After winning a resounding victory in South Carolina Saturday, Secretary Hillary Clinton took the stage alone, without her husband or daughter next to her, to celebrate a big win in the Democratic presidential primary race.
But while former President Bill Clinton may not have been physically on stage, his influence on her campaign was on full display.
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“Despite what you hear, we don’t need to make America great again,” Secretary Clinton said during her speech in the state’s capital, referencing the slogan of the Republican front-runner Donald Trump.
“America has never stopped being great, but we do need to make America whole again,” she said. “Instead of building walls, we need to be tearing down barriers,” Clinton thundered.
The line was well received and the crowd loved it, one directly aimed at Trump and reflecting a new tone of unity and optimism on the heels of an easy win.
It was also a line that Bill Clinton had begun using just days before, after her win in Nevada.
Two days after that victory, Clinton told a crowd in Laredo, Texas that this election is “really about whether we can make every American see himself or herself in the picture the president painted” in the State of the Union.
The former president continued, “I disagree with the candidate that said we need to ‘make America great again.’ This is a great country,” he said to great applause. “We need to make America whole again, so you’ll all be part of the picture,” he said, with the last few words barely audible as the room roared with cheers.
Tested and proven successful with President Clinton, it was this theme that Secretary Clinton adopted and made a central element of her victory speech Saturday night.
Bubba’s Role
Since President Clinton began hitting the stump this cycle, he’s earned mixed reviews. His voice is softer and his youthful vigor has diminished in the decades since his presidency. At times, his effectiveness as a surrogate on the campaign trail has even been questioned.
But the combined firepower of President Clinton, Secretary Clinton, and even Chelsea Clinton on the road, gives the Clinton operation a true numbers advantage. For example, the night after the caucus in Nevada, Secretary Clinton flew to Texas to hold events, while President Clinton travelled to Colorado. Heading into to Super Tuesday, the former president will have made individual stops in nine states, with most visits hosting events in multiple cities.
Chelsea Clinton is also an element to this strategy. Since South Carolina, she has been holding events in Minnesota and Nebraska— two states not visited by her parents in the weeks before the contest.
Not only do these events each pull hundreds of people who are then added to campaign data logs, most of the them earn the campaign free local press — all without taking from Secretary Clinton’s schedule.
At each stop, the former president meets with local officials, he speaks to campaign organizers, and takes official pictures with special guests. After being introduced — usually by an elected official who has endorsed his wife — Clinton walks up to the stage to Pharrell’s “Happy.” He speaks for about 40 minutes, and then hits the rope line, shaking hands, taking selfies, and signing many of the items handed— and sometimes thrown — his way.
His events give the people who come and encounter with a former president. It’s these encounters that are valued by those who are full-throated Hillary Clinton supporters, those on the fence, and even supporters of her rival who just wanted to see a former president.
Phil Burford, a 23 year old student at the University of Virginia, is one of those people. He says he plans to vote for Sanders, but wanted to hear from the former president he adores.
“At first I was skeptical of coming, I didn’t want to get brainwashed by Bill Clinton into voting for Hillary,” Burford said before a Richmond rally that coincided with tornado warnings. “I know he’s going to have a lot of valid points on why you should vote for Hillary.”
Walking out of that event was another young student who also came in supporting Sanders, Sven Philipsen. “I think he did a really good job of just framing the situation that we’re at now,” Philipsen admitted. “It makes sense, he’s the best Hillary supporter that you can find in the world.”
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He said he was “not quite” convinced he could leave the Sanders movement, although said it made him consider. “If anybody could have convinced me, Bill would be the guy,” Sven Philipsen said.









