Hillary Clinton-backed challenger defeats incumbent Rep. Jamaal Bowman in Democratic primary



Incumbent Democratic Rep. Jamaal Bowman of New York lost his Democratic primary to challenger George Latimer in the Empire State's 16th Congressional District.

"While this race garnered a lot of headlines, tomorrow we turn a new page. We must come together, united to defend our Democratic values from MAGA extremism," Latimer tweeted. "We will work together to defeat Trump and re-elect Biden. We will work together to take back the House. And we will work together to deliver #RealResultsNotRhetoric," he said in another post.

'I'm honored to have the support of @HillaryClinton, whose decades of service are an inspiration.'

Latimer had been supported by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

"With Trump on the ballot, we need strong, principled Democrats in Congress more than ever. In Congress, @LatimerforNY will protect abortion rights, stand up to the NRA, and fight for President Biden's agenda—just like he's always done. Make a plan to vote by June 25th!" Clinton tweeted earlier this month.

"I'm honored to have the support of @HillaryClinton, whose decades of service are an inspiration," Latimer, who serves as Westchester County executive, responded.

Bowman, a progressive who has served in Congress since 2021, had been backed by left-wing lawmakers like Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)

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Hillary Clinton backs Jamaal Bowman's Democratic primary challenger



Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed support for George Latimer, the candidate challenging incumbent Democratic Rep. Jamaal Bowman in the Democratic primary in New York's 16th Congressional District.

"With Trump on the ballot, we need strong, principled Democrats in Congress more than ever. In Congress, @LatimerforNY will protect abortion rights, stand up to the NRA, and fight for President Biden's agenda—just like he's always done. Make a plan to vote by June 25th!" Clinton tweeted.

'I'm honored to have the support of @HillaryClinton, whose decades of service are an inspiration.'

Clinton who served as secretary of state during a portion of President Barack Obama's White House tenure, lost the 2016 presidential election to Donald Trump.

"I'm honored to have the support of @HillaryClinton, whose decades of service are an inspiration," tweeted Latimer, who is currently serving as Westchester County Executive.

Bowman, a progressive who took office in 2021, has been endorsed by Planned Parenthood Action Fund and Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. Left-wing Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is also backing Bowman.

Last year, in a post on Independence Day, Bowman declared, "This July 4th, we must remember that we stand on stolen land toiled by enslaved Africans and recommit ourselves to the fight for freedom, equality, & justice so that these ideals are accessible to everyone, not just a privileged few. We are not free until everyone is truly free."

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Liberals rage at Hillary Clinton after she says anti-Israel protesters don't know history of the Middle East



Hillary Clinton inspired outrage online after she criticized anti-Israel protesters for what she said was a lack of knowledge about history in the region — and all of history altogether.

The former Democratic presidential candidate made the comments while being interviewed on MSNBC by Joe Scarborough on his show Thursday.

"I have had many conversations, as you have had, with a lot of young people over the last many months now, and you're right, they don't know very much at all about the history of the Middle East, or frankly, about history in many areas of the world, including in our own country," said Clinton.

"Trashcan warmongering liar who hates Palestinians."

"But with respect to the Middle East, they don't know that under the bringing together of the Israelis and the Palestinians by my husband, the then-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, the head of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, and the Palestinian Authority, Yassar Arafat, an offer was made to the Palestinians for a state on 96% of the existing territory occupied by the Palestinians, with 4% to be given to Israel to reach 100% of the amount of territory that was hoped for," she continued.

"And this offer was made, and if Yassar Arafat had accepted it, there would have been a Palestinian state now for about 24 years," Clinton said.

A video of Clinton's comments was posted to social media where it quickly garnered more than 15 million views.

"Pattern of white supremacy."

Supporters of the anti-Israel protesters rushed to social media to excoriate Clinton for deriding protesters.

"First of all, you’re wrong. Many young people have a much more accurate view of the Middle East than you do," responded liberal commentator Krystal Ball. "Second of all, it doesn’t take a phd in Middle East history to oppose babies being starved and bombed by the thousands. It just takes some basic humanity. Something you clearly lack."

"As someone who believed in you, supported you, & volunteered on your campaign… I must say, I’m incredibly thankful that you’re now obsolete. Palestine was colonized through violence @HillaryClinton. What’s happening now is not their fault. Shame on you," read one response.

