HOPKINSVILLE, Ky. -- The notion of a 2-for-1 Clinton presidency is back.
Recalling sunnier days of growth, low unemployment and budget surpluses under her husband, Hillary Clinton is telling Americans that Bill Clinton will take the lead on the economy if she wins the White House.
What his work would be remains unclear: not a cabinet post, she indicated. But in some way, he'd be "in charge of revitalizing the economy."
Bill Clinton reigned over a strong economy, especially in the final years of his presidency, yet his economic legacy is mixed.
The late 1990s were the last period to see sustained income gains for the typical American household. Middle-income wages have stagnated since then.
But his refusal to step up regulation of exotic financial instruments known as derivatives was blamed in large measure for the collapse of the financial sector years later.
The tech bubble of his time burst, and his agenda was driven by support for free-trade deals, including one that gave China better access to the U.S. market, that are held responsible by elements of both parties for driving jobs out of the country.
Still, those pre-9/11 days marked a stretch of peace and prosperity like Americans haven't seen since, and with her remarks in Kentucky, Hillary Clinton is more firmly laying out how important he would be to her agenda.
The situation is highly unusual: Not only would Clinton be the first president to have a "First Dude," she'd also be the first to have a former president in the East Wing.
Now, facing a two-front fight against Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump, she's stressing Bill Clinton would be an asset in her administration, particularly with the kind of Southern white voters who backed him but now are drawn to Trump.
"Tell me anybody else who's been here as much or knows us as well," Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin said of Bill Clinton during a campaign event in West Virginia.
Hillary Clinton lost that primary -- a state her husband won by double digits -- earlier this month to Sanders.
The GOP front-runner and his team are making a different political bet. They see Bill Clinton's history of scandal as ripe for exploitation.
Still, in recent weeks, Clinton has begun sketching out a bit more of a role for her husband. She told West Virginians he'd focus on helping economically distressed communities, like those in coal county, reinvent themselves in a changing economy.
More any other political couple in recent American history, the Clintons long have viewed themselves as a joint package.
Shortly after entering the White House, Clinton appointed his wife to head the administration's effort to pass a major health-care bill.
The failed measure became known as "Hillarycare."
But as the party has shifted to the left during the Obama administration, Hillary Clinton repeatedly found herself forced to repudiate key pieces of her husband's legacy during her primary campaign.
She's distanced herself from the North American Free Trade Agreement, the federal law that defined marriage as between one man and one woman, and the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that banned gays and lesbians from military service.
Hillary Clinton also has faced criticism for backing the 1994 crime bill, which led to tougher sentencing for drug offenses.
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