(Molly Riley/AP Photo)

NEW YORK - Two-hundred prominent Democratic strategists, former Clinton aides and donors, joined forces today for a day-long strategy meeting hosted by the pro-Hillary Clinton super PAC Ready for Hillary to coalesce their efforts, plot and plan for when and if Hillary Clinton runs for president.

The meeting, held at the Sheraton Hotel in Midtown Manhattan, where the Clintons hold their annual Clinton Global Initiative summit, was made up of a series of closed-to-the-media strategizing panels and marked the beginning of the end of Ready for Hillary, which plans to shut down its operations once Clinton announces a run.

It also marked a turning point for Clinton's potential 2016 campaign.

Although nobody today would flat out say it (hypotheticals like "if" and "hope" preceded all statements about her candidacy), the general sentiment among the panelists and attendees was: She's running. And when she does, her supporters said, they will be ready.

"Hopes run high," Marty Chavez, the former Albuquerque mayor and a senior adviser for Ready for Hillary, told reporters. "The biggest takeaway I have is … there are a lot of people who have her back if she says yes."

The attendees at the event included Correct the Record's David Brock and Burns Strider, who were invited guests to last weekend's 10th anniversary event for the Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock, Arkansas, as well as political strategists Harold Ickes, James Carville and Paul Begala. Two people who have been mentioned as possible campaign managers for Clinton, Stephanie Shriock, the head of EMILY's List, and Guy Cecil, executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, also were there.

Hillary Clinton herself was not at the event. Super PAC rules would not allow her to go.

Very little was said about other possible Democratic presidential candidates, such as former Sen. Jim Webb of Virginia, who just this week became the first candidate to throw his hat in to the ring. The panelists said they saw Hillary Clinton as the most "formidable" candidate and that any concerns were not about a "Hillary Clinton problem," but rather a problem for the Democratic Party, as a whole.

"We have yet to figure out a message on the economy that resonates with working-class voters," Mitch Stewart, a former Obama adviser and founding partner of 270 Strategies, which partnered with Ready for Hillary, told reporters. "We have not been able to persuade them that your values align with ours. And that, for me, is the biggest concern out there."

The meeting also focused on acknowledging what Ready for Hillary has accomplished since it launched nearly two years ago. In that time, the group has raised $11 million and gained 3 million supporters. Once it shuts down, the group plans to transfer its vast email list of supporters to Clinton's campaign. It was unclear, however, what would happen to the group's now-famous bus.

Ready for Hillary's meeting came a day after Hillary Clinton came out in support of President Obama's executive action on immigration and blamed Congress for inaction on the issue. It was a rare move for Clinton, prompting speculation she might be starting to position herself as a candidate, because she has remained relatively mute on policy matters since she stepped down as Obama's secretary of state in 2013.

Ready for Hillary also hosted a grassroots fundraising event Thursday night at a noisy, haram-themed lounge downtown.

The event, with roughly 150 people, cost $20.16 to attend and offered up cocktails thematically linked to Clinton, who might run to become America's 45th president.

"I'll have one 'Ceiling Breaker' and one '45,'" a young 20-something guy, donning a small Ready for Hillary sticker on his button-down shirt, was heard yelling out to the bartender.

Two minutes later, he was handed two ambiguously colored drinks.

"No idea," he shouted out when asked what was in them. But, he said with a smile, "They're named after her."

Hillary Clinton, who has a lighter-than-usual schedule in the coming month, has said she will likely make a decision on 2016 sometime early next year.