"Hi, I have a MA in Middle East Studies and am a professor, and my deep knowledge says Hillary Clinton is a trashcan warmongering liar who hates Palestinians," said a user who identified as Palestinian.

"Hillary Clinton blaming Palestinians for failed peace with Israel isn’t just history revisionism, it’s the pattern of white supremacy that blames the victim for their own oppression," read another popular reply.

Israel has continued its military action in the Gaza Strip after a horrific terror attack that resulted in the deaths of 1,139 people, including some Americans, and the kidnapping of 250 hostages.

Here's the full video from MSNBC:

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Newsom used video of crying student in a pro-abortion ad. She is again reminding him those were tears of joy over Roe being overturned: 'Sad? Try ecstatic'



California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently ran a pro-abortion ad wherein a young woman appears crying outside the U.S. Supreme Court. The woman's tearful response appears to have been strategically situated in the video to convey grief over the high court's Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade and enabled the states to once again make their own determinations about abortion.

There was, however, nothing grievous about the woman's actual response.

In fact, contrary to the voiceover that states in the ad, "Panic is the primary reaction," the woman seen crying was jubilant, overwhelmed by the hard-won result of decades of pro-life efforts and prayers.

"Panic? Sad? Try ecstatic, blown away by God’s grace on this country," tweeted Macy Petty, a pro-life activist and student at Lee University.

Petty is the woman grossly misrepresented in the Democratic governor's agitprop, posted to the official California governor's Twitter account as well as to Newsom's personal account.

She has called out Newsom for seeking to retroactively convert her documented joy into anguish for the purpose of promoting state-sanctioned homicide.

In a Jan. 21 statement posted to Instagram, Petty said, "California governor Gavin Newsom has used my image in one of his political ads in yet another attempt to show his support for women. He and pro abortion Democrats have one again shown Americans that they care little for my voice as a woman."

Despite reaching out to Newsom and his team several times, "asking them to stop their pathetic mischaracterization of who I am," Petty noted "they have chosen once again to use my image and misrepresent me as a pro-life woman."

Petty added, "I do not appreciate, nor do I consent to this kind of treatment and belittling of who I am as a woman. ... Remove my image from your shameful ad and stop your disgraceful treatment of pro-life women just like me."

Ahead of the midterm elections, Newsom and other supporters of pro-abortion Proposition 1, including former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, circulated a campaign video that similarly used the footage of Petty crying.

Petty had called them out then as well, noting, "In your campaign video, you portrayed me in an evil light and distorted my emotions as part of your political game."

The pro-life activist, who has also taken a stand against men in women's sports, clarified, "As I continued to witness history, I pondered how lucky I was to witness such an event. I thanked the Lord for this decision and for opening my eyes to the evil of abortion. This is what brought me to tears."

Clinton shared the deceptive video wherein "SAD" is superimposed on the student's face on Oct. 18.

Days later, Petty tweeted to her, "Hey Hillary, I’m the girl crying in this video. I am pro-life and those are HAPPY tears because I just witnessed a MIRACLE!"

\u201cHey Hillary, I\u2019m the girl crying in this video. I am pro-life and those are HAPPY tears because I just witnessed a MIRACLE! @HillaryClinton @GavinNewsom #prolife\u201d
— Macy Petty (@Macy Petty) 1666290633

Petty told the Christian Post, "I’m part of a generation of pro-life activists. ... My mom worked at a pregnancy center, and my grandma started one. So it’s in my blood. And I was just so grateful to be there to witness it because there are so many people who were in the fight before me who didn’t get to witness it."

Campus Reform reported that Petty has recently partnered with the California Family Council to take the Newsom administration to task.

The CFC issued a statement Monday, writing, "The California Family Council and Macy Petty are urging Governor Gavin Newsom to apologize for his act of defamation, remove the video from circulation, and never again use Macy Petty’s name to promote a pro-abortion stance."

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Hillary Clinton pivots from denying past elections to rejecting future results, claiming Republicans plan to 'steal the next presidential election'



Failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has preemptively accused Republicans of stealing the 2024 presidential election. By once again sowing doubt about the legitimacy of American democracy, Clinton hopes to raise money and help Democrats take over strategic state legislatures.

