A nightclub singer who came to national attention during the 1992 elections claiming to have had an affair with Bill Clinton, Flowers says she would consider supporting his wife's run for the White House.

"I can't help but want to support my own gender, and she's as experienced as any of the others - except maybe Joe Biden," she told the Associated Press. Flowers said she had long wanted to see a woman in the White House, and she remains partial to Democrats. "I just didn't think it would be her," she admitted.

She promised that she would not try to raise havoc during the campaign, or revive a defamation suit against Clinton, which judges dismissed. "I don't have any interest whatsoever in getting back out there and bashing Hillary Clinton," she said.

It marks a turnaround for Flowers, who nearly wrecked Bill Clinton's campaign with her allegation of a 12-year affair. He initially denied it, but admitted years later to a single sexual encounter with Flowers in a deposition in the Paula Jones sexual harassment suit.