SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Hillary Clinton came as close as she has yet to announcing an expected presidential run in 2016, saying Tuesday she’s “obviously” thinking about a bid and is very close to completing her pre-decision checklist.
Coming off a lengthy hiatus from her three-decades spent in the public eye, the all-but-declared presidential candidate chose a Silicon Valley women’s conference to mark her reemergence and hone a message of economic and gender empowerment. The appearance comes ahead of a spate of public events next month that will likely serve as an on ramp to a presidential launch as early as April.
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“I have a very long list. I’m going down it. And I haven’t checked off the last couple of things yet,” the former secretary of state said during a Q&A session moderated by Re/Code editor Kara Swisher when asked about her thinking on a run.
Her lengthy address to 5,000 upwardly mobile women here at the Watermark “Lead On” conference were Clinton’s first public remarks in the country since December. Clinton gave two paid speeches in Canada in January, but has otherwise laid low as she builds a campaign team and plots a run behind closed doors. Clinton has a packed calendar next month, however, and is likely to take some kind of major campaign step as soon as April.
Clinton shied away from highlighting her gender when she ran for president in 2008, but she now calls women’s issues “the great unfinished business of the 21st century” and weaves stories about her experience as a women into her policy goals.
She hinted that if she were to run for president, advancing women and rebalancing the economy for middle class Americans would be the major themes and rationales for her candidacy.
Clinton had plenty of praise for Silicon Valley, but she lamented that women in the room “bump your heads on the glass ceilings that persist in the tech industry” everyday, borrowing a phrase from her 2008 concession speech. “We’re going backwards, in a field that is supposed to be all about moving forwards,” she added.
And the former secretary of state and praised actress Patricia Arquette’s Academy Awards speech that called for pay equity between women and men. “We all cheered Patricia Arquette’s speech at the Oscars because she’s right, it’s time to have wage equality once and for all,” she said.
Turning to tech policy, Clinton came out in favor of the approach the Obama administration is taking on net neutrality, saying, “I would vote for net neutrality.”
Clinton said if there was one thing she could do improve the country, it would be “get back to working together cooperatively” and get people “out of partisan bunkers.” She said she hoped to create a “nice warm purple space” where people have bipartisan conversations.
Clinton could hardly have chosen a better space for the unofficial kickoff of her unofficial campaign run-up. Introducing Clinton, Intel President Renée James called the former first lady “a role model for all of us” and a “modern day suffragette.”
“It’s been 95 years since women earned the right to vote,” James continued. “And we’ve waited 95 years to have a woman lead our country.”
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The audience of professional women, who represent the political demographic that could be Clinton’s secret weapon in 2016, hung on every hint Clinton dropped about running for president and reacted negatively when Swisher made a joke about “President [Elizabeth] Warren.”








