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		 Hillary 
		Clinton expected to announce presidential run as soon as this weekend 
		
		 
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		[April 10, 2015] 
		By Steve Holland 
		  
		 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hillary Clinton is 
		expected to announce her campaign for the Democratic presidential 
		nomination in 2016 as early as this weekend, facing no substantial 
		competition but needing to get her organization in place for the long 
		battle to come. 
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			 A variety of sources in the Clinton orbit said they were 
			anticipating an imminent announcement but would not confirm a report 
			in the New York Daily News that the announcement was expected on 
			Sunday. 
			 
			Clinton is likely to make her intentions known through a social 
			media announcement followed by campaign travel. This focus on 
			digital communications is an attempt to connect with young voters, 
			who Clinton needs to become American's first woman president. 
			 
			The Guardian newspaper reported that Clinton would make her 
			announcement on Twitter at noon eastern time on Sunday while headed 
			to the early voting state of Iowa, followed up by email and video 
			announcements. 
			
			  In her previous presidential run in 2008, Clinton lost to the 
			current president, Barack Obama, in part because of the Obama 
			campaign's clever use of social media to draw attention to his 
			candidacy and raise huge sums through small donations. 
			 
			Her campaign is expected to concentrate on making the 67-year-old 
			former first lady relatable to ordinary Americans. Clinton spent 
			four years jetting to foreign capitals as Obama's first-term 
			secretary of state but has had limited day-to-day contact with 
			everyday Americans. 
			 
			Clinton, the wife of former President Bill Clinton, is the 
			overwhelming favorite for the Democratic nomination and no other 
			major Democratic figure has stepped forward to challenge her, 
			although former Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley has made moves 
			toward a possible campaign. 
			 
			
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			Clinton's biggest obstacle may be overcoming her own image. 
			 
			She has struggled to get past accusations that she might be too 
			secretive based on the revelation earlier this year that she had 
			gone against federal recommendations to use an official email 
			account while at the State Department and instead used her own 
			private server. 
			 
			A Quinnipiac University poll released this week had the surprising 
			result that she was even or only slightly ahead of some Republican 
			contenders like libertarian Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky. Most 
			polls in recent months have shown her with a substantial lead over 
			the Republican 2016 field. 
			 
			(Reporting by Steve Holland, Amanda Becker and Eric Walsh in 
			Washington; Editing by Eric Beech and Michael Perry) 
			
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			reserved.] 
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