podesta-emails

podesta_email_00840.txt

podesta-emails 10,190 words email
P17 P22 D6 P21 V11
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*​**Correct The Record Tuesday October 14, 2014 Morning Roundup:* *Headlines:* *Associated Press: “Hillary Clinton says students should get fair shot” <http://bigstory.ap.org/article/f4ccf0084483477ab64ee06140d70d72/hillary-clinton-says-students-should-get-fair-shot>* “Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told a Las Vegas crowd Monday night that more needs to be done to assure young people can achieve their dreams and free students from onerous college debt ‘that can feel like an anchor tied to their feet dragging them down.’” *Las Vegas Sun: “Hillary Clinton’s Las Vegas visit shows signs of White House ambitions” <http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2014/oct/13/live-hillary-clintons-keynote-speech-unlv-foundati/>* “Hillary Clinton’s night in Las Vegas showed all the signs of someone running to be the most powerful person in the world.” *Las Vegas Review-Journal: “Clinton raises campaign cash; advocates for affordable education” <http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/clinton-raises-campaign-cash-advocates-affordable-education>* “Speaking to supporters of higher education, Hillary Clinton Monday night urged the private business community to partner with the University of Nevada, Las Vegas to help more young people earn college degrees that will give them more opportunity for higher paying jobs of the future.” ... "Before the UNLV Foundation dinner, Clinton headlined a private Nevada Democratic Party fundraiser where donors were asked to contribute from $1,000 to $10,000 each. Money went to the state party and to U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., for his 2016 re-election campaign." *Denver Post: “Hillary Clinton campaigns for Sen. Mark Udall at Denver Union Station” <http://www.denverpost.com/election2014/ci_26721137/hillary-clinton-campaigns-sen-mark-udall-at-denver>* “Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton surprised travelers at Denver Union Station when she and U.S. Sen. Mark Udall showed up Monday afternoon.” *Associated Press: “Hillary Clinton swings by Colorado to help Udall” <http://bigstory.ap.org/article/dc96f0a30a814f5388ae64ed1161ca5e/hillary-clinton-swings-colorado-help-udall>* “Hillary Clinton swung by Colorado to help out embattled Democratic Sen. Mark Udall on Monday during a western swing in which she also spoke of being a new grandmother.” *Elko Daily Free Press opinion: Gregg Potter: “Proud to have Hillary Clinton at UNLV” <http://elkodaily.com/commentary-proud-to-have-hillary-clinton-at-unlv/article_c5a48f1d-9ee8-58a5-bef1-8b126969ebdc.html>* “As a proud graduate of the University of Nevada Las Vegas, I am thrilled that Hillary Clinton is speaking at the UNLV Foundation’s annual dinner Monday night.” *CNN: “GOP spotlights fees ahead of Clinton Vegas fundraisers” <http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/13/politics/clinton-nevada-republicans-money/index.html>* "Clinton also told ABC News in August that 'all of the fees have been donated to the Clinton Foundation for it to continue its life-changing and life-saving work.'" *Detroit News: “Hillary Clinton plans Oakland Univ. visit” <http://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/politics/elections/2014/10/13/hillary-clinton-will-visit-oakland-university/17211837/>* “Hillary Rodham Clinton will arrive in Michigan Thursday to help boost two high-profile Democrats in their election campaign pushes.” *Wall Street Journal blog: Washington Wire: “Elizabeth Warren Highlights Hillary Clinton’s Goldman Problem” <http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2014/10/13/elizabeth-warren-highlights-hillary-clintons-goldman-problem/?KEYWORDS=hillary+clinton>* “Ms. Warren took no swipes at Mrs. Clinton. Along with other women Democratic senators, she has signed a letter supporting a Clinton presidential bid. But she did take aim at Goldman Sachs, a firm with close ties to the Clinton family.” *The Hill blog: Ballot Box: “Warren inches away from Obama” <http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/220619-warren-inches-away-from-obama>* “Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is beginning to distance herself from President Obama amid increased speculation about what role she wants to play in 2016.” *The Daily Beast: Sally Kohn: “Warren and Christie Are the Anti-Hillarys” <http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/10/14/warren-and-christie-are-the-anti-hillarys.html>* "In other words, although anyone markedly more socially conservative than Christie stands no realistic chance of being elected President of the United States of America as the electorate becomes even more socially liberal, the right of the right is so damned determined to police the borders of its increasingly irrelevant influence that it is eschewing Christie for not being right wing enough." *Washington Post: “Can’t quit Mitt: Friends say Romney feels nudge to consider a 2016 presidential run” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/cant-quit-mitt-friends-say-romney-feels-nudge-to-consider-a-2016-presidential-run/2014/10/13/2cb19d12-52ee-11e4-892e-602188e70e9c_story.html>* “Romney has huddled with prominent donors and reconnected with supporters in key states in recent months. Because of the vacuum of power within his party and the lack of a clear 2016 front-runner, confidants said Romney is grappling with this question: If drafted, would he answer the party’s call?” *CNN: “How many ways can Romney say no to 2016?” <http://www.cnn.com/2014/06/23/politics/romney-says-no-to-2016/index.html>* “The former Massachusetts governor has been accused of flip-flopping in the past, but he's been pretty consistent on his future: He's a ‘no.’” *Articles:* *Associated Press: “Hillary Clinton says students should get fair shot” <http://bigstory.ap.org/article/f4ccf0084483477ab64ee06140d70d72/hillary-clinton-says-students-should-get-fair-shot>* By Kimberly Pierceall October 14, 2014, 1:48 a.m. EDT LAS VEGAS (AP) — Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told a Las Vegas crowd Monday night that more needs to be done to assure young people can achieve their dreams and free students from onerous college debt "that can feel like an anchor tied to their feet dragging them down." "I think our young people deserve a fair shot," she told about 900 people gathered in a Bellagio resort ballroom for the annual UNLV Foundation dinner benefiting the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Later, talking about the American public's possible reluctance to get involved in conflicts around the world, Clinton referred to the threats posed by the Ebola virus and the Islamic State group. "They want to bring the fight to Europe and the fight to the United States," she said of the terrorist group. And Ebola is not going to stay confined, she said. At every step, officials should ask if actions are in America's best interest, she said. "We can't say we're not going to be involved because these things are other people's problems," she said. The remarks were part of questions from longtime friend and Las Vegas Sun Publisher Brian Greenspun after Clinton's prepared speech that touched on her thoughts on Russian President Vladimir Putin ("I see a very cold-blooded, calculated former KGB agent who is determined to not only enrich himself and his closest colleagues but also to try to revive Russia's influence around its border"), the most important person she's ever met (Nelson Mandela for his "level of self-awareness and political skill") and her most difficult decision as secretary of state ("Whether or not to go after Bin Laden based on the evidence we had."). But before any questions, Greenspun presented her a gift: a pair of Nike athletic shoes, a reference to one of her last appearances in Las Vegas in April when a woman in the crowd threw a shoe at Clinton. "How do we make amends?" he asked. By giving her two shoes instead of just the one. Greenspun pointed out the pair came from the "running" shoes section, a coy reference to speculation surrounding a possible presidential run by Clinton. She didn't give anything away about her future plans after Greenspun pressed a second time asking about any unfinished business she might have and how she would finish it, a reference to a chapter in her book, "Hard Choices." "I'm really going to have to ponder that seriously," she said. Before Monday's event, Clinton made a stop in Denver to campaign for Colorado Sen. Mark Udall and later appeared at a Nevada Democratic Party fundraiser in Las Vegas with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. The Las Vegas Sun reported that VIP tickets to the fundraiser at the Aria resort cost $10,000 each. The UNLV Foundation dinner honored billionaire Republican fundraiser and Sands Corp. CEO Sheldon Adelson. Clinton, who commended Adelson for his donations to the university, said she had run into the casino-hotel mogul backstage. "Sheldon said to me, 'Gee, I wish they would have paired me with you to ask the questions. We could have had a real debate,'" Clinton said. "Well, that would certainly bring a crowd," she said, adding that it might have required a boxing ring. Adelson's Las Vegas Sands has committed giving $7 million to fund construction of Hospitality Hall for the university's Harrah Hotel College and a proposed Center for Professional and Leadership Studies. The event also posthumously honored philanthropist Kitty Rodman whose estate pledged $12.9 million for the university's special education programs. *Las Vegas Sun: “Hillary Clinton’s Las Vegas visit shows signs of White House ambitions” <http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2014/oct/13/live-hillary-clintons-keynote-speech-unlv-foundati/>* By Kyle Roerink October 13, 2014, 7:33 p.m. Hillary Clinton’s night in Las Vegas showed all the signs of someone running to be the most powerful person in the world. The former secretary of state helped raise money for fellow Democrats. She spoke about education, war and peace. She even congratulated Republican super donor Sheldon Adelson for his UNLV philanthropy. Clinton's keynote address made no reference to higher office. But the 900 students, donors and politicians who attended the UNLV Foundation’s annual dinner saw plenty of signals. Her question-and-answer session with Brian Greenspun, the Las Vegas Sun editor and publisher and a UNLV trustee, featured a mix of lighthearted stories about people she's met in politics and showcased Clinton’s work in international affairs. *Clinton and Adelson* Before delivering her keynote address, Clinton had a word with Adelson, CEO of the Las Vegas Sands Corp. The UNLV Foundation honored Adelson tonight for donating $7 million. When Clinton and Adelson crossed paths backstage, they didn’t trade partisan jabs. Clinton said that Adelson told her he wished that he was asking the questions on stage. “That would have been a debate,” Adelson reportedly told Clinton. Clinton told the crowd, dining in the Tower Ballroom at the Bellagio, “We would have needed a boxing arena.” *Education* Clinton used her keynote address to aim at problems in higher education. She attacked “fly-by-night for-profit schools” and predatory lenders that “exploit students.” She hinted at Congress’ inability to pass higher education reforms to tackle the problems. She said the solutions “shouldn’t be partisan or controversial.” “I don’t think any group, any political party, any business, any sector of the economy, any politician has all the answers. In fact, I think it’s time we got back to working together again,” she said. Clinton’s keynote speech also touched on what Nevada is doing to improve its worst-in-the-nation public education system. She said her family’s charity — the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation — is working with Barrick Gold Corp. to develop programs at Great Basin Community College and vocational programs to train Nevadans (Greenspun is on the Barrick Gold board of directors). Clinton, who was paid $225,000 for speaking, donated the money to her family charity. *Speaking like a candidate* If Clinton does run for office, she will inevitably face questions about her time as secretary of state. Asked about tough decisions she made as the chief foreign policy adviser to President Barack Obama, Clinton spoke about the “excruciating analysis” before going after Osama bin Laden in Pakistan. “A lot of the assessments that pointed to his compound in Abbottabad was 40 to 60 percent reliable,” she said. Then she added: “Sorting that through was a really difficult decision.” She didn’t specifically address an attack at a consulate in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four American officials. Critics blamed Clinton for not doing enough to protect diplomats in Benghazi and for her handling of the investigation that followed. Clinton said military force should be a last resort but said the U.S. cannot retreat from the world’s problems. “I don’t think the United States can solve every problem in the world. But I don’t think you can solve problems without the United States,” she said. She didn’t back away from questions about Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling him “a cold-blooded former KGB agent.” She added: "In my dealings with Putin, we’ve had an ongoing exchange of argumentation and heated views from time to time. He is someone who can be understood and dealt with. But it takes a long-term strategic commitment.” She said Putin has influenced Russia’s neighbors with natural gas holdings and by having his “friends” purchase media companies in Eastern European states. She said the world “cannot allow the borders of Europe to be re-written the way Putin is trying to rewrite Ukraine. ... That will be bad for us." *Running shoes* Clinton has now visited Las Vegas three times this year. Her first visit made headlines after a woman threw a shoe at her during a speech before the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries convention in April at Mandalay Bay. Greenspun apologized for the incident, and without saying anything about Clinton’s purported aspirations to run for president in 2016, handed her a pair of Nike running shoes. *Las Vegas Review-Journal: “Clinton raises campaign cash; advocates for affordable education” <http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/clinton-raises-campaign-cash-advocates-affordable-education>* By Laura Myers October 13, 2014, 9:33 p.m. Speaking to supporters of higher education, Hillary Clinton Monday night urged the private business community to partner with the University of Nevada, Las Vegas to help more young people earn college degrees that will give them more opportunity for higher paying jobs of the future. Now, Clinton said, the cost of education is too high for many students, particularly those with little money and access to grants and scholarships. And the job market is so challenging that even graduates with college degrees are having difficulty finding their first job to launch their careers. The millennial generation is talented, smart and hard-working, but doesn’t have as many job opportunities as Clinton did when she was young, she said, speaking at the annual UNLV Foundation dinner held to thank top donors to the university. As a result, young people are delaying launching careers of their choice, buying their first homes and even getting married, she said. “We have a lot more work to do if we want to unleash the full potential and make sure more Americans feel they, too, have a future,” Clinton said to applause. “That’s especially true for our young people. … Many Millennials are still struggling … in a difficult job market.” Clinton, a former secretary of state who is expected to run for president in 2016 on the Democratic ticket, also said that post-graduation many students are burdened by student debt “that can feel like an anchor dragging them down.” This, too, puts their future at risk, she said. Clinton praised President Barack Obama for increasing federal Pell grants by $1,000 and working to cap student loan repayments at 10 percent of discretionary