Former first daughter Chelsea Clinton talks privilege, female leadership, dealing with critics – and how Trump ‘degrades what it means to be an American’
When the American media describe Chelsea Clinton as royalty, they refer not to her popularity but to her ubiquity. Her very first home was the Governor’s Mansion in Little Rock, Arkansas; the family home she left for college 18 years later was the White House. Ordinarily, it’s only young royals who grow up in lavish official residences and the pitiless media spotlight, a permanent presence in our consciousness. It is a uniquely strange and unenviable version of celebrity that stole Chelsea’s anonymity before she was old enough to spell it.
When we meet there is, therefore, a disconcerting sense of déjà vu. Everything begins exactly as one might expect. On the previous day there had been the pre-interview call from one of her handlers, who was ostensibly warm and yet conveyed an impression of wary control, leaving me worried about how far I’d be allowed to stray from the subject of Chelsea’s new book. The interview takes place at the Clinton Foundation, a vast but discreetly unadvertised expanse of midtown Manhattan office space populated by serious-looking people, and adorned by African-inspired artwork chosen by Chelsea’s father. Chelsea is waiting in the glass boardroom; the interview starts precisely on schedule, to the second.
Chelsea has inherited her mother’s unnerving composure, and speaks in monotone paragraphs consisting almost entirely of language no human being I know ever uses. For example: ‘The choices that they made were fundamental to me feeling affirmed in charting my own journey’ – which is not how anyone else talks about their mom and dad.
Esta historia es de la edición September 2018 de Marie Claire South Africa.
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Esta historia es de la edición September 2018 de Marie Claire South Africa.
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