Preemptive election denial

For years, Democrats have expressed concerns about how "planting seeds of doubt" undermines democracy. In fact, Democrats continue to denounce some Republicans as "election deniers" for questioning the legitimacy of the 2020 election, which Clinton had told then-candidate Joe Biden not to concede "under any circumstances."

Notwithstanding the left's apparent sensitivity to so-called election denial, Clinton — who has repeatedly suggested the 2016 election was "stolen" from her despite having lost to former President Donald Trump by 77 electoral votes (304-227) — alleged last week that a "coup" was imminent.

In a video posted to Twitter on Oct. 21 by the radical leftist organization Indivisible, Clinton claimed that "right-wing extremists already have a plan to literally steal the next presidential election. And they're not making a secret of it."

In her fundraising video for Indivisible, an activist group started by former Democrat staffers, Clinton said the "steal" would be achieved by Republican-led state legislatures.

Clinton explained how the alleged steal would be achieved: "The right-wing-controlled Supreme Court may be poised to rule on giving state legislatures, yes, you heard me that correctly, state legislatures the power to overturn presidential elections,"

"Just think: If that happens, the 2024 presidential election could be decided, not by the popular vote or even by the anachronistic Electoral College, but by state legislatures, many of them Republican-controlled," she added.

After calling into question the legitimacy of American elections, Clinton revealed the true purpose of her wild claims: "Indivisible has launched Crush the Coup to make sure we're ready to defend democracy in 2024. They have put together a list of critical races in six key states and how you can get involved." Clinton then suggested viewers donate.

\u201c*taps microphone* And now an important message from Secretary @HillaryClinton!\n\nWe're all focused on winning the midterms and defending our congressional majorities. That\u2019s critical. But we also must take the fight to MAGA Republicans at the state level: https://t.co/3JDygMc5T2\u201d
— Indivisible Guide (@Indivisible Guide) 1666369925

Moore v. Harper

Indivisible's Crush the Coup identified "the 29 most critical races in 6 states that we need to win to defeat the MAGA coup." The six battleground states are allegedly Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

CTC named a number of Democrats the group wants bankrolled and elected to power this November. Extra to providing the Democrats with leverage over strategic legislatures, CTC intends for these candidates to mitigate what it perceives would be the fallout of Moore v. Harper, an election redistricting case that will be heard this fall by the Supreme Court.

The case concerns whether "a State's judicial branch may nullify the regulations governing the 'Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives ... prescribed ... by the Legislature thereof,' ... and replace them with regulations of the state courts' own devising."

CTC has restated the claim made by others on the left that by adopting "an extremist and fringe legal doctrine," the court will give states the power to overturn elections.

"The nightmare scenario," according to CTC, "is that a legislature, displeased with how an election official on the ground has interpreted her state's election laws, would invoke the [independent state legislature doctrine] as a pretext to refuse to certify the results of a presidential election and instead select its own slate of electors."

Carrie Campbell Severino, head of the Judicial Crisis Network, recently indicated in National Review that the "alarmism around Moore v. Harper comes from liberals who cherry-pick their grievances in states whose constituents favor Republicans and selectively use liberal activist state courts to give Democrats advantages they cannot democratically."

Whereas Clinton and CTC allege they are fighting to protect democracy, they are, according to Severino, hoping to help Democrats keep undermining it.

"Their rhetoric about democracy is part of a con job, and the Left's disinformation campaign serves as a subterfuge to distract from the reality that their true grievance is not on behalf of the people," wrote Severino. "It is that their strategy of jerry-rigging otherwise lost elections through renegade courts might soon come to an end."

Clinton v. the democratic will of the people

Like Georgia's gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D), Clinton routinely warns of threats to democracy.

In June, Clinton said that "Donald Trump, his allies, and supporters are a clear and present danger to American democracy." She also tweeted, "The people involved in the criminal conspiracy to overturn the will of America's voters ... must be held accountable."

Despite speaking highly of democracy and the need to defend it, Clinton has repeatedly rejected the results of democratically decided elections.

In 2019, Clinton called Trump an "illegitimate president" and suggested "he knows" he stole the 2016 election.

Hillary Clinton: "Trump knows he's an illegitimate president" youtu.be

In 2020, Clinton said on the Atlantic's "The Ticket" podcast that "There was a widespread understanding that this election [in 2016] was not on the level. ... We still don't know what really happened."

