The close runner-up for the Democratic nomination four years ago, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton would enter the 2016 cycle as her party?s instant front-runner. If anything, Secretary Clinton has boosted her stock since 2008, when she buried the hatchet with Barack Obama and took on the tough portfolio at State.
She has earned high marks for her energetic performance. And for 10 straight years, she has topped the Gallup poll as America?s most admired woman. But she says she?s ready to step off the "high wire of American politics" after 20 years as first lady, senator, presidential candidate, and cabinet secretary.
Still, one last chance at breaking the highest, hardest glass ceiling and becoming the first woman president of the United States may be too tempting to pass up ? even though she will be almost 70 in 2016.
In an interview April 2 on ABC News, former President Clinton left the door open to another presidential campaign by his wife.
"It's entirely up to her," he told "Good Morning America."
"I believe that she's being absolutely honest with you when she says she doesn't think she'll go back into politics,? he said. ?But if she comes home and we do this foundation stuff for the rest of our lives, I'll be happy. If she changes her mind and decides to run, I'll be happy."
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