Hillary Rodham Clinton to Receive a Special Award Commemorating Her History of Commitment and Support; Glamour Editor-In-Chief Cindi Leive to Receive Leadership Award; Ghecemy Lopez and Wanda Lucas to Receive Advocacy Awards
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13, 2014 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The National Breast Cancer Coalition will host its Annual New York Gala on November 19 at 583 Park Avenue in New York City. This year, NBCC is proud to honor Hillary Rodham Clinton, Cindi Leive, Editor-in-Chief, Glamour, along with advocates Ghecemy Lopez and Wanda Lucas.
These awards recognize individuals who have made a true difference in the world of breast cancer and embody the spirit of NBCC—passionate, relentless and mission-driven social innovators. NBCC is pleased to recognize them for their leadership and the extraordinary work they have done toward ending breast cancer.
During President Bill Clinton’s administration, NBCC President Fran Visco was appointed as one of three members of the President’s Cancer panel. She was re-appointed to successive terms and served as a member of the President’s Cancer Panel Special Commission on Breast Cancer until its dissolution.
The event, honoring the families of fallen veterans, was Clinton’s most intimate, unguarded public appearance since leaving State. “I’m so sorry. I’m so, so sorry.” posted on Oct. 1, 2014, at 9:50 p.m.
Hillary Clinton greets the families of fallen soldiers at an awards program in New York City for the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors. Twitter / Shushannah Walshe / Via Twitter: @shushwalshe
Hillary Clinton looked down at the photo of the man in uniform.
A woman had emerged from the crush of people around the former secretary of state to present her with the picture of a young man — her son. Other mothers and fathers and sisters and brothers gathered around Clinton as she eyed the photo at a veterans event on Wednesday night in New York City’s Herald Square. “This is my son, who committed suicide,” the woman told Clinton. “This is his year anniversary. Thirty-five.” “I’m so sorry,” Clinton said. “I’m so, so sorry.” She held the woman’s hand, held her elbow, rubbed her arm. Read more >>>>
In Los Angeles as part of a western leg of her book signing tour, Hillary attended the Public Counsel Dinner at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Century City last night and received the William O. Douglas Award from her good friend Mary Steenburgen.
Former Secretary of State and U.S. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton will speak at Public Counsel’s annual William O. Douglas Dinner Award and receive the William O. Douglas Award in Los Angeles on June 19, 2014.
SNIP
About the William O. Douglas Award: The William O. Douglas Award is named for late Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, noted for his support for civil rights and freedom of speech. Past recipients of the award include Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, President Bill Clinton, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Dole, Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright, and Peace Corps founder Sargent Shriver.
Through heavily promoted interviews and a CNN town hall, Hillary Clinton’s answer to the will-you-or-won’t-you question about 2016 is no longer news, but an exercise in how she will tease the fact that she’s thinking about another run for the presidency.
On Thursday, as she accepted the William O. Douglas Award from legal advocacy organization Public Counsel, she came from behind a podium and paced back and forth before the crowd of about 1,500 that filled the Century Plaza Hotel ballroom.
SNIP
Clinton did insist that she’s not focused on making a decision about 2016, but on becoming a grandmother, with daughter Chelsea expecting this fall.
Saying she was trying to stay “in the moment,” she said, “I’ve already run for president once. Becoming a grandmother is totally new and different.”
Both Chelsea and Hillary were honored by the Wildlife Conservation Society last night for their Clinton Foundation efforts in the battle against the ivory trade .
Gala 2014: An Elephant’s Tale was held on Thursday, June 12 at the Central Park Zoo. Welcoming more than 550 guests, the event was a celebration of the majestic elephant and WCS’s efforts to save the remaining populations of these gentle giants. WCS was delighted to honor Clinton Foundation leaders Hillary Rodham Clinton and Chelsea Clinton and longtime WCS Trustee Diane Christensen for their active roles and partnerships that help WCS realize its mission.
An Elephant’s Tale: The Matriarch tells the story of a single elephant, but provides powerful testimony to the experience of the species as a whole at this crucial moment in its existence. Together, we must work to ensure that we are not remembered as the generation that let elephants disappear.
WCS honored Chelsea Clinton, Vice Chair of the Clinton Foundation, as well as former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and WCS Trustee Diane Christensen, at its annual gala on Thursday, June 12.
WCS honored former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vice Chair of the Clinton Foundation Chelsea Clinton and WCS Trustee Diane Christensen at its annual gala on Thursday, June 12. All three were recognized for their commitment to saving elephants and to protecting wildlife and wild places.
President Bill Clinton and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio were also among the 600 guests in attendance at the event, which was held at the Central Park Zoo.
“I am so confident that, with WCS leading the charge, helping to make sure that we have the information about what each and every one of us can do to save the African forest elephant,” said Secretary Clinton, “we will make the right choices.”