income, but she said young people feel overwhelmed by debt even as they struggle to find employment in their field of study. “More needs to be done,” she said. “Higher education shouldn’t be a privilege for those able to afford it. It should be an opportunity widely available for anybody with the talent, determination and ambition” to learn. Clinton said her family’s non-profit charity, the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation, has started a program “Job One” to partner private business with higher education to help students. In Nevada, she said, Barrick Gold has partnered with Great Basin Community College and the Shoshone Tribe to develop education and job programs to help students get more work experience. “We think that first job is essential,” Clinton said. “I think our young people deserve a fair shot. And Barrick Gold’s investment in Nevada is one example … to prepare young people to compete.” Clinton praised UNLV for deciding to open a medical school and aiming for Tier 1 status as a university. And she urged the business community to get more involved instead of just counting on government to help students. In the end, she said, it will help companies’ bottom lines. UNLV President Dan Snyder “has been known to say you can’t have a great city without a great university. I think he’s right,” Clinton summed up. After her 25-minute speech, Las Vegas Sun Publisher Brian Greenspun, a Clinton family friend, gave the former first lady a pair of tennis shoes, saying they were “running shoes,” a not so subtle hint that she should run for the White House. It also evoked memories of a Las Vegas speech Clinton gave in the spring during which a protester threw a pair of shoes at her, which she ducked. Before Clinton spoke, UNLV honored Sands Chairman Sheldon Adelson for donating $7 million to the university this past year for the hotel college, his latest effort to support the school. Adelson also is one of the most generous GOP political donors and would likely support any Republican candidate who ran against Clinton if she runs for president. Clinton said she chatted backstage with Adelson and he told her, “I wish they’d paired me with you to ask the questions. We could have a real debate.” “Well, that would certainly draw a crowd,” Clinton quipped. “I think you’d need a boxing arena for that to be pulled off.” More than 900 people attended the sold-out UNLV dinner at the Bellagio where the top donor tables went for $3,000 to $20,000 each. The Foundation raised more than $350,000 from top donors alone, and the annual UNLV dinner was expected to make a profit, according to the university. UNLV also raised nearly $235,000 from a pledge drive held during the dinner, the university said. The dinner also honored the late Kitty Rodman, a longtime UNLV supporter, whose estate Monday donated a record high $12.9 million gift to the College of Education. The money will support scholarships and graduate fellowships for UNLV students studying special education. Clinton was paid $225,000 for the hour-long event, including her speech and question-and-answer session, a fee that has been criticized because it’s coming from a non-profit educational foundation. UNLV student leaders also have called on Clinton to donate her fee to the university instead of giving it to her family’s Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation. Under Clinton’s contract, the UNLV event initially was closed to media coverage. But she had a change of heart and last week UNLV said her 8 p. m. speech would be open to press coverage. Clinton and former President Bill Clinton have made $100 million from speaking fees since leaving the White House in 2001. The high fees have become an issue even before Clinton officially announces a presidential run. Critics question whether she has lost touch with the middle class. During her recent book tour, Clinton defended accepting high speaking fees by noting that she and her husband were “dead broke” when they left the White House. Before the UNLV Foundation dinner, Clinton headlined a private Nevada Democratic Party fundraiser where donors were asked to contribute from $1,000 to $10,000 each. Money went to the state party and to U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., for his 2016 re-election campaign. *Denver Post: “Hillary Clinton campaigns for Sen. Mark Udall at Denver Union Station” <http://www.denverpost.com/election2014/ci_26721137/hillary-clinton-campaigns-sen-mark-udall-at-denver>* By Lynn Bartels October 13, 2014, 6:09 p.m. MDT Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton surprised travelers at Denver Union Station when she and U.S. Sen. Mark Udall showed up Monday afternoon. Clinton, the presumed frontrunner for the Democratic nomination for president in 2016, talked to shoppers and laughed with a barista when she ordered coffee as part her swing through various states to help Democratic candidates. The visit to Union Station came after Clinton appeared at the Brown Palace for a fundraiser for Udall, who faces a tough election challenge from Republican Congressman Cory Gardner. Ballots for the Nov. 4 election will be mailed this week. The Associated Press reported that while at Union Station, Clinton marveled at the barista's ability to draw a pattern in the foam atop their beverages; she got a smiling pig in honor of the shop's name, Pigtrain Coffee Co., Udall, a well-known environmentalist, a leaf. "Is that a marijuana plant?" Clinton asked, laughing, a reference to Colorado's newly legalized recreational marijuana industry. It was a return visit of sorts for Clinton. In June, she and former President Bill Clinton chose Union Station's Great Hall for an evening event venue while finishing touches of its renovation were still under way, during the Clinton Global Initiative America conference. Bigwigs dined on food specially prepared by chefs from Denver restaurants and listened to music, weeks before Union Station's reopening. Bill Clinton had been scheduled to headline a fundraiser for Udall on Sept. 27 but cancelled because of the birth of his granddaughter the night before. He spoke to donors by speakerphone. *Associated Press: “Hillary Clinton swings by Colorado to help Udall” <http://bigstory.ap.org/article/dc96f0a30a814f5388ae64ed1161ca5e/hillary-clinton-swings-colorado-help-udall>* By Nicholas Riccardi October 13, 2014, 7:39 p.m. EDT DENVER (AP) — Hillary Clinton swung by Colorado to help out embattled Democratic Sen. Mark Udall on Monday during a western swing in which she also spoke of being a new grandmother. Clinton held a closed-door fundraiser for Udall, who is facing a tough challenge from Rep. Cory Gardner. They ordered coffee at Denver's refurbished Union Station, and she paused to shake hands, posed for photos and lent her political celebrity to the incumbent a day before ballots are mailed to voters. The former secretary of state was quick to beckon 10-year-old Macy Friday out of the crowd of onlookers to pose for photos with her, her brother and her father Derek, who introduced his mother Elaine, who had just arrived from Ohio. "Most important, she's the grandmother," Clinton said. "You're a grandmother," Elaine Friday said. "I know," said Clinton, whose daughter Chelsea gave birth to her first child on Sept. 26. "Isn't it the best?" As they grabbed coffees at a shop inside the station, Clinton and Udall chatted about the next stop on her schedule — aMonday evening event for Nevada Democrats in Las Vegas. The two discussed Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. "He's a good leader," Clinton said of Reid, who has been used by Republicans to attack Democrats this year, including Udall. Clinton also marveled at the barista's ability to draw a pattern in the foam atop their beverages — she got a smiling pig in honor of the shop's name and Udall, a well-known environmentalist, a leaf. "Is that a marijuana plant?" Clinton asked, laughing, a reference to Colorado's newly legalized recreational marijuana industry. Clinton is in the middle of a trip to support Democrats in key races, with stops in Kentucky, Iowa, Michigan and