It’s official.
After a months-long buildup, Hillary Rodham Clinton announced Sunday she’s running for president again, and promises things will be different this time. Welcome to Clinton 2.0.
The former secretary of state, senator, and first lady declared in a video posted to her new website Sunday afternoon, “I’m getting ready to do something, too – I’m running for president.”
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The 2 minute and 18 second video features a range of Americans, from a small businessman to an immigrant speaking Spanish, telling the camera they’re getting ready for something: Home improvements, moving, home repairs, Kindergarten. A gay couple, holding hands, says they are preparing to wed.
Finally, Clinton appears one and half minutes in. “Americans have fought their way back from bad economic times, but he deck is still stacked in favor of those at the top,” she says, echoing the populist message of progressive wing of the Democratic party. “I’m hitting the road to earn your vote. Americans need a champion and I want to be your champion. It’s your time.”
She plans to travel to Iowa Tuesday, followed by visits to New Hampshire and South Carolina. Bill Clinton will not be hitting the trail with Clinton in Iowa, campaign officials tell msnbc, but will appear later and has been involved behind the scenes.
I’m hitting the trail to earn your vote. Headed to Iowa. –H http://t.co/Mut4vOMxm0
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) April 12, 2015
Top aide John Podesta officially confirmed Clinton’s run for president in an email to Democratic members of Congress and chiefs of staff just before the video was released. “I wanted to make sure you heard it first from me,” Podesta wrote. “There will be a formal kickoff event next month, and we look forward to seeing you there.”
The video draws a stark contrast from her announcement video from January 2007, which showed Clinton — alone — speaking to straight to the camera to say: “I’m in it to win it.” This time, Clinton does not even appear until halfway through, making it clear that her campaign aims to be about voters and not her ambitions.
The “getting ready” message evokes the super PAC Ready for Hillary, which has for two years been laying the groundwork for a Clinton campaign. Having long planned to shut down when Clinton got in, the group changed its name today and plans to be out of its offices by the end of the week.
The video was shot last week all over the country, including in Iowa and New Hampshire, according to campaign officials, who added that the voices are all “real people,” not actors or stock footage.
The message announcing her run was posted to her Twitter account — now adorned with her new campaign logo — and was viewed 3 million times in one hour, according to Twitter.
Clinton will put the challenges facing the middle class front and center in this campaign, aides say, and will focus on restoring economic security. She’ll present 2016 as a choice election, rather a referendum on the current president, Barack Obama, whom aides say she will continue to embrace despite his middling popularity.
For political insiders and wary Democrats who watched Clinton’s 2008 presidential bid implode, the nascent 2016 effort has been sending plenty of signals that Clinton 2.0 will bear little resemblance to Clinton 1.0.
A memo to staff from campaign manager Robby Mook, obtained by msnbc Saturday evening, stressed teamwork, humility, and “fun” – a sharp contrast from a previous campaign marked by a dearth of all three. Few senior officials from Clinton’s 2008 bid have returned for round two.
“She’s definitely a stronger candidate,” longtime Clinton ally Rep. Carolyn Maloney told msnbc at event for Ready for Hillary in New York City Saturday.
While a few other Democrats are eyeing a bid for the party’s Democratic nomination, including former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb and former Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee, none can match Clinton’s name recognition, fundraising ability and breadth of support in the party. While some left-leaning activists have tried to lure Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren into the race, polls show there is little unhappiness about Clinton’s candidacy among Democrats.
O’Malley, via via a spokesperson that he is undaunted. “The Democratic Party will benefit from a robust issues debate, and—should Governor O’Malley decide to enter the race—he will bring one,” spokesperson Lis Smith said in a statement.
Related: Republicans rush to condemn Hillary
In 2008, Clinton downplayed her gender, was slow to embrace the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses, and entered the process with an air of inevitability. Her third place showing in the Iowa caucuses was a humiliating setback and all but cemented Obama as the 2008 nominee.








