Chelsea Victoria Clinton (27. Februar 1980 geboren) ist das einzige Kind der ehemalige US-Präsident Bill Clinton und der frühere US-Außenminister und 2016 Präsidentschaftskandidatin Hillary Clinton. Sie war ein besonderer Korrespondent für NBC News von 2011 bis 2014 und arbeitet jetzt mit der Clinton Foundation und der Clinton Global Initiative. Seit 2011 hat sie eine herausragende Rolle in der Stiftung und hat einen Sitz im Verwaltungsrat.
2430 x 3649 px | 20,6 x 30,9 cm | 8,1 x 12,2 inches | 300dpi
Aufnahmedatum:
September 1991
Ort:
Atlanta, GA, USA
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Clinton was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, on February 27, 1980. Chelsea's name was inspired by a visit to the Chelsea neighborhood of London during a Christmas 1978 vacation. Hillary said that upon hearing the 1969 Judy Collins recording of the Joni Mitchell song, "Chelsea Morning", Bill remarked, "If we ever have a daughter, her name should be Chelsea." When Chelsea was two years old, she accompanied her parents as they campaigned throughout Arkansas for her father's gubernatorial race. She learned to read and write at a very young age. Chelsea claims that she started reading the newspaper by the age of three and also wrote a letter to President Ronald Reagan when she was only five years old.In the letter, which was photocopied and preserved by her father, she asked President Reagan not to visit a military cemetery in West Germany, where Nazi soldiers were buried. Chelsea attended Forest Park Elementary School, Booker Arts and Science Magnet Elementary School and Horace Mann Junior High School, both Little Rock public schools. She skipped the third grade. White House portrait of the Clintons On January 20, 1993, the day of her father's first inauguration, Chelsea moved into the White House with her parents and was given the Secret Service codename "Energy".The Clintons wanted their daughter to have a normal childhood, and they hoped to shield her from the media spotlight.[9] Hillary Clinton followed the advice of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis on raising children in the White House, and asked the press to limit coverage of Chelsea to her participation in public events such as state visits.Margaret Truman, daughter of former president Harry S. Truman, supported the Clintons, and in March 1993 wrote a letter to the editor of The New York Times about the damage that could be done if the press made Chelsea a subject of intense coverage.