Pennsylvania. Udall can use her help. He's been deadlocked in the polls with Gardner since the congressman hopped into the race more than six months ago. Bill Clinton had been scheduled to headline a fundraiser for Udall on Sept. 27, but ended up appearing by speakerphone after the birth of his granddaughter the night before. *Elko Daily Free Press opinion: Gregg Potter: “Proud to have Hillary Clinton at UNLV” <http://elkodaily.com/commentary-proud-to-have-hillary-clinton-at-unlv/article_c5a48f1d-9ee8-58a5-bef1-8b126969ebdc.html>* By Gregg Potter October 13, 2014 As a proud graduate of the University of Nevada Las Vegas, I am thrilled that Hillary Clinton is speaking at the UNLV Foundation’s annual dinner Monday night. She is one of the most well-known and respected women in the world, and UNLV is lucky to have her. Her attendance will raise money for the University, the Clinton Foundation, and will add to the long list of work she has done to promote education in the United States and throughout the world. The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported in early July that the UNLV Foundation had already raised an impressive $353,000, and that it expects to make a profit for only the third time in the event’s history. Considering that was months ago, before individual tickets had even gone on sale, there is no doubt the event will be a huge success. And there is no doubt that Hillary Clinton will be the reason why. The UNLV community won’t be the only one benefiting from Hillary’s appearance -- the speaking fee is going directly to the Clinton Foundation, her family’s charitable foundation that contributes about $20 million every year to address the most critical problems facing people in this country and all over the world, including education. But Hillary Clinton has done so much more to promote education than just raise money. After law school, she worked for the Children’s Defense Fund, the country’s leading child advocacy organization that strives to level the playing field for all children by ensuring access to a quality education, among other things. In Arkansas, she led the effort to reform the state’s educational system and improve academic standards. In the Senate, she fought to expand access to early childhood education for low-income children and make college more affordable and accessible. As Secretary of State, she made advancing education of girls around the world a major focus of U.S. foreign policy. And now, through her work at the Clinton Foundation, she’s launched the Too Small To Fail Initiative to close the achievement gap for low-income children, and the CHARGE program to allow 14 million girls in the developing world attend secondary school. She’s taken real action that has made a real difference in the lives of so many people – including me. I grew up in a rural Wisconsin town of 400 people. My family, like most in the town, didn’t have a lot of money. But my mother worked hard to provide for my brother and me, and to ensure that we could have more opportunities than she did. It’s what Hillary calls “the basic bargain of America: no matter who you are or where you come from, if you work hard and play by the rules, you will have the opportunity to build a good life for yourself and your family.” Even though UNLV is one of our country’s great public universities that provides the quality education of a top-tier school without the exorbitant price tag, I still couldn’t cover the costs on my own. Luckily, I received a Pell Grant, which are need-based grants from the federal government that do not have to be repaid. I took out student loans to pay for the remainder of the costs. Because of Hillary Clinton’s work in the Senate to increase funding to the federal Pell Grant program and to reduce the burden of student loan debt, I was able to receive a top-notch education without accumulating monstrous debt. And it allowed and – inspired me – to pursue my education further at the Clinton School of Public Service, the nation’s first school to offer a Master of Public Service degree. Stemming from Clintons’ commitment to making the world a better place, the Clinton School combines academics with hands on service projects. From the concepts I learned in the classroom to my work to reduce the rejection of LGBT refugees in South Africa, the Clinton School gave me the tools to create positive social change. After graduation, I formed Project Kinect, to share those tools with other doers and help them make a real impact. There is no better person to speak about education than Hillary Clinton, who has spent her entire career increasing educational opportunities for so many people, including me. I know we all will welcome her with open arms. *CNN: “GOP spotlights fees ahead of Clinton Vegas fundraisers” <http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/13/politics/clinton-nevada-republicans-money/index.html>* By Dan Merica October 13, 2014, 1:43 p.m. EDT Republicans looking to fault Hillary Clinton hope the few hours the former secretary of state will spend in Las Vegas on Mondaywill remind voters of her less-than-perfect book roll-out and high-dollar speaking fees. Clinton, who starts her day in Denver for a fundraiser with Sen. Mark Udall, will make two appearances in Las Vegas on Monday. She will first headline a fundraiser for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid at the Aria Hotel and Casino, then the former secretary of state will keynote a fundraiser or the The University of Nevada-Las Vegas Foundation at the swanky Bellagio. Republicans are seizing on the second speech, where Clinton, the prohibitive favorite for the Democrats' presidential nomination in 2016, will collect $225,000 for her appearance, according to event organizers. Although a Clinton spokesperson argues that the fee will go straight to the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation, the former first lady's appearance in Las Vegas on Monday was possibly the most controversial and widely talked about paid speech Clinton was set to give this year. "Clinton's Nevada Pay Day," said an email from the Republican National Committee. "As Clinton's Long-Awaited Silver State Pay Day Arrives, A Reminder Of The Troubles It Caused Her Would-Be Campaign." "The much anticipated Hillary UNLV speech reminds us that Hillary's exorbitant fees and travel requirements are going to be problematic on her run for the White House," RNC Press Secretary Kirsten Kukowski said in an email. When Clinton's appearance at the UNLV fundraiser was announced in June, students at the university protested the fact the foundation was spending money to bring Clinton in at the same time that their tuition was going up due to budget issues. "In keeping with Secretary Clinton's long-standing history of advocating for students in higher education, we as student government leaders are asking that she charitably donate part or all of the $225,000 speaking fee she is reportedly making for this fundraising speech back to the UNLV Foundation of UNLV as a whole," Elias Benjelloun, the UNLV student body president, and Daniel Waqar, the student government's public relations director, wrote in a letter addressed to Clinton's foundation. The letter goes on to ask Clinton "to do what is right" and donate the money. "This would be an incredible opportunity for Secretary Clinton to remain true to her commitment to higher education," they write. The students, however, never heard from Clinton or the foundation, but are not planning to protest outside the event on Monday. UNLV and Clinton have defended the event. "Private donations secured by the UNLV foundation from donors funded her speaking fee which was paid to the Harry Walker Agency," Afsha Bawany, a spokesperson for UNLV, said over the summer. University administrators have also argued that the money the event will bring in will far outweigh the money paid the Clinton. Clinton also told ABC News in August that "all of the fees have been donated to the Clinton Foundation for it to continue its life-changing and life-saving work." That hasn't stopped Republicans from using the fees to knock