Hillary Clinton waded deeper into the 2014 midterm elections Friday, using her first televised remarks at a national party event to heap praise on a long list of female Democrats on the ballot this year.
“Now, I know they might not be as glamorous as presidential elections, but these upcoming midterm elections are crucial,” the former secretary of state, who has presidential elections on her mind, told the Democratic National Committee’s Women’s Leadership Forum Conference in Washington.
Clinton, who was in Iowa last Sunday, lauded Staci Appel, a Democratic congressional candidate in the state. “She is a great mom who worked her way up from minimum wage to management, and with enough support, she could be the first woman ever elected from Iowa to the U.S. House of Representatives,” Clinton said.
Appel is one of more than 100 Democratic women running for Congress this year, along with 10 Democratic women looking for Senate seats and six running for governor. “If I could vote for all of them, I would!” Clinton cheered.
She also took a moment to give special attention to Mary Burke, who is challenging Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker. “She is offering a choice between more angry gridlock and progress that will actually make a difference for Wisconsin families,” Clinton said. “Wisconsin deserves better, and with Mary Burke, it will get better for the people and families of Wisconsin.”
Burke has fired a campaign consultant amid allegations that the candidate’s jobs plan appears to have been plagiarized from other candidates.
Clinton shouted out almost every female Democrat running statewide in the country. “We have so many reasons to be hopeful. Mary Burke gives me hope. Maggie Hassan gives me hope. Martha Coakley and Wendy Davis give me hope. Alison Lundergan Grimes, Kay Hagan, Mary Landrieu, Michelle Nunn, Jeanne Shaheen, Natalie Tennant, they all give me hope,” Clinton, a potential 2016 presidential candidate, said.
Clinton didn’t mention Shenna Bellows, who is facing an uphill battle against Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins, and Amanda Curtis, the Democrat running for Senate in Montana after the party’s favored candidate dropped out. She also skipped Gina Raimondo, the party’s gubernatorial nominee in Rhode Island.
Borrowing a bit from the populist message that has propelled some in her own party, Clinton presented Democrats as the ones who will look out for average Americans. “At a time when the deck does seem stacked against middle-class families in so many ways, we have a choice to make,” she said of the November elections.
Clinton, who spoke Thursday on women in politics at an event at the Center for American Progress, went on to decry the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby decision, saying it “pulled the rug out for America’s women” just as the Affordable Care Act was coming online to help them. “It’s a slippery slope when we start turning over a woman’s right to her own health care decisions to her employer. Any my question is, will Congress do anything about it?” the former first lady said.









