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Post by Admin on Oct 20, 2013 5:26:40 GMT
Chelsea Clinton on Thursday said she wants her mother to have this year to “rest” and didn’t rule out a political bid of her own. “Now I’m very strongly exercising my prerogative as a daughter,” she said, speaking to Fortune magazine’s Most Powerful Women Summit. “Just making sure my mom has this year to rest and reflect and write her memoirs as Secretary of State, and engage as she wants to engage.” Chelsea Clinton highlighted one difference between her and her father, former President Bill Clinton, when she spoke at Fortune's Most Powerful Women Summit on Thursday. Her dad knew he wanted to be President at the age of five and built his life around achieving his goal. Chelsea said her career path was much more fluid. "I wish I had had one galvanizing ambition that I could reverse-engineer my life toward," she said. Instead, the younger Clinton spent her twenties working at McKinsey and at hedge fund Avenue Capital, but found that she "didn't want to grow up to be my boss." With an "amorphous ambition to make a difference," Clinton continued her education -- she's currently working on a doctorate in international relations at Oxford -- and joined the Clinton Foundation, where she is vice chairman. As the daughter of two politicians, Clinton often gets asked if she'll run for office one day. Her reply at the Most Powerful Women Summit was simple, yet candid: "I don't know."
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Post by Admin on Jun 19, 2016 18:50:30 GMT
The Clintons just welcomed the newest member of their growing family to the world, with former (and potentially soon-to-be-again) first daughter Chelsea Clinton giving birth to a baby boy, Aidan Clinton Mezvinsky. Aidan joins his sister, Charlotte, as Bill and Hillary Clinton's two grandchildren. And given we could be just a few months away from a second President Clinton -- and that Aidan's mother, Chelsea, has also been the subject of plenty of political talk -- there will be chatter about whether the newest Clinton could one day take over the family business. Chelsea has even talked about this and said she's open to it. That's presumptuous, though; the kid is a day old, after all, and we don't even know what his position is on free trade yet. So we'll simply talk about whether the Clintons as a whole just increased their chances of winning another presidency -- Hillary Clinton 2016 or otherwise.
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Post by Admin on Jun 21, 2016 18:50:03 GMT
The former first daughter, 36, was seen leaving Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City Monday afternoon with newborn son Aidan, who made his debut on Saturday — just in time for Father’s Day. Aidan is the second child for Clinton and husband of almost six years Marc Mezvinsky, 38. The couple are also parents to 20-month-old daughter Charlotte. “Marc and I are overwhelmed with gratitude and love as we celebrate the birth of our son,” Clinton wrote on Twitter to announce Aidan’s arrival. On Monday morning, she tweeted, “Can’t get enough! Thank you everyone for the warm wishes!”
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Post by Admin on Nov 24, 2016 18:37:10 GMT
Hillary Clinton's daughter Chelsea allegedly used funds from the Clinton Foundation to go toward her wedding, new Wikileaks emails purport. In several emails, Doug Band, a former top aide to president Bill Clinton and a former Clinton Global Initiative board member, complains about Chelsea Clinton (writing 'cvc' or Chelsea Victoria Clinton). In one email, dated January 1, 2012, Band emails John Podesta, Chairman of the 2016 Hillary Clinton presidential campaign, and says the Chelsea Clinton was conducting an internal investigation into CGI and the Clinton Foundation, which posed a conflict of interest. The email from Band reads: 'I just received a call from a close friend of (William Jefferson Clinton) who said that cvc told one of the (George W Bush) kids that she is conducting an internal investigation of money within the foundation from cgi to the foundation.
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Post by Admin on Apr 7, 2019 17:19:23 GMT
Chelsea Clinton on Rep. Ilhan Omar and 2020 Candidates | The View
Chelsea Clinton on Wednesday spoke publicly about a viral video last month that showed her being confronted by students who claims she “stoked” hatred that led to the New Zealand mosque shootings.
Clinton appeared on “The View” and said the incident highlighted the need for respectful dialogue.
“We have so much pain and anger in our country and in our world right now,” Clinton said. “And I think we do have a real responsibility to listen to each other.”
“It’s more important now than it's maybe ever been in my lifetime,” she added.
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