Here are some of Hillary’s events this week to mark on your calendar! Her book will be released on Tuesday, and she will be off and running promoting it.
Looking splendid in short-sleeved midnight navy satin brocade, Hillary Clinton received the Order of Lincoln Award from Governor Quinn at the Field Museum in Chicago last night.
The Order of Lincoln was established in 1964 by Proclamation of Illinois Governor Otto Kerner to honor individuals whose contributions to the betterment of humanity have been accomplished in Illinois, or, whose
achievements have brought honor to the state because of their identity with it, whether by birth or residence, or whose dedication to the principles of public service inspire all Illinoisans to respond to what Lincoln called
‘the better angels of our nature’.
To insure that no political connotation should surround the award, an independent, non-partisan entity was established to administer the program. Thus, the Order of Lincoln and the Lincoln Academy (based respectively upon the French Legion of Honor and the French Academy) were established, with Michael Butler, the Academy’s first chancellor, as its primary architect.
In 1989, as part of the Academy’s twenty-fifth anniversary, Governor James R. Thompson declared the Order of Lincoln to be ‘the state’s highest award’ and every Illinois Governor since then has so described it.
Each honoree receives a warrant signed by the Governor and bearing the Great Seal of the State of Illinois, certifying his or her investiture as a Laureate of the Order of Lincoln.
The insignia of the Order of Lincoln is a variant of the Maltese cross (with ten points rather than eight) — a white-enameled, red-bordered Maltese asterisk. The obverse displays the Arms of the State of Illinois encircled by the inscription ‘Palmam Qui Meruit, Ferat’ (‘Let him who merits bear the palm’ — words from Horatio Viscount Nelson). The center is supported by cross pieces of perforated gold, encircled by leaves of violet. The reverse central disc features the likeness of President Lincoln in gold and on a gold ground, encircled by the inscription ‘The Lincoln Academy MCMLXV’. The cross is suspended by an oval circlet of green and gold enameled oak leaves and is suspended from a ribbon in the colors of the state’s symbols: red
for the state bird, the cardinal; violet for the state flower; and green for the state tree, the oak.
Our best compliments, Mme. Secretary, on being chosen for this prestigious and well-deserved honor!
Office of the Governor Pat Quinn
For Immediate Release
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Governor Quinn Announces Hillary Rodham Clinton Will Receive State’s Highest Award
Clinton to Join Seven to Receive the Order of Lincoln on May 3 in Chicago
CHICAGO – Governor Pat Quinn today announced that Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will join seven distinguished Illinoisans to receive The Order of Lincoln, the State’s highest honor for professional achievement and public service.
“Through her decades of service, Hillary Clinton has helped shape and improve the world more than almost any person in our nation’s history,” Governor Quinn said. “From working on women’s and children’s issues, to her time as First Lady, U.S. Senator, and Secretary of State, she personifies the best that Illinois and the United States of America can offer. We are grateful to be able to present her with the state’s highest award and thank her for the service she continues to provide to this day to the people across the world.”
Hillary Rodham Clinton, an Illinois native, was raised in Park Ridge, Illinois. She served as First Lady of Arkansas for more than a dozen years championing causes for women, children and families. She served as First Lady of the United States from 1993 to 2001, and advocated for health care reform and led successful bipartisan efforts to improve the adoption and foster care systems, reduce teen pregnancy, and provide health care to millions of children. She also traveled to more than 80 countries as a representative of our country, winning respect as a champion of human rights, democracy, civil society, and opportunities for women and girls around the world.
In 2000, Clinton made history as the first First Lady elected to the United States Senate. She worked across party lines to expand economic opportunity and access to quality, affordable health care, including for wounded service members, veterans and members of the National Guard and Reserves. After September 11, 2001, she secured resources to rebuild New York and provide health coverage for the needs of first responders who became sick during rescue and recovery efforts at Ground Zero.
In 2007 and 2008, Clinton made her historic campaign for President, winning 18 million votes, and more primaries and delegates than any woman had before.
In her four years as Secretary of State, Clinton played a central role in restoring America’s standing in the world and strengthening its global leadership. Her “smart power” approach to foreign policy elevated American diplomacy and development and repositioned them for the 21st century — with new tools, technologies, and partners, including the private sector and civil society around the world. As America’s chief diplomat and the President’s principal foreign policy adviser, Clinton spearheaded progress on many of our greatest national security challenges, from reasserting the United States as a Pacific power to imposing crippling sanctions on Iran and North Korea to responding to the challenges and opportunities of the Arab Awakening to negotiating a ceasefire in the Middle East. She pushed the frontiers of human rights and demonstrated that giving women the opportunity to participate fully is vital to security, stability, and prosperity.
Clinton is a graduate of Wellesley College and Yale Law School.
