PHILADELPHIA — Hillary Clinton earned a hometown welcome here Thursday night while campaigning for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Tom Wolf and testing out what felt like the makings of presidential stump speech.
“She is a Pennsylvanian at heart,” Wolf said while introducing Clinton at “Women for Wolf” fundraiser at the Constitution Center downtown. “Coursing through her veins is blood that is infused with Pennsylvania values … She’s one of us.”
The former secretary of state had laid claim to many hometowns over the years. She was born and raised outside Chicago, attended college near Boston, and lived for many years in Little Rock, Arkansas where her husband, former President Bill Clinton, served as governor. She now has homes in Washington and in Chappaqua, New York, a state she represented in the Senate for 8 years. But she has often mentioned her attachment to Pennsylvania as well, noting her grandfather’s roots in blue-collar Scranton.
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When Clinton took the stage, she reminisced about her family’s annual road trips through the Pennsylvania countryside. “There’s a lot of Philadelphia and a lot of Pennsylvania in Charlotte,” she said of her new granddaughter. “Her father has already held her while watching the Eagles play.”
Clinton’s son-in-law, Marc Mezvinsky, is the daughter of Marjorie Margolies, a former congresswoman from the city. Margolies, whom Clinton campaigned for this year during an unsuccessful attempt to regain her seat in Congress, greeted local Democratic dignitaries ahead of the speech, brining some to visit with Clinton.
“This state has been very good to my family and to my husband and to me,” Clinton added. She carried the state during the 2008 Democratic primary.
Alan Kessler, Clinton’s 2008 national finance chair and a major Democratic donor from the area, said he was pleased to see Clinton here again. “Eight years ago, in a very difficult time, Pennsylvania and Philadelphia came through with a 10 point win in the primary, so I think Philadelphia and Pennsylvania is ready for Hillary,” Kessler told msnbc. Was he here for Wolf or Clinton? “Both,” he replied.
In her speech, Clinton adroitly walked the line between both being a good Democrat stumping for a fellow partisan and laying out her own vision – even if there were jokes about her preeminence. “Listen, I’m the one running for governor!” Wolf joked when Clinton accidentally came on stage prematurely and sent up a cheer from the crowd, which was estimated to be about 1,000 strong.
Clinton began by thanking local Democratic leaders. She paid a lengthy tribute to former Gov. Ed Rendell and Rep. Allison Schwartz, who lost a gubernatorial primary campaign to Wolf, but has since become his loyal supporter.
In his own speech, Rendell joked that he was confident Wolf would be “the second best governor in Pennsylvania history!”
Of Sen. Bob Casey, who supported Barack Obama in 2008 and has yet to sign on the Ready for Hillary effort, Clinton said he was “another great Democratic leader.”
After posing with Wolf, Clinton launched into a lengthy story of his biography, calling him the kind of “made-in-America success story that made this country great.” She explained how he started as a forklift driver and eventually ran his own company, which faltered during the recession, forcing him to invest his “every penny” to rescue it.
“For Tom Wolf, that business was about a lot more than the Wolf family. For him, everyone that worked there was part of the family,” she said.
Wolf’s values, she continued, building to a portion of the speech that would sound as good in Iowa or New Hampshire as they did here, are “the way things are supposed to work in America.”
She laid out many components any speechwriter would be happy to use in a presidential campaign speech, embedded with responses to likely criticisms.