Clinton's comments on her personal wealth. During the first interview of her book rollout Clinton argued that she and her husband were "dead broke" when they left the White House in 2000. The comment rang hollow, even to many Democrats, given that the Clintons went on to make millions on the paid speaking tour and in book sales. Republicans used fees like that from UNLV to constantly remind people of Clinton's wealth and inarticulate comments for much of the summer. "Greedy," said Tim Miller, executive director of America Risng, an anti-Clinton super PAC. "Hey kids, I know that tuition is skyrocketing and you all are loaded up with student debt but I'm going to go ahead and take in $1.8 million from your universities for 8 hours of speeches anyway," Miller said in an email to reporters. Reid, who Clinton will appear with on Monday, did not pile on, however, and refused to criticize Clinton's UNLV speech. "Anything we can do to focus attention on UNLV, that's extremely important to do, and this certainly will focus attention on UNLV, and that's why they have these people come," Reid told the Las Vegas Review Journal in June. The Reid-Clinton relationship, especially in the context of Clinton's possible 2016 bid, has been on full display in the last six months. Reid sent a fundraising email for Ready for Hillary over the weekend, touting Clinton as someone "doing everything she can" to help Democrats get elected in 2016. The Senate majority Leader also invited Clinton to headline his green energy conference in Las Vegas earlier this year, where Reid said he had "such admiration for the Clinton family." "She's the best," Reid said of Clinton. *Detroit News: “Hillary Clinton plans Oakland Univ. visit” <http://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/politics/elections/2014/10/13/hillary-clinton-will-visit-oakland-university/17211837/>* By Jim Lynch October 13, 2014, 4:30 p.m. EDT Hillary Rodham Clinton will arrive in Michigan Thursday to help boost two high-profile Democrats in their election campaign pushes. The former U.S. secretary of state and Democratic U.S. senator from New York will appear in Rochester at Oakland University arena for a 3:30 p.m. event with gubernatorial candidate Mark Schauer and U.S. Senate candidate Gary Peters. The event will be held at the O’Rena. Tickets for the event are being offered free and will be available Tuesday at several Michigan Democratic Party offices in Metro Detroit starting at 10 a.m. The locations: ■17243 Mack in Detroit. ■2642 E. Jefferson in Detroit. ■17100 W. 12 Mile in Southfield. ■29936 Orchard Lake in Farmington Hills. ■1205 N. Main in Royal Oak. ■4 N. Saginaw, second floor, in Pontiac. ■3518 Robert T. Longway Blvd. in Flint. ■29136 Ryan in Warren. ■33804 Schoenherr in Sterling Heights. ■23918 Cherry Hill in Dearborn. ■12844 Farmington Road in Livonia. ■3810 Packard, Suite 230, in Ann Arbor. ■2842 E. Grand River in East Lansing. The visit follows high-profile events by other national politicians including first lady Michelle Obama, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and a visit Monday by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. *Wall Street Journal blog: Washington Wire: “Elizabeth Warren Highlights Hillary Clinton’s Goldman Problem” <http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2014/10/13/elizabeth-warren-highlights-hillary-clintons-goldman-problem/?KEYWORDS=hillary+clinton>* By Peter Nicholas October 13, 2014, 12:56 p.m. EDT A large swath of liberals will be sorely disappointed if Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.) sits out the 2016 presidential election. In Ms. Warren they see a feisty crusader for the underclass. When some liberals look at Hillary Clinton, the Democratic frontrunner, they see instead a mainstream figure who is too cozy with the Wall Street firms that helped trigger the financial collapse in 2008. As it stands now, Mrs. Clinton is almost certain to run in ’16 and Ms. Warren is likely to opt out. But Ms. Warren isn’t shy about making known her view that the U.S. political system is “rigged” in favor of powerful interests, an argument that only makes the left pine for her all the more and keep the “Draft Warren” movement alive. In an interview with Ms. Warren published Sunday in Salon, Thomas Frank, author of the book, “What’s the Matter with Kansas,” describes the freshman senator as “the single most exciting Democrat currently on the national stage.” She offers a mixed assessment of President Barack Obama’s record. Though she praised him for establishing a consumer bureau aimed at protecting people from predatory lenders and rapacious credit card companies, she also said his economics team aligned itself with Wall Street. One of Mr. Obama’s top economic advisers was Lawrence Summers, who made millions of dollars from the financial firm D.E. Shaw & Co. before joining the White House in 2009. “They protected Wall Street,” Ms. Warren said. “Not families who were losing their homes. Not people who lost their jobs. Not young people who were struggling to get an education. And it happened over and over.” She added: “At the same time, he [Mr. Obama] picked his economic team and when the going got tough, his economic team picked Wall Street.” Repeating a term she used in her Democratic presidential convention speech in 2012, Ms. Warren said the political system is “rigged” in favor of moneyed interests. “It’s the armies of lobbyists and lawyers who are always at the table, who are always there to make sure that in every decision that gets made, their clients’ tender fannies are well protected,” she said. At the same time, “there are very few people at the decision-making table to argue for minimum-wage workers. Very few people.” Ms. Warren took no swipes at Mrs. Clinton. Along with other women Democratic senators, she has signed a letter supporting a Clinton presidential bid. But she did take aim at Goldman Sachs GS -0.90%, a firm with close ties to the Clinton family. In the two decades since the Clintons arrived on the national political stage, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has been the couple’s top Wall Street contributor, kicking in nearly $5 million to various Clinton causes. Ms. Warren said in the interview that banking “regulators all meet with Goldman Sachs executives and employees day after day after day. They don’t see the people who get tricked, the people who get cheated, the people who get fooled by the products that Goldman turns out.” *The Hill blog: Ballot Box: “Warren inches away from Obama” <http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/220619-warren-inches-away-from-obama>* By Peter Schroeder October 14, 2014, 6:00 a.m. EDT Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is beginning to distance herself from President Obama amid increased speculation about what role she wants to play in 2016. From charging that the president has “protected” Wall Street to voting against the administration’s strategy for arming the Syrian rebels, Warren is flashing an independent streak from her populist perch in the Democratic Party. “What she’s trying to do is influence the debate. She is not somebody who is there to go along to get along,” said one financial industry lobbyist. “If you … want to be effective but you don’t want to run for president, then you do what she’s doing.” Warren is in high demand as a campaign surrogate, and on Monday announced she would spend the final three weeks before the November election visiting some of the nation’s toughest Senate battlegrounds. The campaign tour will take her to Colorado and Minnesota on behalf of her colleagues Sens. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) and Al Franken (D-Minn.), and Iowa, where she’ll be looking to bolster the candidacy of four-term Rep. Bruce Braley (D-Iowa). “If doing everything we can for 22 days means we'll be able to spend the next two years pressing forward in our fight to give just a little bit of relief to single moms struggling on minimum wage, or to college students getting crushed with loans, or to women who just want access to birth control, then I'm ready for that fight,” Warren said. Warren has already visited 15 states to campaign for Democratic Senate and gubernatorial candidates, raising her profile at a time when liberal groups are pleading with her to mount a challenge to Hillary Clinton in 2016. The senator has repeatedly ruled out a presidential run. Close observers doubt that she would take on Clinton, but they say it’s clear that she’s using her soapbox to try and pull the Democratic Party in a new direction. “A rising populist tide is sweeping the country, and Elizabeth Warren is the guiding light setting the example for others in the party,” said Laura Friedenbach, spokeswoman for the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. “Warren is right to call out the party's failures to take on Wall Street, and we need more leaders in Congress like Warren who aren't afraid to stand up on behalf of their constituents.” The latest shot across the bow came over the weekend, when Warren told the liberal media outlet Salon that Obama and his team “protected” Wall Street from the repercussions of the financial crisis. “He picked his economic team and when the going got tough, his economic team picked Wall Street,” Warren said. “They protected Wall Street. Not families who were losing their homes. Not people who lost their jobs. ... And it happened over and over and over.” Elsewhere in the interview, Warren credited the president for backing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — her signature project before joining the Senate — and said the GOP’s policies are the real problem. "Democrats have not done all that they should, but at least we’re out there fighting for the right things. We’re fighting and I think trying to pull in the right direction," she said. Still, Warren is not shy of bucking the tide. She was among just a handful of Democrats to vote against a bipartisan student loan compromise struck in the summer of 2013, arguing the government was profiting on the backs of struggling students. Warren was also one of only 10 Democrats to oppose a government funding bill in September that gave Obama power to arm and train Syrian rebels, airing concerns about the U.S. getting involved in another Middle Eastern conflict. Last fall, Warren was among a group of congressional Democrats who helped scuttle the possible nomination of Larry Summers to head the Federal Reserve. But while she has broken with party leaders occasionally, Warren has not adopted the pose of outside agitator, instead campaigning and fundraising on behalf of Democratic candidates around the country. Democrats are well aware of how potent Warren’s populist economic message can be with voters, and have embraced it with their “fair shot” agenda for the midterm elections. Party leaders made Warren the face of one of Senate Democrats’ top priorities this year, giving her the lead on a bill that would let borrowers refinance for lower interest rates. Observers say Warren’s outsized role for a freshman has already changed some of the calculus in the Senate, as members are wary of getting on the wrong side of one of her pet issues. “It impacts how the Senate does things,” said the lobbyist. “Getting Elizabeth Warren on board is a very big deal. … You’ve got to check that box.” *The Daily Beast: Sally Kohn: “Warren and Christie Are the Anti-Hillarys” <http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/10/14/warren-and-christie-are-the-anti-hillarys.html>* By Sally Kohn October 14, 2014 [Subtitle:] Warren hits Obama on Wall Street. Christie tells the right they’ll have to live with him as is. Wish Clinton had a little of that moxie. It’s no wonder that despite the obstacle of Bridgegate on the one hand and the Hillary juggernaut on the other, rank-and-file voters across parties remain energized by the prospect of either Chris Christie or Elizabeth Warren running for president. In an era of politicians who are too cautious to take a bold stand on much of anything except for when it comes to the hyperbole of bashing the other party, Christie and Warren seem to be actual human beings—most importantly, ones with actual convictions that they’re willing to stand up for, even if it means standing against their own parties. The contrast is even more stark in the context of Hillary Clinton: Elizabeth Warren has forceful policies, Chris Christie a forceful personality, but Hillary Clinton has neither. In a recent interview with Salon, Warren doubled down on her criticism of President Obama for letting Wall Street off the hook in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. After Wall Street reckless crashed the entire United States economy, costing millions of Americans their jobs, homes, and savings, the Obama Administration put forward only modest financial reform laws and didn’t prosecute a single culpable bank executive. “[W]hen the going got tough, his economic team picked Wall Street,” Warren said. “They protected Wall Street. Not families who were losing their homes. Not people who lost their jobs. Not young people who were struggling to get an education. And it happened over and over and over.” Warren echoed criticism she lobbed at President Obama in her book, A Fighting Chance, in which she cited Obama’s lack of action on comprehensive financial reform as a significant “lost opportunity” to hold Wall Street accountable and fix the structures of our economy to make it work for the middle class. Meanwhile, The New York Times published a story about Chris Christie’s awkward courtship of evangelical Republicans. Christie actually siding with the Religious Right on a number of fundamental issues is somehow insufficient, the article accounts: “Although they are drawn to Mr. Christie’s bumptious style, and believe that his opposition to abortion, their chief priority, is deep-seated, they feel he has crossed them on pivotal issues and at key moments.” In other words, although anyone markedly more socially conservative than Christie stands no realistic chance of being elected President of the United States of America as the electorate becomes even more socially liberal, the right of the right is so damned determined to police the borders of its increasingly irrelevant influence that it is eschewing Christie for not being right wing enough. Christie’s attitude? According to the Times, “Asked about the depth of his conservatism this spring, Mr. Christie replied, ‘I just act like myself and people take it or leave it, and I’m completely content with that.’” It’s the sort of attitude that, I’ll confess, makes Christie hard to dislike—in spite of all his anti-teacher, anti-gay, anti-woman policies. And it’s the sort of attitude that has allowed him even still be toying with the presidency despite a year of seemingly disqualifying bad headlines. Contrast both Warren and Christie with Clinton, the heir-apparent to the presidency as far as all the polls (PDF) so far are concerned. Clinton is cautious politically—trying, for instance, in her rhetoric to nod to the economic populism of the day while maintaining her allegiances to Wall Street. Or talking tough on foreign policy while trying to obscure the depths of a pro-war hawkishness for which voters simply don’t have an appetite. And it doesn’t help that Clinton is also stylistically cautious—that every sentence she produces seems like a dehydrated piece of fruit that’s then been chewed up and spit out by three focus groups before being spoon fed in its final bland and listless form to the American public. Sure, it’s easy to get excited about the idea of Hillary Clinton—pioneering political figure who would break the ultimate glass ceiling if elected. But Hillary Clinton herself just ain’t exciting. The tide of politics would seem to be leaving a Clinton-type behind as we as a nation become more hyper-partisan and simultaneously more fixated on big personality-driven characters, from real housewives to TV anchors to the candidates for whom we vote. And yet just like Mitt Romney survived (for a while) by being the last guy standing, Clinton may win out through simple endurance in spite of all her counter-cultural downsides. Then again, Mitt