Clinton has not only contested the results of the 2016 election. She claimed that Stacey Abrams would have beaten Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in 2018 "if she'd had a fair election."

In 2002, Clinton publicly claimed former President George W. Bush had been "selected" president, not elected.

Hillary Clinton says she will never seek the presidency again



Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that she will never mount another White House bid.

"Would you ever run for president again?" Norah O'Donnell asked Clinton during an interview.

"No, no," Clinton replied, adding that she will do everything she can to ensure that the nation has "a president who respects our democracy and the rule of law and upholds our institutions."

"What if Donald Trump runs again?" O'Donnell asked.

"He should be soundly defeated. It should start in the Republican Party. Grow a backbone. Stand up to this guy," Clinton declared, adding that in the event that he becomes the GOP presidential nominee, Trump "needs to be defeated roundly and sent back to Mar-a-Lago."

\u201cEXCLUSIVE: @HillaryClinton tells @NorahODonnell she does not plan to run for president again, but did vow to do everything she can to ensure a future president \u201crespects our democracy.\u201d Adding if Trump runs again that Republicans should \u201cgrow a backbone.\u201d\u201d
— CBS Evening News (@CBS Evening News) 1662506342

While Trump has not made an official announcement, he is widely expected to run for president again during the 2024 election cycle.

President Joe Biden has said that he plans to run for re-election as long has he is healthy. If Biden were to run and win, he would be 86-years-old by the conclusion of his second term in office.

Clinton, the wife of former President Bill Clinton, was the Democratic presidential nominee in 2016 but ultimately lost the election to Republican candidate Donald Trump. She had previously served as Secretary of State during a portion of President Barack Obama's tenure in office. Prior to that, she had served as a U.S. Senator from the state of New York.

Doug Schoen, who describes himself on Twitter as a "Democrat committed to restoring bipartisanship," has contended that a presidential run by Clinton would give Democrats "their best chance" at securing victory during the 2024 election.

"Regardless of one's own political affiliation or opinion of Clinton, the country knows her as an experienced politician and a champion of women's rights," Schoen asserted in an opinion piece earlier this year. He claimed that Clinton "offers the exact type of leadership that the Democratic Party desperately needs." Schoen argued, "If Democrats want a chance at winning the presidency in 2024, Clinton is — now more than ever — their best chance."

Hillary Clinton's 'would-be victory speech' will be featured in a new Masterclass



Former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton finally revealed what would have been her victory speech had she defeated former President Donald Trump in the 2016 election.

Clinton revealed that she never actually wrote a concession speech, because even though her campaign experienced many difficulties the during the final 10 days, she knew that she would win the presidency.

The former secretary of state decided to share her "would-be victory speech" with the world as part of a new class she will be teaching in partnership with the platform "Masterclass."

The primary thrust of Clinton's speech focuses on her journey in politics and her mother's personal story, Clinton told "Sunday Today" host Willie Geist. Clinton told Geist that she wrote the speech as a way of "making it clear that she would be be the first woman president, but she stood on the shoulders and lived the lives and experiences of those who came before her."

MasterClass Presents The White House. Soon, members will be able to learn from the world's best leaders. Two former U.S. Presidents. Two U.S. First Ladies. Three women who have served as U.S. Secretary of State. Coming soon to MasterClass. #MasterClassFirstLookpic.twitter.com/Hqo09tMJUm
— MasterClass (@MasterClass) 1636593998

In a video preview of her tabled speech, Clinton gets emotional as she speaks of a dream in which she tells her mother that she would become the president of the United States.

"Look at me, listen to me. You will survive. You will have a good family of your own and three children, and as hard as it might be to imagine your daughter will grow up and become the president of the United States," Clinton said.

For the first time, @HillaryClinton is sharing the speech she would have made if she had won the 2016 presidential election. Watch more of the conversation on #SundayTODAY with @WillieGeist.pic.twitter.com/iRLbKUGINc
— TODAY (@TODAY) 1638970134

"In this lesson, I’m going to face one of my most public defeats head-on by sharing with you the speech I had hoped to deliver if I had won the 2016 election," Clinton says in the video preview.

"Today, with your children on your shoulders, your neighbors at your side, friends old and new standing as one, you renewed our democracy," she said in the speech she didn't get to give five years ago, according to "Today." "And because of the honor you have given me, you have changed its face forever. I’ve met women who were born before women had the right to vote. They’ve been waiting a hundred years for tonight."