Clinton will receive the award on Saturday evening, May 3, 2014, at the Field Museum in Chicago as part of the 50th Annual Convocation of the Lincoln Academy of Illinois. The Lincoln Academy is a non-partisan, independent organization which administers the award and chooses each year’s honorees.
For more information about the Order of Lincoln or to view information about this year’s recipients, please visit www.thelincolnacademyofillinois.org.
NEW YORK (AP) — Former U.S. first lady and secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke about the country’s longstanding friendship with Israel and the importance of keeping nuclear weapons out of Iran as she accepted a lifetime achievement award from the American Jewish Congress on Wednesday.
Clinton, widely seen as a potential 2016 presidential contender, spoke at the group’s gala in Manhattan, introduced by actress Julianna Margulies.
She said the coming months would be “crucial” for the region, both in the attempts to negotiate a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians and in efforts to make sure Iran doesn’t acquire nuclear weapons. She said that both goals were vital to the United States’ interests.
NEW YORK (AP) — Former U.S. first lady and secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke about the country’s longstanding friendship with Israel and the importance of keeping nuclear weapons out of Iran as she accepted a lifetime achievement award from the American Jewish Congress on Wednesday.
Clinton, widely seen as a potential 2016 presidential contender, spoke at the group’s gala in Manhattan, introduced by actress Julianna Margulies.
She said the coming months would be “crucial” for the region, both in the attempts to negotiate a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians and in efforts to make sure Iran doesn’t acquire nuclear weapons. She said that both goals were vital to the United States’ interests.
Hillary delivered her Luskin Lecture at UCLA this afternoon and was awarded the UCLA Medal, their highest honor. The front of the medal has the UCLA seal with a banner of the school’s motto: “Let there be light.” The back has a picture of Royce Hall, the venue where this event took place, as presenter, university Chancellor and CEO Gene Block explained.
She began her address with an anecdote telling the audience that when she and Bill Clinton were younger they were in LA and visited Campbell’s bookstore where they purchased a few botanical prints which have made the rounds with them and now are in their Chappaqua home. She said every time she looks at them she thinks of UCLA.
Moving on, and before getting to the main messages of her lecture, she took a few moments to speak about the situation in Ukraine and clarify previous remarks and actions. Voicing support for President Obama’s position, she stated unequivocally that Putin has violated international law. She called on all parties to work toward reconciliation and support for all Ukrainian citizens.
Calling Putin a “tough guy with thin skin” whose vision of a greater Russia is a re-Sovietized Russia, she said he is squandering Russia’s potential. She encouraged her fellow Americans to recognize the complexity of the situation and support diplomacy as we all seek a path toward deescalation.
Then she launched into her lecture proper which concerned the dilemma of ensuring college graduates find jobs after graduation. Saying that one-third in the 16-24 age group is out of both work and school she told the audience that a generation is being deprived of rights and opportunities that earlier generations took for granted.
Recounting her personal experiences with her first job at 13 which, she said, gave her a sense of responsibility and moving on to her law school job with the Children’s Defense Fund, she stressed the personal skills that develop from a first paid job. While internships can be valuable, she stated that unpaid internships need to give way to on-the-job training and that industries need to move interns into positions of paid employment.
Recalling some of her experiences as secretary of state, she told her audience that in countries where young people cannot find employment the economies also suffer, but she also stressed that government alone cannot solve this problem and explained how the Clinton Foundation is working on programs that bring young people into the work force. She also pointed out the importance of training people for the jobs that are actually there and cited a Clinton Global Initiative effort that aims to draw talent into the burgeoning healthcare industry.
Calling for workforce training and cooperation, she reiterated her support for compromise and an end to policy-making in evidence-free zones. She closed her prepared remarks with a call for her audience to bring the light from UCLA with them when they graduate.
The Q&A session began with more questions about the Ukraine situation. Specifically the question was whether leaders who do not stand up to Putin will face the same kind of disapproval as those who did not stand up to Hitler. Hillary said there is not one right way to respond. Clarifying her remarks from yesterday regarding Germany’s 1938 claims of protecting German minorities outside its borders, she stated that she was not making a comparison between Hitler and Putin but rather adding perspective.
She went to to specify that when the USSR dissolved there was a commitment to leave European borders alone, and that while there was an agreement to maintain the Black Sea Fleet in place, it was clear that the location was within Ukrainian borders. The commitment, she went on, was violated with Russia’s 2008 invasion of Georgia where Russian-seized territories have not been relinquished. She called Germany key in resolving the crisis due to its fuel dependence on Russia and the path delicate.
Asked about the effectiveness of her 2009 “reset” with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, she specifed that there were clear objectives, accomplishing the New START Treaty and achieving rights of transit that were indeed met by that reset and that progress made with Medvedev was primarily with regard to those goals.
