-Caveat Lector-

 from: http://www.capitolhillblue.com/Jan1999/clintondivorcejan7.htm


 It's over! First Lady tells friends, Clinton she
 will divorce him

 By Daniel J. Harris
 White House Correspondent

 First Lady Hillary Clinton has told her closest friends that her
 marriage is over and that she will divorce her husband, sources
 confirm to Capitol Hill Blue.

 Termination of her marriage will most likely occur after Clinton's
 second term as President ends on January 20, 2001, but could come
 even sooner if Mrs. Clinton decides to seek the New York U.S.
 Senate seat being vacated by Democrat Daniel Patrick Moynihan.

 "It's over," one close friend of the First Lady said Wednesday.
 "The only question is when."

 In New York state, a poll being conducted to test Mrs. Clinton's
 electability to the Senate includes questions about whether voters
 would be more or less likely to vote for her if she was no longer
 married. Three residents of New York confirmed Wednesday night that
 they were called by pollsters who asked if Mrs. Clinton's marital
 status would affect their vote. The three, who asked that their
 names not be used, initially contacted Capitol Hill Blue to reveal
 the the contents of the questions.

 As the Senate prepares to open a trial on Clinton's impeachment,
 White House insiders report that tensions between the President and
 First Lady are at an "all-time high," with frequent arguments,
 shouting matches and at least one fight where Secret Service agents
 had to pull an angry Hillary Clinton off her husband, leaving her
 husband with a bruise on his face that required extensive makeup to
 mask (that fight has been reported previously in English tabloids
 and on the Drudge Report internet site).

 Sources said Mrs. Clinton told both the President and daughter
 Chelsea before Christmas that their marriage was over and that she
 would divorce him, but she agreed to continue the public show of
 support at least until the impeachment process currently before the
 Senate is concluded.

 "She won't abandon him publicly while he is still on trial, but
 anything is possible once the Senate finishes its work," one source
 close to the First Lady said.

 New York Democratic officials are urging Mrs. Clinton to seriously
 consider a run for Moynihan's seat. New York Mayor Rudolph Guiliani
 is considering a run from the Republican ticket.

 "I think she would be a terrific candidate," says Democratic
 Senator Robert J. Torricelli. "She should run."

 Moynihan's seat has a history of carpetbagger occupancy. It was
 once held by former US Attorney General Robert Kennedy, a
 Massachusetts native who established residency in New York state
 to run for the seat

 Calls for comment to both the White House press office and the
 First Lady's press office were not returned Wednesday night.




 Capitol Hill Blue is published daily on the web. Some material is
 ©The Associated Press and © Reuters NewMedia.


 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 story #2:

 from: http://dailynews.yahoo.com/headlines/pl/
       story.html?s=v/nm/19990107/pl/hillary_2.html

 Yahoo! News - Politics Headlines
 Thursday January 7 12:37 AM ET


 Mrs. Clinton's Friends Doubt She Will Seek Office

 By Laurence McQuillan

 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Aides and close friends of first lady
 Hillary Rodham Clinton Wednesday dismissed speculation she will
 seek political office, suggesting instead she will seek an
 international stage to champion her causes.

 There has been increasing speculation in recent weeks that Mrs.
 Clinton, found to be the most admired woman in America by a
 year-end Gallup Poll, will run for political office.

 Her name has been raised by some as a possible U.S. Senate
 candidate, with the lead editorial in The New York Times Tuesday
 asking "Senator Rodham?" -- a reference to speculation she would
 seek the Senate seat being vacated by veteran Democratic Sen.
 Daniel Patrick Moynihan in 2000.

 There also have been published reports Mrs. Clinton is interested
 in running for the Senate from California, Massachusetts or
 Illinois. Her name even has been mentioned in making a run for
 the White House or as vice president in 2000.

 "The only thing I want to say is that she has no plans to run"
 for elective office, said Marsha Berry, the first lady's press
 secretary, who has been flooded with queries. "That's really the
 truth of the matter."

 In private, those close to Mrs. Clinton went out of their way to
 try to dampen the speculation -- with several stressing she was far
 more likely to seek a forum that would let her continue to champion
 the causes of women and children on the international stage.

 "Personally, I can't imagine that she would run for anything," said
 a senior adviser to Mrs. Clinton. "Right now a lot of people are
 speculating about endless possibilities."

 The New York speculation was fueled by the first lady's successful
 campaigning for Democrat Charles Schumer's upset victory over
 Republican Al D'Amato in the state's Senate race in November.

 A close friend of the first lady and a long-time Democratic Party
 activist said she could understand the speculation about Mrs.
 Clinton's political aspirations but was convinced they are
 groundless.

 "In my mind, she is probably the most political person I know and
 has the most astute, almost steel-trapped mind of anyone I know,"
 the friend said.

 "I think the question for her is what does she actually want to
 do," she said. "Where I could see her is as the U.N. ambassador.
 I see her in a much more global role."

 Mrs. Clinton has used her role as first lady to press for the
 rights of women and children, particularly during visits to places
 such as India and Pakistan, Africa, China and Latin America.

 "Just from being around her so long, I actually see her in a much
 more humanitarian role" than holding political office, particularly
 being one member of the 100-member U.S. Senate, said one former
 White House official.

 "It just strikes me as not a logical choice for her," the former
 White House insider said. "It isn't powerful enough for her. I
 honestly see her in a whole different role, not one of a hundred.
 I see her as one of one."

 "I think she is going to use her voice as a voice for those who
 don't have one" after serving as first lady, added the former
 official.

 All of those interviewed stressed that Mrs. Clinton has made no
 decisions about what she will do after leaving the White House, but
 each one said they were certain she would want a forum to promote
 issues involving women and children.

 Mrs. Clinton has seen her popularity rise steadily, particularly
 after President Clinton became caught up in a sex scandal involving
 former White House intern Monica Lewinsky.

 The Gallup survey found that 28 percent of Americans said Mrs.
 Clinton was the woman they admired most -- double the number who
 felt that way the year before. Entertainer Oprah Winfrey finished
 in second place with 8 percent.



 Copyright © 1999 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.




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