The former first lady's speech will be part of the "MasterClass Presents the White House" series. Her husband, former President Bill Clinton will be featured in the following episode of the series.

Clinton says that "sexism and misogyny" played a role in her election loss in 2016.

"Any of you who’ve read my book about 'what happened' know that I think misogyny and sexism was part of that campaign — it was one of the contributing factors," Clinton said at Georgetown University in 2018.

Hillary's MasterClass will be available Dec. 9.

Hillary Clinton said her upcoming novel marks her 'first foray into fiction,' and Twitter is having a field day



Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is prodding people to preorder her forthcoming book "State of Terror," cowritten with Louise Penny, describing the novel as her "first foray into fiction."

"My first foray into fiction! It was a labor of love with my friend (and favorite mystery author) Louise Penny, and I can't wait for you to read it. Pre-order "State of Terror" now to dive in as soon as it's released next Tuesday, October 12," Clinton tweeted.

"Your first foray into fiction was the idea the 2016 election was stolen from you," RedState senior editor Joe Cunningham tweeted in response to Clinton's post.

Clinton, who has also previously served as the First Lady of the United States and a U.S. Senator from the state of New York, lost the 2016 presidential election to Donald Trump.

"Wasn't her first foray into fiction when she tried to become President?" a tweet questioned.

As many social media users understand, some tweets do not age very well, and someone highlighted an excellent example. An Oct. 2016 tweet on Clinton's account declared, "Happy birthday to this future president," and featured a photo of Clinton as a child — shortly thereafter she went on to lose the 2016 presidential contest.

@HillaryClinton What about this fiction? https://t.co/yhvOjBRRgD

— tw account (@justpickedaname) 1633457164.0

"Hillary thinking this is her first 'foray into fiction' is in and of itself a bigger foray into fiction," someone tweeted.

"I'm pretty sure you were already an expert at fiction," another tweet said.

"Her first foray into fiction... LMAO!!! Who said this woman didn't have a sense of humor?" another tweet said.

"First foray into fiction? Your entire political career and subsequent books were all based on fiction! Is this claim your first foray into stand-up comedy?" someone queried.

"No your first Foray into fiction was the Russia gate hoax you pushed," another tweet declared.

Democrats unhinged after SCOTUS allows Texas law barring abortions after 6 weeks to take effect: 'Chaos on the ground'



A new pro-life law in Texas that bars abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected — or as early as six weeks into pregnancy — is infuriating Democrats both statewide and on the national stage.

What's the background?

The law, S.B. 8, went into effect at midnight Tuesday after the Supreme Court declined to take action on an emergency request to block it.

Under the new legislation, physicians in the state are prohibited from "knowingly perform[ing] or induce[ing] an abortion on a pregnant woman if the physician detected a fetal heartbeat for the unborn child ... or failed to perform a test to detect a fetal heartbeat."

However, the bill has no criminal enforcement provision for state officials. Rather, the ban will be "enforced exclusively through the private civil actions," allowing private individuals to police violations by suing those who perform an abortion or "aids and abets" it.

While abortion patients can't be sued, the law allows doctors, staff members at abortion clinics, abortion counselors, and anyone who helped pay for a procedure to be subject to a civil lawsuit. Scholars say this provision is what makes the law difficult to challenge.

What has been the reaction?

Democrats in the state are crying foul, claiming the law unfairly sidesteps the legal precedent established by Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, which together grant a constitutional right to abortion and forbid states from banning abortion before fetal viability — or the point at which babies can survive outside the womb, typically considered to be 22 weeks.

In a desperate emergency request to the Supreme Court, abortion providers lament that the new law will "immediately and catastrophically reduce abortion access in Texas, barring care for at least 85 percent of Texas abortion patients (those who are six weeks pregnant or greater) and likely forcing many abortion clinics ultimately to close."

The Texas Tribune reported that major abortion providers Planned Parenthood and Whole Women's Health have claimed that the new law has resulted in "chaos on the ground."

As an example, women in Texas reportedly rushed to abortion clinics to have procedures.

In a tweet thread, Whole Women's Health said doctors and staff at its clinics in Texas reportedly stayed until 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday before the law took effect to perform abortions, saying "waiting rooms are filled with patients and their loved ones."