Romney’s primary opponents were perhaps a uniquely unqualified group of self-destructive yahoos. Christie and Warren are real threats to Clinton both in real political terms, as potential opponents, but also conceptually in that their political talent spotlights Clinton’s deficiency. Odds are that Warren won’t run in 2016, but that she will wisely use the enthusiasm around her gift for authentically connecting with the populist outrage of voters to push an agenda with both Obama and Clinton, hopefully successfully nudging both further to the left—away from big business and Wall Street and toward middle class accountability. On the other hand, Chris Christie will probably run—and the fact is that if he manages to survive the Republican primary process, even though the majority of American would side with Hillary Clinton especially on social policy (Christie is indeed far to the right of most voters), he would still pose a significant challenge because of his more winning personality. Without any real challengers, Clinton may be able to pull off looking populist and popular enough—but when the race gears up, the strengths of other candidates will simply emphasize her weaknesses. *Washington Post: “Can’t quit Mitt: Friends say Romney feels nudge to consider a 2016 presidential run” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/cant-quit-mitt-friends-say-romney-feels-nudge-to-consider-a-2016-presidential-run/2014/10/13/2cb19d12-52ee-11e4-892e-602188e70e9c_story.html>* By Philip Rucker and Robert Costa October 13, 2014, 5:10 p.m. EDT CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Officially, Mitt Romney returned to Iowa, the quadrennial presidential proving ground, to give a boost to Joni Ernst. But at a closed-door breakfast fundraiser here Monday, the first question from a donor had nothing to do with Ernst’s Senate campaign. “When you get elected to the Senate, your job should be to convince Mitt Romney to run for president again,” a donor told Ernst, according to several attendees. The Republican candidate said she would, while Romney laughed. When Romney and Ernst gathered in a West Des Moines boardroom with about 40 agriculture executives Sunday night, one businessman after another pleaded with Romney to give the White House another shot. And at a rally for Ernst in Cedar Rapids on Monday, the state legislator who introduced Romney said, “If his address was 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, I would sleep a lot better.” After Romney and Ernst finished speaking, some activists chanted, “Run, Mitt, run!” Romney, the 2012 GOP presidential nominee and now the tacit head of the Republican Party, visited Iowa as part of a feverish nationwide tour designed to help the GOP take control of the Senate. He has insisted that he is not interested in running for president a third time. But his friends said a flurry of behind-the-scenes activity is nudging him to more seriously consider it. Romney has huddled with prominent donors and reconnected with supporters in key states in recent months. Because of the vacuum of power within his party and the lack of a clear 2016 front-runner, confidants said Romney is grappling with this question: If drafted, would he answer the party’s call? Further juicing the speculation was a Des Moines Register-Bloomberg News poll released over the weekend showing that Romney is the only potential 2016 candidate who would beat Hillary Rodham Clinton (D) among likely Iowa voters, 44 percent to 43 percent. People in Romney’s vast political orbit who are waiting and wishing on him to launch another campaign said Romney has done little to quiet them and has been hazy about his plans following next month’s midterm elections. Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty (R), who briefly ran against Romney in 2012 before becoming a close ally, said he wants to see Romney give it another go. “There is a feeling that the country missed out on an exceptional president,” Pawlenty said. “If he runs, I believe he could win the nomination and the general election. It’d be the right person at the right time, and I would encourage him to do it.” Pawlenty noted that Ronald Reagan ran unsuccessfully for president twice before being elected in his third attempt “and was stronger for it.” In contrast with Romney, Pawlenty said, “the emerging class of Republican candidates is untested and unproven.” Within Romney’s political network, there has been informal chatter about a third run since early 2013, according to people familiar with the discussions. It bubbled up in phone calls and at dinners and has gained steam this year. Requests continue to pour in for him to appear on the campaign trail, and advisers said he is eager to mount a multi-state fly-around swing beforeNov. 4. In Iowa, however, Romney seemed uncomfortable with the 2016 talk. At the West Des Moines rally, he spoke for only five minutes, criticizing President Obama on income inequality, foreign affairs and other issues. When reporters tried to question him afterward, he sneaked into a dark maze of cubicles. He also said that now that he was no longer a candidate, he had a joke to share involving Obama, golfer Phil Mickelson and tennis great Andre Agassi. As Romney told it, Obama shows up at a bank to cash a check without his ID. The teller asks him to prove who he is, saying that Mickelson proved his identity by hitting a golf ball into a cup and Agassi proved his by hitting a tennis ball at a target. “Is there anything you can do to prove who you are?” the teller asks. “I don’t have a clue,” Obama replies in the joke. The crowd ate it up. Former aides and senior Republicans say Romney appreciates the GOP masses crowing that he was right about issues such as Russia and health care. But what really intrigues him, they said, are the vulnerabilities among top-tier candidates in the Republican field. If Romney moves toward a race, it would be because he sees a path to victory. “It’s the market pulling him,” said Kent Lucken, a longtime friend and adviser who accompanied Romney to Iowa. “People look at Hillary as the likely Democratic nominee, and the party needs a strong leader who can stand up to her and who’s been through the process.” Romney is returning to Boston on Tuesday for a dinner that he and his wife, Ann, are hosting for former campaign advisers and business associates. The event — to benefit neurological research at Brigham and Women’s Hospital — has Romney intimates abuzz. Save-the-date notices have gone out for the third annual Romney policy retreat in Park City, Utah, in June 2015 — a signal that he wants a platform to promote his issues as the presidential primary campaign season gets underway. Romney is also mingling privately with top donors who could fund a third campaign. Romney visited Sept. 23 with Joe Ricketts, a billionaire investor who finances the Ending Spending super PAC, at Ricketts’s palatial penthouse apartment covering the entire 78th floor of the Time Warner Center in New York. On Oct. 6, Romney also took part in a GOP fundraising dinner at the Manhattan apartment of Woody Johnson, the New York Jets owner and former Romney campaign finance chairman. Several 2016 hopefuls gave presentations to the donors, while Romney served as a co-host and made no pitch. At Johnson’s home, Romney and media magnate Rupert Murdoch spoke about Romney’s political future. According to two Romney allies familiar with the conversation, Romney was cagey with Murdoch but expressed concerns about the developing GOP field. Romney told Murdoch that he felt uneasy about the party’s non-interventionist drift on foreign policy and the base’s embrace of ideological hard-liners. Many Romney boosters believe that his window of opportunity will be in mid- to late 2015, should Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) or Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) ascend and party establishment types turn to Romney as a savior. If former Florida governor Jeb Bush (R) opts out of a campaign, “there is going to be more pressure on Mitt to go,” said Tom Rath, an influential New Hampshire Republican. At a luncheon