16 October 2014 | 14:05

As Hillary Clinton stumps for Democrats, 2016 looms large

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 Hillary Clinton hits the campaign trail Wednesday to support a Democratic Senate hopeful, one of several events that could offer sneak peeks at her 2016 presidential aspirations, AFP reports.


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 Hillary Clinton hits the campaign trail Wednesday to support a Democratic Senate hopeful, one of several events that could offer sneak peeks at her 2016 presidential aspirations, AFP reports.

The former secretary of state and presumptive Democratic frontrunner for the next White House race was in Kentucky lending her political celebrity to Alison Lundergan Grimes, who has mounted an underdog race to unseat five-term Senator Mitch McConnell, the chamber's top Republican.

The race, in which polls show McConnell with a slim lead, has garnered national attention for possibly playing a role in Republican efforts to take back the Senate.

"Hillary's visit will propel the immense amount of excitement and energy that surrounds Alison's campaign and help translate this strong enthusiasm into votes come election day," Grimes campaign manager Jonathan Hurst said in a statement.

The event follows several attended by Clinton in recent weeks, including an appearance with Colorado's embattled Senator Mark Udall after a Denver fundraiser, and a stop in Pennsylvania supporting Democratic gubernatorial nominee Tom Wolf.

The themes of Clinton's Philadelphia speech last Thursday -- improving opportunities for the middle class, education, workers' and women's rights -- could lay groundwork for a presidential campaign should she choose to run.

On Tuesday, while addressing a conference in San Francisco, Clinton delivered a teaser of sorts. Asked about her political future, she told the audience: "I don't want to make any news today."

Clinton, a former first lady, was a US senator for eight years, and it is no secret that she is considering a second presidential run after losing the Democratic nomination in 2008 to eventual White house occupant Barack Obama.

While she has stressed she will not announce her decision for several months, a string of appearances ahead of the November 4 mid-terms has raised speculation that a Clinton campaign is coalescing.

Last month she returned to the presidential proving ground of Iowa, where she lost the first-in-the-nation Democratic caucus in 2008, proclaiming to a crowd: "Hello Iowa -- I'm ba-ack!"

Clinton has reliably outpaced potential Republican and fellow Democratic rivals in polls over the past year.

But last weekend the Des Moines Register released survey results upsetting that conventional wisdom: among likely Iowa voters, given a choice between Clinton and 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney, respondents chose Romney by 44 percent to 43 percent.

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