From Whole Woman’s Health CEO @AmyHM: We have staff and doctors providing abortions in Texas - still at this hour -… https://t.co/CC0CEoWn5B

— Whole Woman's Health (@WholeWomans) 1630463927.0

"We are under surveillance," the group added. "This is what abortion care looks like. Human right warriors."

We are so proud of Team Whole Woman’s Health. No matter what the courts say, you are good and right and strong and… https://t.co/4Jc3K22SCY

— Whole Woman's Health (@WholeWomans) 1630463928.0

What else?

Democratic politicians and media figures on the national stage have also filled social media with criticism for the new law.

President Joe Biden slammed the legislation in a statement, saying, "This extreme Texas law blatantly violates the constitutional right established under Roe v. Wade and upheld as precedent for nearly half a century."

Progressive Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) derided the law as racist and oppressive.

I’m thinking about the Black, brown, low-income, queer, and young folks in Texas. The folks this abortion health ca… https://t.co/Ue5HpCaJ0t

— Cori Bush (@CoriBush) 1630503883.0

Hillary Clinton also took aim at the law and the Supreme Court's inaction in a tweet.

Under the cover of darkness, by choosing to do nothing, the Supreme Court allowed an unconstitutional abortion ban… https://t.co/EYwnsnXhXU

— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) 1630511149.0

Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) used the legislation as an opportunity to reference remarks she made during her 2020 presidential run.

Let’s be clear about what just happened in Texas: The second-largest state in America has effectively banned aborti… https://t.co/Kqac6JtT3I

— Elizabeth Warren (@ewarren) 1630505502.0

Socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders called the law "outrageous," adding, "Women get to control their bodies, not politicians and not judges."

Nearly half a century ago, the Supreme Court affirmed abortion as a constitutional right. This Supreme Court's refu… https://t.co/CbWRSf9OK5

— Bernie Sanders (@SenSanders) 1630519870.0

Countless others have also taken to social media to voice their opposition.

Hillary Clinton claims 'attacks on voting' are part of shift 'toward white supremacist authoritarianism'



Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton claims that in the wake of the 2020 presidential election legislators around the U.S. have introduced bills that would make it more difficult for Americans to vote and that this is part of an effort to shift the country "toward white supremacist authoritarianism."

"Since the 2020 election with its historic turnout, lawmakers across the country have introduced nearly 400 bills making it harder to vote: purging voters from the rolls, making it more difficult to register, cutting back on early and absentee voting, getting rid of ballot drop boxes, even banning giving out food or water to people waiting in line at the polls," Clinton wrote in her piece published on Democracy Docket.

"We need to call these attacks on voting what they are: part of a clear attempt to move away from a pluralistic, multi-racial democracy and toward white supremacist authoritarianism," Clinton wrote. "We need to remain laser-focused on what's at stake for democracy and people's lives and refuse to allow Republicans to draw us into piecemeal fights over tactics and technicalities. Voters should have the ability – not just in principle, but in practice – to hold elected officials accountable in the voting booth. We should be doing everything we can to make it easier for eligible voters to cast their ballots."

Clinton, who lost the 2016 presidential contest to Donald Trump, called the Jan. 6 episode when people breached the U.S. Capitol building an "insurrection."

"After the insurrection, I wrote about the failure of imagination that hindered our ability to prevent the violence in Washington. I quoted historian Taylor Branch, who asked in Isabel Wilkerson's 'Caste: 'If people were given the choice between democracy and whiteness, how many would choose whiteness? The months that followed revealed the ugly truth of just how many elected officials in America would choose whiteness," Clinton said.

Clinton served as the First Lady of the United States during her husband Bill Clinton's tenure as president. She later served as a Democratic Senator from New York and then as the Secretary of State during a portion of the Obama administration.

She became the 2016 Democratic presidentential nominee and faced off against Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump during the 2016 election contest, ultimately losing that contest to Trump.

Clinton had previously failed to secure the party's nomination during the 2008 primary when then-candidate Barack Obama became the Democratic presidential nominee before eventually winning his White House bid.

We are witnessing a concerted attempt to destabilize the democratic process and delegitimize our multi-racial democ… https://t.co/VkADPmbELi
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) 1625675437.0