Kuwait Times

Comeback Queen? Hillary rumors won’t go away

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The prospect of a Hillary Clinton comeback after her shock loss to Donald Trump could hardly be less certain, but in New York where she is revered, plenty of people dream of her running for mayor. Her public appearance­s since the election have been largely confined to walks in the woods close to her Chappaqua home, where she is photograph­ed in minimal makeup by neighbors mourning her defeat and repelled by the president-elect.

The 69-year-old former secretary of state otherwise emerged to present pop star Katy Perry with an award at a UNICEF ball and has been photograph­ed at smart restaurant­s such as the Polo Bar, dining with fashion designer Ralph Lauren who custom-made the pantsuit in which she conceded defeat to Trump. Then there was also a December meeting with donors at which the New York Times said that she blamed her loss on Russian President Vladimir Putin and the late-hour FBI interventi­on over her email scandal.

In a city where nearly 80 percent of the electorate voted for her, Clinton can forget that she polarized the electorate and the millions of Americans who consider her the incarnatio­n of an abhorrent political class. On Jan 8, she got a standing ovation on Broadway when she attended the last night of The Color Purple - in stark contrast to Vice President-elect Mike Pence who was booed and lectured when he went to Hamilton in November.

On Friday she will attend Trump’s inaugurati­on - her first major appearance in months - when cameras will be watching for the slightest reaction from the woman who hoped to shatter the ultimate glass ceiling and become the first female commander-in-chief of the world’s most powerful democracy. While the Democrat lost the crucial Electoral College by 232 to 306, she won the popular vote by more than 2.7 million ballots - more than any white man as her supporters delight in pointing out.

Confidante Neera Tanden told CNN that Clinton would never run for office again, but several media outlets have reported on rumors and speculatio­n that she’s been asked to consider a run for New York mayor this November. The job would put her in charge of Trump’s hometown, but the fact that the current incumbent - Bill de Blasio - once managed her New York senate campaign and is running again, makes the prospect reportedly more unlikely.

Trump’s hometown foe

But as the rumors have spread, Clinton has done nothing to give them credence or to shoot them down. Even tabloid the New York Post, which was hostile to Clinton the presidenti­al candidate, urged her to run against the left-leaning mayor it opposes. “Secretary Clinton, we’d love to see you run for mayor. New York City needs you,” it wrote on Jan 6. It listed her attributes and work ethic, and implied it would not be difficult for Clinton to become a city resident and build ties to city neighborho­ods. “While it’s not the glass ceiling she hoped to break, New York has never had a woman mayor. Isn’t it past time for that to change?” finished the editorial. — AFP

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