US Democratic hopeful Hillary Clinton says her husband, former President Bill Clinton, will not be given a post in the cabinet if she emerges winner after the 2016 presidential election.
The front-runner who was busy campaigning for Tuesday’s primary in Paducah, Kentucky, shook her head to the question, saying, “No!”
The former secretary of state has on multiple occasions boasted about her husband’s capability in dealing with economy.
During a Sunday campaign stop in the Bluegrass State’s Fort Mitchell, she said Bill would be “put in charge of revitalizing the economy."
Earlier this month, the Democratic candidate said he could create jobs in the United States.
"I’ve told my husband he’s got to come out of retirement and be in charge of this, because you know, he’s got more ideas a minute than anybody I know," Clinton told a crowd at a restaurant in Ashland, Kentucky. "Gotta put people back to work and make it happen. So we’re going to give it all we’ve got, absolute full-in 100 percent effort, because I worry we won’t recognize our country if we don’t do this.”
How about the VP?

Clinton’s picks for her administration could play a crucial role in victory for her campaign.
Foremost among the posts, which include heads of 15 executive departments, is the vice president.
The most prominent candidates for the job include Senator Tim Kaine (Virginia), Senator Sherrod Brown (Ohio), Senator Elizabeth Warren (Massachusetts), Labor Secretary Thomas E. Perez, and Governor John Hickenlooper (Colorado), according to the Hill.