October was billed to be a make or break month for Hillary Clinton. The former secretary of state’s 2016 campaign was walking into a minefield of events that could have posed significant damage to her presidential candidacy. Ahead of the first Democratic primary debate, there was uncertainty over whether Clinton’s performance would live up to expectations. Her testimony before the House Select Committee on Benghazi gave her opponents a platform to poke holes in her record. A decision from Vice President Joe Biden on a possible 2016 bid was expected any day. And adding to the stakes, Clinton’s campaign had been bogged down by controversy over her private email server. All the while, Sen. Bernie Sanders was biting at her heels in the polls.
But with October almost over, and Monday marking her 68th birthday, Clinton has plenty to celebrate.
Benghazi bust
On the top of the list, Clinton cleared a major hurdle by coming out of the Benghazi hearing last week unscathed. She more than just survived the 11-hour grilling from House Republicans over the 2012 attacks on a U.S. compound in Benghazi, Libya. She turned it into a victory while exposing the substance behind the hearing to be little more than political theater.
The takeaway: Clinton left the marathon hearing appearing poised, sharp and presidential. Republicans came out of it empty-handed and appearing petty on issues that have already been litigated in previous congressional investigations.
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Rolling in the dough
If the subtext of the Benghazi Committee hearing was to land blows against the Clinton campaign, the Republican leaders at the helm of the efforts achieved just the opposite.
The Clinton campaign did a victory lap after seeing donations spike within an hour after the hearing concluded. The campaign picked up 100,000 donors in October alone — marking one-fifth of all individual donors who have backed Clinton since she formally entered the race. More than half of the donors who turned out the night of the Benghazi hearing were first-time supporters for Clinton’s 2016 run, and nearly all gave $250 or less.
Not bad, especially considering that Clinton aides told NBC News they hadn’t even solicited the cash.
Long-time Obama ally in Clinton’s corner
David Plouffe, who served as Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign manager and later as a top White House adviser, formally backed Clinton on Saturday. His endorsement marked a key signal for Obama allies to begin coalescing around Clinton ahead of a major Democratic event in Iowa. It also made clear that differences in the past were now water under the bridge.








