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Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Kirsten Gillibrand Wants To Battle!

Kirsten Gillibrand is in the race. She will take on the imbecile Trump.
It's official. The New York senator has decided to join a growing list of Democrats who are determined to defeat that imbecile. That imbecile has a 65% chance of winning reelection. We're in a partial government shutdown, This is one of the longest government shutdowns in American history.

Many fault that imbecile and Republicans for hurting the American people. However, there's that base willing to distract and distort the record of candidates running.

The Democrats are still bickering over the 2016 election. It might be inspired by far-left agitators and Russian propaganda. Who knows?

But history is showing that women are moving forward.


Do you believe Kirsten Gillibrand is ready to be President of the United States?
Code:

Yes. I believe Kirsten Gillibrand is a proven candidate. She seems to have courage to run for President of the United States.
Yes. I believe Kirsten Gillibrand will be a formidable opponent against President Donald Trump. She has the capability of rallying women to vote in 2020 election.
No. I believe that Kirsten Gillibrand will damage Democrats chances at winning. She is too polarizing and she is an acolyte of Hillary Clinton.
No. I believe that she isn't ready to be President of the United States. President Donald Trump will rally his base to vote against Gillibrand.
I have no opinion of Kirsten Gillibrand. I have to know a little more about her before I have a judgement.

Hillary Clinton's defeat has opened the door. Many women believe the American people elected Trump was a huge mistake.

With that being said, there's three women running for President Of United States.

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) announcing she is forming a presidential exploratory committee. She is officially running for president.

The 52-year old senator is feminist and strong supporter of the Time's Up/Me Too Movement.

Gillibrand is an outspoken on issues like sexual harassment in the military and sexual harassment in general. She is a supporter of Medicare for All, the abolishing of ICE and moving away from the conservative views on immigration and guns.

Born Kirsten Elizabeth Rutnik, the lawmaker grow up in Albany. She is the daughter of attorneys. She would be known as "Tina" by her closest friends. She is a lawyer, writer, wife and mother.

Gillibrand met her husband, Jonathan Gillibrand, a venture capitalist and British national, on a blind date. Jonathan planned to be in the United States for only a year while studying for his Master of Business Administration at Columbia University, but he stayed in the country because of his relationship with her. The two were married in a Catholic church in Manhattan in 2001.

The Gillibrands had their first child, Theodore, in 2003, and their second son, Henry, in 2008. She continued to work until the day of Henry's delivery, for which she received a standing ovation from her colleagues in the House the next day.

Gillibrand entered the growing field of 2020 Democratic presidential contenders Tuesday, telling television host Stephen Colbert that she’s launching an exploratory committee.

“It’s an important first step, and it’s one I am taking because I am going to run,” the New York senator said on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.” She listed a series of issues she’d tackle as president, including better health care for families, stronger public schools and more accessible job training.

She joins what is expected to be a crowded primary field for the Democratic nomination that could feature more than a dozen candidates. Already, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA)  has announced her own exploratory efforts, and decisions by a number of other senators are expected in the coming weeks.

Gillibrand, who was appointed to the Senate in 2009 to fill the seat vacated by Hillary Clinton, has been among the Senate’s most vocal members on issues like sexual harassment, military sexual assault, equal pay for women and family leave, issues that could be central to her presidential campaign.

“I’m going to fight for other people’s kids as hard as I would fight for my own,” said Gillibrand, a mother of two sons, ages 10 and 15.

As she works to distinguish herself from likely rivals, Gillibrand will be able to draw from the more than $10.5 million left over from her 2018 re-election campaign that she can use toward a presidential run.

Gillibrand pledged during her Senate campaign that she would serve out her six-year term if re-elected.

She will use Troy, New York, where she lives, as a home base for her presidential efforts.

Near the end of their interview, Colbert presented Gillibrand with a basket of campaign gifts, including an ear of yellow corn to wave in Iowa, a piece of granite for New Hampshire and a one-of-a-kind button that reads “I announced on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”

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