ATLANTIC CITY, New Jersey – In the final scheduled paid speech of Hillary Clinton’s long run-up to a second presidential campaign, the former secretary of state said political polarization is one of the country’s greatest challenges, and called for adult summer camps to close America’s “fun deficit.”
As her 2016 campaign team quietly assembles itself in advance of an expected April launch date, Clinton steered clear of thorny issues of the day and controversies that have hung over her in recent weeks. Instead, she spoke about the need for Americans to “come together about where we go together in the future.”
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The former first lady spoke for about an hour to more than 3,000 camp professionals at the American Camp Association of New York and Jersey’s annual Tri-State CAMP Conference here, including a 30 minute Q&A session with her longtime donor and ally (and camp owner) Jay Jacobs.
She opened her remarks by advocating, somewhat facetiously, for adult summer camps to help close the “serious fun deficit” in America and bridge political differences. Adult campers in the “blue cabin” and “red cabin” would have to “come together and actually listen to each other,” she joked.
The former senator, who has taken aim at congressional Republicans on Twitter this week, lamented the growth of political division and partisanship, pointing to changes in the media and campaign finance laws as culprits.
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“The insatiable pressure to raise money” is “crazy” and “no way to run a country,” Clinton said, calling out the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision.
She also said the media feed on conflict, and worried that not enough lawmakers work across the political aisle these days, spending too little time in Washington. She recalled when then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich would go to war with the Clinton White House during the day, then come over to 1600 Pennsylvania at night.
“As senator, I did a lot of relationship-building, reaching across the aisle,” she said. “From my perspective, you can’t do enough relationship building.”
President Obama has been criticized for not investing enough in building ties with members of Congress.
While Clinton has shed few details about her 2016 campaign themes, the need for a pragmatic approach to getting things done in a gridlocked Washington has been one. In Silicon Valley last month, Clinton said she wanted to get Americans into a “nice warm purple space” to come together.
Her foil thus far has been congressional Republicans, whom she portrays as obstructionists, instead of presidential hopefuls in the GOP, though they have taken shots at her.
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In a speech light on policy, Clinton also spoke about her advocacy for children, her book It Takes a Village, and praised camp professionals for teaching life skills to kids.
She also reiterated her call for universal pre-kindergarten education, which she portrayed as an economic and national security issue, since competitors like China are already investing in the program. “This is not just about how nice it is for us to do things for our kids, this about what we’re going to be able to do in terms of economic growth and jobs and opportunity into the future,” she said.








