Clinton hints at keeping post in a second Obama term
US: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton left the door open to
continuing to serve under President Barack Obama should he win a second
term that would begin in January.
One of Obama’s most popular cabinet members, Clinton has repeatedly
insisted she would leave her office as America's top diplomat at the end
of the Obama administration’s first term.
But she hinted at serving beyond then in an interview with The Wall
Street Journal. “A lot of people have talked to me about staying,”
Clinton said.
She said it was “unlikely” that the fallout from the deadly September
11 attack on the US consulate in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi
would force her to stay on, though left that possibility open for the
first time since she took office in 2009.
The hint not only suggests continuity in Obama’s foreign policy, but
also broadens the president’s appeal among women voters, who have backed
him in the past but are increasingly supporting his Republican
challenger Mitt Romney.
Clinton, who lost her 2008 Democratic presidential nomination bid to
Obama, has long been seen as a possible White House contender in 2016.
But she has been adamant in quashing the rumors. “I have ruled it out,”
said Clinton, who turned 65 on Friday.
“It's important for me to step off this incredibly high wire I've
been on... to take stock of the rest of my life.”
AFP |