this month in Atlanta to help GOP Senate nominee David Perdue, “people sat up and paid attention” to Romney, said Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.). “I pulled him aside afterward to thank him for coming. He said he’s not running, and I take him at his word. But I don’t think the door is entirely closed, and circumstances can change.” That phrase — “circumstances can change” — has been repeated by many Romney backers since the former nominee used it to describe his own thinking about 2016 in a radio interview last month with Hugh Hewitt. Spencer Zwick, Romney’s former national finance chairman, talks regularly with Romney and said he has been receiving daily calls from donors and other supporters. “There are still plenty of donors who hope circumstances will change and there will be an opportunity for Romney to run again,” he said. Zwick is part of a slimmed-down inner circle, including longtime advisers Beth Myers, Peter Flaherty, Stuart Stevens, Lanhee Chen and aides Kelli Harrison and Matt Waldrip, who are advising Romney on political activities this fall. Romney traveled through Iowa with three trusted advisers and friends: David Kochel, Ron Kaufman and Lucken. He also reunited with supporters from campaigns past. In Cedar Rapids, Romney spotted Jim Wilson, a Virginia man who logged more than 40,000 miles chasing the GOP nominee from coast to coast in his campaign-festooned GMC pickup. The two hugged. “You son of a gun,” Romney said. Another fan, Gary Chidester, 64, came to the West Des Moines rally with a full coterie of Romney paraphernalia for the former candidate to autograph: campaign placards, enlarged photographs and buttons of Mitt and wife Ann, and paperback and audio copies of Romney’s book “No Apology.” He also held a framed drawing that a friend gave him of a black cruise ship named Obama sinking into the sea and a white ship named Romney with the caption, “We’re here to save you.” “He’s the only qualified person to run this time,” Chidester said. “Mitt is a business genius. That’s why I’ve listened to this tape three times. He had it all down — he had Russia down, he had the debt down — and all the other Republicans are novices by comparison.” *CNN: “How many ways can Romney say no to 2016?” <http://www.cnn.com/2014/06/23/politics/romney-says-no-to-2016/index.html>* By Ashley Killough June 23, 2014, 12:08 p.m. EDT With no clear frontrunner or obvious "next-in-line" candidate in the field of potential 2016 GOP presidential contenders, Mitt Romney keeps getting asked if he's thinking about throwing his hat in the ring one more time. But it's not entirely a far-fetched question. A poll of New Hampshire Republicans and independents who lean that way found that Romney would be the 2016 frontrunner if he decided to run. The 2012 GOP nominee has done little to stay out of the limelight, especially this year, as he gets involved in numerous races — including GOP primaries — and keeps up a fairly regular routine of media appearances. He has assumed a sort of party elder role, and just finished hosting close to 300 major donors and politicians at his third annual Park City retreat. He was asked as recently as last week on "Meet the Press" if he would still turn down another presidential bid -- even if drafted. The former Massachusetts governor has been accused of flip-flopping in the past, but he's been pretty consistent on his future: He's a "no." 1. "I'm not running, and talk of a draft is kind of silly." -- June 15, 2014, on NBC's "Meet the Press" 2. "I'm far from a kingmaker. I'm just one of those that wants to keep the conversation going and fighting for things I think will make a difference for my 22 grandkids...I'm not running." -- June 13, 2014, on Fox "Your World with Neil Cavuto" 3. "The unavailable is always the most attractive, right? That goes in dating as well." -- June 13, 2014, to The Associated Press 4. "I'm thinking about the people who I want to see running for president. ... I fully anticipate that I'll be supporting one of them very vigorously." -- March 23, 2014, on CBS' "Face the Nation" 5. "I'm not running for president. We've got some very good people who are considering the race. And I'm looking forward to supporting someone who I think will have the best shot of defeating whoever it is the Democrats put up." -- February 16, 2014, on NBC's "Meet the Press" 6. "The answer is no, I'm not running for president in 2016. It's time for someone else to take that responsibility and I'll be supporting our nominee." -- February 5, 2014, on CNN's "The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer" 7. "I've had my turn, I gave it two good shots, didn't win and now it's time for someone else to do it. I'm not running for president. I made that clear the morning after the last loss." -- February 5, 2014, on CNN's "The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer" 8. "Oh, no, no, no. No, no, no, no, no. No, no, no." -- January 18, 2014, to the New York Times 9. "I loved it. But look, I want to make sure that we take the country in a different direction. I think that Chris Christie and Paul Ryan and Jeb Bush and Scott Walker, and the list goes on, have a much better chance of doing that, and so I will support one of them as they become the nominee." -- January 18, 2014, to the New York Times 10. "You know it was a fabulous experience, I loved it. But we're not doing that again." -- November 15, 2013, on CBS' "This Morning" 11. "I'm optimistic a Republican is going to win in 2016. But I'm not going to be that guy. It will be somebody else that takes ... that mantle. And more power to them. I hope I can help them in some way." -- June 2013, to CNN Chief Political Analyst Gloria Borger 12. "I won't get a third chance. I'm not doing it again. ... I'm not running for office. I don't have a big organization that's out speaking in my behalf." -- March 3, 2013, on "Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace" Oh, and Ann Romney is done, too. "I think I'm over it. Life is good. Life moves on. There's woulda-coulda-shouldas, of course, that you feel all the time. But no, our life is wonderful and I'm very happy right now, in a good place." -- January 31, 2014, on Fox News with Bill Hemmer *Calendar:* *Sec. Clinton's upcoming appearances as reported online. Not an official schedule.* · October 14 – San Francisco, CA: Sec. Clinton keynotes salesforce.com Dreamforce conference (salesforce.com <http://www.salesforce.com/dreamforce/DF14/highlights.jsp#tuesday>) · October 15 – Louisville, KY: Sec. Clinton campaigns for Alison Lundergan Grimes (Politico <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/10/alison-lundergan-grimes-hillary-clinton-111779.html> ) · October 16 – MI: Sec. Clinton campaigns for Rep. Gary Peters and Mark Schauer in Michigan (AP <https://twitter.com/KThomasDC/status/520243743170236416>) · October 20 – San Francisco, CA: Sec. Clinton fundraises for House Democratic women candidates with Nancy Pelosi (Politico <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/08/hillary-clinton-nancy-pelosi-110387.html?hp=r7> ) · October 20 – San Francisco, CA: Sec. Clinton fundraises for Senate Democrats (AP <http://bigstory.ap.org/article/03fe478acd0344bab983323d3fb353e2/clinton-planning-lengthy-campaign-push-month> ) · October 24 – RI: Sec. Clinton campaigns for Rhode Island gubernatorial nominee Gina Raimondo (Politico <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/10/hillary-clinton-gina-raimondo-rhode-island-elections-111750.html> ) · November 2 – NH: Sec. Clinton appears at a GOTV rally for Gov. Hassan and Sen. Shaheen (AP <http://bigstory.ap.org/article/03fe478acd0344bab983323d3fb353e2/clinton-planning-lengthy-campaign-push-month> ) · December 1 – New York, NY: Sec. Clinton keynotes a League of Conservation Voters dinner (Politico <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/09/hillary-clinton-green-groups-las-vegas-111430.html?hp=l11> ) · December 4 – Boston, MA: Sec. Clinton speaks at the Massachusetts Conference for Women (MCFW <http://www.maconferenceforwomen.org/speakers/>)
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