Clinton to become first female nominee from major party
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| Hillary Clinton makes history |
Hillary
Clinton will shatter another glass ceiling on Tuesday when she becomes
the first female presidential nominee of a major party in the nation's
240-year history.
The former first lady, New York senator
and secretary of state, will formally be installed as the head of her
party in Philadelphia as she seeks to unite Democrats after a fractious
primary against Bernie Sanders and to win a third consecutive White
House term for her party.
After emotional nominating speeches for both Clinton and Sanders and raucous cheers for both candidates.
Sen. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland emphasized the historic nature of the moment in nominating Clinton.
"On behalf of all the women who've
broken down barriers for others, and with an eye toward the barriers
still ahead, I proudly place Hillary Clinton's name in nomination to be
the next President of the United States of America," Mikulski said.
Nancy
Pelosi, a history maker in her own right after becoming the highest
ranking woman in the history of the US government when she was elected
House speaker in 2007, was overcome with emotion as she contemplated
Clinton's achievement.
"It's beyond thrilling. It's very
exciting and to see at the end she's the nominee. It's going to be
spectacular,"- Pelosi Said
"It's pretty exciting ... she's the best."
As
part of the push to bring Democrats together, following repeated shows
of dissent from disenchanted Sanders supporters from the floor on
Monday, the Vermont senator's campaign is asking for his home state to
go last in the roll call.
He would move for Clinton to be acclaimed the
party nominee unanimously, his spokesman Michael Briggs said Tuesday.
Such
a move would reprise Clinton's similar gesture at the 2008 Democratic
National Convention in Denver, after her own divisive primary duel
against then-Sen. Barack Obama.
Each state in the roll call will be
called in alphabetical order to announce their vote tally for Clinton
and Sanders -- a process that will eventually bring the former secretary
of state over the delegate threshold to clinch the nomination over
Sanders.
The self-proclaimed
democratic socialist won nearly 2,000 delegates during his insurgent
campaign, but told his supporters on Monday night in that they had no
choice but to unite around Clinton to ensure the defeat of GOP nominee
Donald Trump.
The nominating
formalities will mark a moment of vindication for
Clinton who emerged from the wreckage of her unsuccessful 2008 bid -- in
which she started out as highly favored -- to serve as secretary of
state in Obama's "Team of Rivals" cabinet.
But
she faces a grueling campaign against Trump, who has engineered a
polling bounce after his own convention in Cleveland last week and is
now locked in a close race with the soon to be Democratic nominee.
Clinton can however draw on political lesson learned after her long career in the glare of the public spotlight.
This year, the Clinton campaign and the candidate herself appeared determined to apply the lessons from her defeat eight years ago to her second White House bid, running a notably different campaign.
Hillary Clinton has one big advantage over Donald Trump heading into November: hindsight.
Clinton has also undertaken a personal journey since her losing effort eight years ago.
Meanwhile, Clinton's daughter, Chelsea, got married and gave birth to two children.
The experience of becoming a grandmother,
in particular, seems to have softened Clinton as a candidate, helping
her become more comfortable grounding her candidacy on her personal
background and family story.
After
she crossed the threshold to clinch her party's nomination in June,
Clinton's victory speech drew inspiration from her late mother.
"I
wish she could see her daughter become the Democratic nominee," Clinton
said of Dorothy Rodham, in a striking departure from 2008 when she was
reticent to discuss her mother.
The
political drama with Sanders and controversy over Democratic National
Committee emails that show staffers has done little to dampen the
excitement among Clinton allies.
Michigan
Democratic Rep. Dan Kildee in an interview, the floor of the convention that
this is a moment in American history that "we should not take lightly
or take for granted."
"As a father
of a daughter and a grandfather of a granddaughter, knowing that my
daughter and my granddaughter will grow up in a country where that
barrier has been broken is something that's not just history for our
nation but it's personal," Kildee said. "And I'll remember it that way."
New Hampshire state Sen. Donna
Soucy, a Clinton delegate, is holding a handmade sign tonight that
refers to Clinton as first lady, senator, secretary of state and
president.
"It means a lot for me
personally," - Soucy
"Tonight is the night when Hillary Clinton
will break the glass ceiling for every woman and girl in this country."
Louisiana
Clinton delegate Sheryl Abschire, 65, said she was a Clinton delegate
in 2008 and was not sure she would live to see a woman nominated or
elected president.
Abschire was crying after she and other Louisiana delegates cast their votes.
"This
is a very emotional day for me," she said. "It's a generational thing
for me.
My grandmother told me about how her grandmother could not vote.
So for me to be here to support the first woman nominee and what I
believe will be the first woman president means everything to me."

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