Hillary Clinton swears she’s not interested in any job she doesn’t have — which would seem to include president of the United States. But that doesn’t mean she’s not already talking like a potential 2016 presidential candidate.
The former secretary of state spoke to an adoring audience during Thursday evening’s “Women in the World summit” in New York City, where she criticized gridlock in Washington, D.C., condemned Russian President Vladmir Putin’s incursion into Ukraine, discussed the need to bring jobs to America’s youth and made the economic argument for greater gender equality in the workplace.
Clinton spoke at the summit alongside International Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde. The Q&A was moderated by The New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman.
When Friedman asked Clinton if there was any other job that piqued her interest, clearly referring to the 2016 presidential election, the question was met with wild applause. The former first lady insisted, “Not right now.”
Nonetheless, private citizen Hillary Clinton sure sounded a lot like 2016 presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton.
“We’re kind of marching backwards instead of forward,” she said. At another point, Clinton said: “I want to get back to evidence-based decision making,” blasting “pure ideology, pure partisanship” in Washington.
On looking back at her time as secretary of state, Clinton played up her experience, saying she was proud of the economic stabilization under her tenure, which now allows the U.S. to deal with problems like the crisis in Ukraine. “I think we really restored American leadership in the best sense … I just don’t want to lose that because we have a dysfunctional political situation in Washington.”
Clinton also weighed in on Putin, saying his recent military incursion demonstrates how the Russian leader is “motivated by the past, to recreate it, reclaim it, restore the proper place of Russia in the world order.” She added: “I believe in the long run this is a losing strategy … We have to say ‘no’ to somebody like Putin.”
Lagarde, meanwhile, promised continued IMF support for the Ukraine. When asked if the U.S. was doing enough, Lagarde replied: “You want the truth? No.”
Clinton has been slowly revving up her public appearances, sticking mostly to safe subjects like poverty, her upcoming book and women’s equality.
Earlier in the day, Clinton threw her support behind an initiative by the U.S. Agency for International Development to eradicate extreme poverty by 2030. The event was slightly overshadowed by an Associated Press report earlier in the day claiming USAID (which has ties to the State Department) and the U.S. government were involved in a secret plan to build a Twitter-like messaging system in communist Cuba with hopes of spawning political unrest.









