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  1. Welcome to the Office of Hillary Rodham Clinton. Read about Hillary's life See Hillary's current projects

  2. Hillary Rodham Clinton has spent five decades in public service as an advocate, attorney, First Lady, U.S. Senator, U.S. Secretary of State, and presidential candidate. Hillary Rodham was born in Chicago, Illinois on October 26, 1947.

  3. Hillary Clinton’s plan to strengthen manufacturing so we always “Make it in America.” Mental health We have to address the mental health crisis in America and end the stigma and shame associated with treatment.

  4. Hillary Rodham Clinton is the namesake of the Hillary Rodham Clinton Chair of Women’s History at Oxford University, which is held by Professor Brenda E Stevenson, an award-winning historian of race, slavery, gender, family, and conflict. Learn More

  5. Contact Hillary. You can follow Hillary on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. Or, send her a note at the address below.

  6. Hillary will promote LGBT human rights and ensure America’s foreign policy is inclusive of LGBT people, including increasing our investment in the Global Equality Fund to advance human rights. Hillary has been a vocal advocate for LGBT rights throughout her career.

  7. Hillary will introduce comprehensive immigration reform with a pathway to full and equal citizenship within her first 100 days in office. It will treat every person with dignity, fix the family visa backlog, uphold the rule of law, protect our borders and national security, and bring millions of hardworking people into the formal economy.

  8. Protect women’s health and reproductive rights. Women’s personal health decisions should be made by a woman, her family, and her faith, with the counsel of her doctor. Hillary will fight back against Republican attempts to restrict access to quality, affordable reproductive health care.

  9. Hillary Clinton has led and will continue to lead the fight to expand health care access for every American—even when it means standing up to special interests. When insurance companies spent millions to stop her efforts to reform health care in the ’90s, she refused to give up.

  10. We need to give small businesses—including women- and minority-owned small businesses—access to the financing they need to build, grow, and hire. Hillary will work to boost small-business lending by easing burdens for community banks and credit unions.

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