defense Fund, the Child Care Action Campaign, and the
Children's Television Workshop.

She also continued her legal career as a partner in a law firm. She
led the American Bar Association's Commission on Women in the
Profession, which played a pioneering role in raising awareness of
issues like sexual harassment and equal pay. Hillary was twice
named one of the 100 most influential lawyers in America.

When her husband was elected President in 1992, Hillary's work as a
champion for women was recognized and admired around the world.
She traveled the globe speaking out against the degradation and
abuse of women and standing up for the powerful idea that women's
rights are human rights.

In the White House, Hillary led efforts to make adoption easier, to
expand early learning and child care, to increase funding for breast
cancer research, and to help veterans suffering from Gulf War
syndrome who had too often been ignored in the past. She helped
launch a national campaign to prevent teen pregnancy and helped
create the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997, which moved
children from foster care to adoption more quickly. Thanks in part to
her efforts, the number of children who have moved out of foster
care into adoption has increased dramatically.

As everyone knows, Hillary's fight for universal health coverage did
not succeed. But her commitment to health care for every American
has never wavered. She was instrumental in designing and
championing the State Children's Health Insurance Program, which
has provided millions of children with health insurance. She battled
the big drug companies to force them to test their drugs for children
and to make sure all kids get the immunizations they need through
the Vaccines for Children Program. Immunization rates dramatically
improved after the program launched.

Hillary's 1995 book It Takes A Village, about the responsibility we
all have to help children succeed, became an international best
seller. Hillary has donated the proceeds -- more than a million
dollars -- to children's causes across the country.

Hillary's autobiography, Living History, was also a best seller. It has
been translated into 12 languages and sold over 1.3 million copies.

In 2000, Hillary was elected to the United States Senate from New
York. As Senator, Hillary has continued her advocacy for children
and families and has been a national leader on homeland security
and national security issues.

After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Hillary worked
with her colleagues to secure the funds New York needed to recover
and rebuild. She fought to provide compensation to the families of
the victims, grants for hard-hit small businesses, and health care for
front line workers at Ground Zero. And she continues to work for
resources that enable New York to grow, to improve homeland
security for New York and other communities, and to protect all
Americans from future attacks.

She is the first New Yorker ever to serve on the Senate Armed
Services Committee, working to see that America's military has the
necessary resources to protect our national security. She has visited
troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and at Fort Drum in New York, home
of the 10th Mountain Division and other New York bases, as well as
at Walter Reed Military Hospital. She has learned first-hand the
challenges facing American combat forces. Hillary passed legislation
to track the health status of our troops so that conditions like Gulf
War Syndrome would no longer be misdiagnosed. She is an original
sponsor of legislation that expanded health benefits to members of
the National Guard and Reserves and has been a strong critic of the
Administration's handling of Iraq.

But Hillary has recognized that we can't ignore our problems at
home while we face challenges overseas. She has introduced
legislation to tie Congressional salary increases to an increase in the
minimum wage, because she believes if America's working people
don't deserve a raise, neither does Congress. She has supported a
variety of middle-class tax cuts, including marriage penalty relief,
property tax relief, and reduction in the Alternative Minimum Tax,
and supports fiscally responsible pay-as-you-go budget rules. She
helped pass legislation that encouraged investment to create jobs in
struggling communities through the Renewal Communities program.
She has championed legislation to bring broadband Internet access,
which is so important in today's information economy, to rural
America.

In the Senate, Hillary has not wavered in her work to expand quality
affordable health care to more Americans. She worked to strengthen
the Children's Health Insurance Program, which increased coverage
for children in low income and working families. She authored
legislation that has been enacted to improve quality and lower the
cost of prescription drugs and to protect our food supply from
bioterrorism. She sponsored legislation to increase America's
commitment to fighting the global HIV/AIDS crisis, and is now
leading the fight for expanded use of information technology in the
health care system to decrease administrative costs, lower
premiums, and reduce medical errors.

Her strong advocacy for children continues in the Senate. Some of
Hillary's proudest achievements have been her work to ensure the
safety of prescription drugs for children, with legislation now
included in the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act, and her
legislation to help schools address environmental hazards. She has
also proposed expanding access to child care. She has passed
legislation that will bring more qualified teachers into classrooms and
more outstanding principals to lead our schools.

Hillary has been a powerful advocate for women in the Senate. Her
commitment to supporting the rights guaranteed in Roe v. Wade and
to reducing the number of abortions by reducing the number of
unwanted pregnancies was hailed by the New York Times as "frank
talk...(and) a promising path." Hillary is one of the original
cosponsors of the Prevention First Act to increase access to family
planning. Her fight with the Bush Administration ensured that Plan
B, an emergency contraceptive, will be available to millions of
American women and will reduce the need for abortions.

