Clinton's memoir, "Hard Choices," will be released tomorrow, accompanied by interviews with ABC News and other U.S. News organisations. Clinton will appear at book events this week in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and suburban Washington, DC
The former first lady remains the leading White House contender for the Democratic party if she chooses to run for president again and representatives from the Republican party have aggressively challenged her record at the State Department in anticipation of another campaign.
Clinton's words have been carefully parsed for clues to her thinking about 2016. In an excerpt of an interview with ABC News that aired yesterday, the former first lady said she looks forward to travelling the country to promote the book and would "help in the midterm elections in the fall and then take a deep breath and kind of go through my pluses and minuses."
But she also told ABC's Diane Sawyer that potential Democratic primary rivals were free to "do whatever they choose to do" and recalled that her husband, former President Bill Clinton, didn't launch his first presidential campaign until the fall of 1991. Some Democrats worry that by freezing the field, she could leave other Democrats at a disadvantage if she decides not to run.
