Is Hillary Clinton still thinking about breaking the highest glass ceiling in American politics?
At Friday’s Pennsylvania Conference for Women, Clinton announced the launch of The Clinton Foundation’s “no ceilings” initiative to promote gender equality worldwide.
While Clinton made no mention of running for president, she made an impassioned call for women’s rights, urging the 7,000-member audience to stand against discrimination and to promote women in leadership ranks.
“Ceilings in America are unacceptable,” Clinton said, “and we’re going to be about the business of making sure those ceilings crack. So let’s get cracking!”
Gender equality has been a major focus of Clinton’s career, stemming from her time as First Lady and continuing today through her work at the newly-renamed Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation.
“These ceilings don’t just hold back women and girls,” Clinton said, citing instances of sexual violence, a lack of job opportunities and unequal access to education. “They hold back entire… societies, because no country can thrive by denying the contributions of half their people.”
The refrain has been a cornerstone of Clinton’s public speeches, which–along with fundraisers–have taken her to eight cities in the past 10 days. Clinton has frequently called the fight against oppression of women and girls worldwide “the great unfinished business of the 21st century.”
Next September marks the 20-year anniversary of Clinton’s landmark speech at a U.N. women’s conference in Beijing, in which she declared that “women’s rights are human rights and human rights are women’s rights, once and for all.” On Friday she reflected on that speech.