Hillary is strongly committed to making sure that every American
has the right to vote in fair, accessible, and credible elections. She
introduced the Count Every Vote Act of 2005 to ensure better
protection of votes and to ensure that every vote is counted.

In 2006, New Yorkers reelected Hillary to the Senate with 67
percent of the vote.

Clinton had been preparing for a potential candidacy for United
States President since at least early 2003. On January 20, 2007,
Clinton announced via her web site the formation of a presidential
exploratory committee for the United States presidential election of
2008. She stated, "I'm in, and I'm in to win." No woman has ever
been nominated by a major party for President of the United States.
In April 2007, the Clintons liquidated a blind trust that had been
established when Bill Clinton became president in 1993, in order to
avoid the possibility of ethical conflicts or political embarrassments
in the trust as Hillary Clinton undertook her presidential race.

Clinton speaking at a large campaign rally. South Hall, San Jose,
California, February 1, 2008.Clinton led the field of candidates
competing for the Democratic nomination in opinion polls for the
election throughout the first half of 2007. Most polls placed Senator
Barack Obama of Illinois and former Senator John Edwards of North
Carolina as Clinton's closest competitors in the early caucus and
primary election states. Clinton and Obama both set records for
early fundraising, swapping the money lead each quarter,while
Clinton generally maintained her lead in the polls. By September
2007, opinion polling in the first six states holding Democratic
primaries or caucuses showed that Clinton was leading in all of them,
with the races being closest in Iowa and South Carolina. By October
2007, national polls had Clinton far ahead of any Democratic
competitor.
On Super Tuesday, Clinton won the largest states, such as
California, New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts while Obama
won more states; they almost evenly divided the total number of
delegates and the total popular vote.

Obama then won the next eleven caucuses and primaries, often by
large margins, and took the overall delegate lead from Clinton. On
March 4, Clinton broke the string of losses by winning in Ohio and
Texas among other places. Throughout the campaign, Obama
dominated caucuses, and did well in primaries where African
Americans or younger, college-educated, or more affluent voters
were heavily represented; Clinton did well in primaries where
Hispanics or older, non-college-educated, or working-class white
voters predominated. Meanwhile, some Democratic party leaders
expressed concern that the drawn-out campaign between the two
could damage the winner in the general election contest against
presumptive Republican nominee John McCain,especially if an
eventual triumph for Clinton was won via party-appointed
superdelegates. On April 22 she won the Pennsylvania primary by 9
points, keeping her campaign alive. However, on May 6, a narrow
win in the Indiana primary, coupled with a large loss in the North
Carolina primary, damaged her campaign's chances and led to
speculation about whether she could or would remain in the race. She
vowed to stay on through the remaining primaries,and a 41-point win
in the May 13 West Virginia primary left her "more determined than
ever to carry on this campaign". On May 31, the Democratic
National Committee agreed to seat half of the Michigan and Florida
delegates at the national convention, narrowing the delegate gap
between Clinton and Obama, and increasing the number of delegates
needed to win the nomination; millions of Clinton's supporters
viewed this as unfair and "cheating" by the democratic party many
of which were imbedded with the Obama campaign.

On the final primaries day of June 3, 2008, Obama gained enough
super delegates to become the presumptive nominee, however with
over 18 million votes Hillary Rodham Clinton once again made
history by not only becoming the first female candidate to ever run
for a national party to become a presidential nominee, but made a
greater mark in history by earning the most votes ever received by
any presidential primary candidate in American Politics!
Promising a future run for the Whitehouse in front of over 3000
spectators Hillary Clinton gave her final speech in June of 2008
declaring that although she lost the primary election of 2008 - she
had once again made history as a Living Legend of Politics!

On January 21, 2009, Hillary Rodham Clinton was sworn in as the
67th Secretary of State of the United States. As of October 2009
Secretary Clinton had the highest approval ratings of ANY member
of the Obama Administration including First Lady Michelle Obama.
With 65% of the American public satisfied with her job performance
and likability Hillary Clinton is destined for a future in politics.
Secretary Clinton joined the State Department after nearly four
decades in public service as an advocate, attorney, First Lady, and
Senator, living her life for the people, by the people, and with the
people. One thing that we can be sure of is Hillary Rodham Clinton
will continue to change millions of lives, minds, and hearts and she
will forever be known here and thru-out the world as
a LIVING LEGEND!
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