Questions then turned to elections – presidential elections particularly – and the likelihood of a woman president. Hillary pointed out that many countries have preceded the U.S. down this path but also pointed out that the hardest, highest glass ceiling is somewhat easier to crack in parliamentary democracies where the head of state is not the head of government and allowed that the diminishing of resistance to the idea of a woman president is a sign of progress.
A follow-up question addressed the nomination process. Hillary said the hybrid process works differently for different people and did not predict any changes there.
On the issue of the Affordable Care Act, she took a two-pronged approach saying people need to appreciate what has been accomplished and that perhaps things need to be better explained citing parents’ ability to keep adult children on their plans to age 26, emphasis on preventive care, ending preexisting condition discrimination, a new transparency on disparities in cost for services and medications, and the inclusiveness of Medicaid expansion where it has been implemented. Challenges to ACA, she said were ideological, political, and commercial.
In response to a question about her evolution on marriage equality she gave credit to Chelsea saying her activism was greatly responsible for enlightening her view but did remind her audience that very early in her tenure as secretary of state she extended spousal benefits to partners of Foreign Service officers (we should not forget that, either). She told the audience that much of the world is far behind the U.S and Europe on this issue. Many world leaders deny that there are any LGBT people in their countries and gay people are persecuted in many nations.
The final question was what can liberal arts graduates do to change the world. Hillary encourage them to pursue exposure to all that is available to them, believe that they can effect change, and, as her hero Eleanor Roosevelt said, “grow skin like a rhinoceros.”
She advised them to take criticism seriously but not personally and to attend to the source. She told the women that there is still a double standard that will manifest itself in comments about appearance. She advised them to learn how they want to present themselves and to be persistent.
Closing with advice from her own mom (one of my favorite people), she quoted Dorothy Howell Rodham telling her that you can be a bit walk-on in someone else’s play or you can be a star in your own. Great advice for young people!
This private blog is about Hillary Clinton's work. It is intended to support, promote, and appreciate Hillary Clinton's efforts and initiatives, all of them – past, current, and future. Onward together! “Resist, insist, persist, enlist.” - Hillary Rodham Clinton
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Hillary Clinton's 2016 election memoir
Too Small to Fail
“One of the best investments we can make is to give our kids the ingredients they need to develop in the first five years of life.” — Hillary Rodham Clinton
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Flint Child Health & Development Fund
"If you can, please chip in to support the Flint Child Health & Development Fund, which is working to provide health care and educational support to families in Flint affected by this crisis." - Hillary Clinton
Thank you for everything, Mme. Secretary!!!!
Thank you for all of your dedicated service and brilliant leadership!
Hillary Clinton’s Cover Letter to Congress on the ARB Report
Hillary because…
She would NEVER have allowed social safety nets to be "on the table."
Read the unclassified ARB Report on Benghazi here.
@U.S. Senate: Time to ratify LOST!
"... ratify the Law of the Sea Convention, which has provided the international framework for exploring these new opportunities in the Arctic. We abide by the international law that undergirds the convention, but we think the United States should be a member, because the convention sets down the rules of the road that protect freedom of navigation, provide maritime security, serve the interests of every nation that relies on sea lanes for commerce and trade, and also sets the framework for exploration for the natural resources that may be present in the Arctic." -HRC, 06-03-12, Tromso Norway
"I deeply resent those who attack our country, the generosity of our people and the leadership of our president in trying to respond to historically disastrous conditions after the earthquake." - HRC 01-26-10
Good Advice!
“You can’t keep snakes in your backyard and expect them only to bite your neighbors. Eventually those snakes are going to turn on whoever has them in the backyard.” HRC
Hillary! Leadership we need!
Politics & Foreign Policy
"What I have always found is that when it comes to foreign policy, it is important to remember that politics stops at the water's edge." -HRC 11-04-10
What a difference one woman can make!
"...whether it’s here, in the absolute best embassy in the world, or whether it’s in Washington, or whether it’s elsewhere, what a difference one woman can make. And that woman is right here, the woman who needs no introduction, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton." 07.05.10 - Unidentified speaker, Embassy Yerevan
Most Respected
"So, ladies and gentlemen, I give you your Secretary of State, and perhaps the most respected person on the world stage today, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton." - Jon Huntsman 05-23-2010
Hillary Clinton Express Facebook Group
Your one stop spot for Hillary Clinton News!
Supporters of “The People’s President,” Hillary Rodham Clinton
Together 4 us! Facebook Page
Uppity Woman
The place to go if you feel like you're the only woman who wants to punch her own TV set.
Jenny’s Jumbo Jargon
Elephant Watch
Favorite Quote
“When people attack you, you always have to remember that a lot of what others say about you has a lot more to do about them than you.” – Hillary Rodham Clinton