Nod to gender at Clinton rally

In NYC, she embraces ambition to be first female president

Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton greets supporters Saturday in New York before formally opening her campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination with a speech outlining her campaign platform. Sharing the stage with her are her son-in-law Marc Mezvinsky, daughter Chelsea and husband, former President Bill Clinton.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton greets supporters Saturday in New York before formally opening her campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination with a speech outlining her campaign platform. Sharing the stage with her are her son-in-law Marc Mezvinsky, daughter Chelsea and husband, former President Bill Clinton.

NEW YORK -- Hillary Rodham Clinton formally kicked off her presidential campaign Saturday with an embrace of her potential to become the first woman to win the White House, asking supporters gathered at an outdoor rally to join her in building an America "where we don't leave anyone out or anyone behind."

With the downtown New York skyline and new World Trade Center over her shoulder, Clinton offered herself as an advocate for those still struggling from the most recent recession.

She promised to carry on the liberal legacies of President Barack Obama and former Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Bill Clinton, her husband, saying "real and lasting prosperity must be built by all and shared by all."

While Clinton ended her first campaign for president in 2008 by conceding she and her backers "weren't able to shatter that highest, hardest glass ceiling," she vowed Saturday to push ahead toward an "America where a father can tell his daughter: Yes, you can be anything you want to be -- even president of the United States."

"I think you know by now that I've been called many things by many people," Clinton said to the crowd of roughly 5,500 gathered on Roosevelt Island in the East River. "Quitter is not one of them."

The 67-year-old former secretary of state, first lady and Democratic senator from New York did not make her gender a core element in 2008, but it provided the cap to the first major speech of her 2016 bid.

"I will be the youngest woman president in the history of the United States. And the first grandmother, as well," she said.

Two months after starting her campaign with a video that showed her only briefly, Clinton outlined a broad vision intended to attract the coalition of young and minority-group voters that propelled Obama to two victories.

In her roughly 45-minute speech, Clinton laid out a wish list of Democratic policies: universal pre-kindergarten education; increased regulation of the financial industry; paid sick leave and equal pay for women; a path to citizenship for those in the country illegally; campaign-finance overhaul; and a ban on discrimination against gay people and their families.

Clinton tried to cast the 2016 election as a choice about the economic future of the middle class, saying the Republican field is "singing the same old song."

The GOP's candidates, she said, want to give Wall Street banks free rein, take away health insurance, "turn their backs" on gay people and ignore the science of climate change.

"Fundamentally, they reject what it takes to build an inclusive economy," Clinton said. "It takes an inclusive society -- what I once called 'a village' that has a place for everyone."

Republicans jumped on Clinton's decision to cite her ties to Obama and were trying to raise money off the speech almost as soon as it ended. In an email appeal asking for donations, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry wrote, "We want to look toward a brighter future, not backward at the failed policies of the Obama-Clinton years."

The race for the Democratic nomination also includes Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley and former Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee.

As part of an effort to reintroduce herself to the public, Clinton stressed her career of advocacy -- a calling she said was inspired by her mother's difficult upbringing.

After the rally, she traveled to Iowa for a house party event Saturday night, where she urged supporters to sign up to help her campaign. The event was streamed online to more than 600 launch parties around the country, part of a tour this week of early-voting states. There, she will focus on her relationship with her mother and her father's background as a veteran and owner of a small business.

Clinton spoke about foreign policy Saturday for the first time in any significant detail since returning to presidential politics. As Obama's first secretary of state, Clinton said she stood up to Russian leader Vladimir Putin and was in the White House Situation Room the night Osama bin Laden was killed.

Clinton remained silent on some issues of critical importance to the Democratic base, most notably a Pacific Rim trade pact backed by Obama but opposed by organized labor, liberals and others who say it will cost the U.S. jobs.

The omission didn't go unnoticed in Iowa and New Hampshire, where Sanders and O'Malley were campaigning.

Both are against the trade deal, and Sanders again hammered Clinton for refusing to say where she stood while touting his support from organized labor.

"I want to say this: The president is dead wrong on this issue, but he has come out for it," Sanders said. "Most Democrats in the Congress are against it. But I don't understand how you don't have a position on this issue."

Information for this article was contributed by Catherine Lucey and Kathleen Ronayne of The Associated Press.

A Section on 06/14/2015

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