Here are the opening words of a Politico article spelling the end of the Clintons.

POLITICOKirsten Gillibrand is having a moment, whether she meant to or not.

Going where no other prominent Democrat had before on Thursday evening by declaring that Bill Clinton should have resigned the presidency during the Monica Lewinsky scandal, the New York senator and potential 2020 presidential contender yet again found herself the face of a national conversation with the potential to dominate headlines and divide her party.


At a time Democrats are desperate to keep the focus on accusations against President Donald Trump and Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, Gillibrand’s stand shocked even some of her close allies. They had no inkling that she was planning to make news — let alone news that would invite questions about her own ties to a political power family that has dominated her party’s consciousness for nearly three decades.

Editor:  Understand that before Gillibrand declares for a presidential run,  she will have to put to bed,  Mrs Bill Clinton,  once and for time.  She is 20 years younger,  never looks like a hag,  and was a blue-dog conservative as a House representative.  Chances are that her brand of Progressivism will not be as "revolutionary as Hillary and far less "rough" as was the case with Barack.  In other words,  she would be a considerable threat to GOP opposition.  

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