Hillary Clinton THREE times more popular as her nearest rival Joe Biden to be Democrat's presidential candidate in 2016

Hillary Clinton is already three times as popular as her nearest rival Joe Biden to be the next Democratic presidential candidate, leaked polling data showed today.

If she chose to run for the White House, as many expect her to do, she is expected to take 58 per cent of the vote in the Iowa caucuses compared to Biden on 17 per cent, according to Public Policy Polling.

Yesterday, her spokesman confirmed she will step down as U.S. Secretary of State within 'days' of President Barack Obama's second inauguration in January and is seen as a prelude as a run for the top job in 2016.

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President Clinton? The Secretary of State is expected to take a tilt at the White House in 2016

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo trails Biden at 6 percent and Massachusetts Sen.-elect Elizabeth Warren at 3 percent in the PPP figures shared with Politico.

'The Secretary has been honoured to serve as President Obama's Secretary of State, and has loved every minute of leading this Department and being part of the State family,' Philippe Reines, a Clinton spokesman, said in an email to the 'Weekly Standard' yesterday.

He did not answer questions on whether she would run for president after she steps down following Obama's inauguration in January.

If Mrs Clinton does run in 2016, it could set up an intriguing 'back to the future' - a term Bill Clinton used in supporting his wife in 2007 - contest between her and Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor.

Jeb Bush, the younger brother of President George W. Bush and son of President George H.W. Bush, was counted as a 2012 candidate and is already being mentioned as a 2016 contender.

More likely, perhaps, is that Bush, 59, will emerge as a kingmaker, perhaps for his close ally Senator Marco Rubio, 41, of Florida.

VIDEO: State Dept. confirms Clinton does not plan second term:

She's back: Hillary Clinton was pictured in Washington DC on Thursday after a week out of the spotlight

The top candidate to replace her is believed to be Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the losing 2004 Democratic presidential nominee.

He is viewed as a more likely pick that Susan Rice, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, because of her widely-criticised appearance on Sunday talk shows in which she insisted that spontaneous deomonstrators in Benghazi had killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans.

Other possibilities include Tom Donilon, the National Security Adviser, David Petraeus, CIA director, Chuck Hagel, a Vietnam veteran and former Republican senator, Samantha Power, an Irish-born former journalist, and William Burns, Clinton's deputy.

Hillary Clinton is not usually one to keep a low profile - but as the eyes of the world turned on American politics this week, the Secretary of State was nowhere to be seen.

Her mysterious absence - she was not even pictured in public from last Thursday until today - led to speculation she is busy preparing for her own run at the White House in 2016.

Clinton has previously announced that she is to step down from State early next year, and this week her spokesman confirmed that she was set to leave office within months.

She's back: Hillary Clinton was pictured in Washington DC on Thursday after a week out of the spotlight

Last week, she embarked on a tour of the Balkans, meeting officials in Serbia, Albania, Croatia and Kosovo - far away from the electoral fray as Barack Obama faced off with Mitt Romney in a successful attempt to win four more years as President.

And next week Clinton is expected to visit Australia for an international summit, though even this has not been officially confirmed.

Close: Bill Clinton has been one of Obama's most important surrogates during this election

Bill Clinton, who was one of the President's most important surrogates throughout the campaign, spoke at a number of events over the weekend, but was not joined by his wife.

Rivals? Clinton could have been distancing herself from Obama to prepare the ground for a 2016 run

The couple apparently voted together near their home in Chappaqua, New York on Tuesday evening, but their trip to the polls was not publicised or photographed.

Hillary finally resurfaced on Thursday, when she presided over a ceremony to grant U.S. citizenship to children born abroad and adopted by American parents.

She has repeatedly claimed that she will not run for President again after her failed bid in 2008, and has added that she will not seek any public office after leaving State.

However, many pundits are sceptical of her protestations, and the main article this morning on Politico, a news website popular with insiders, anointed her the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016.

Clinton's decision to stay out of the limelight could, therefore, have been a hedging strategy designed to distance her from Obama in the event that he lost.

Strangely, given her pivotal role in the Obama administration, Hillary seems to have ended up being less important to the President than Bill is.

The 42nd President, rather than his wife, was the first person Obama phoned after Romney conceded defeat.

Now that Obama has been re-elected, some expect Mrs Clinton to grow closer to him in an attempt to portray herself as part of a winning team - although she may calculate that by 2016, Americans will be so tired of him that she will have to present herself as the face of change if she is to make it to the White House.

Her movements over the next weeks, months and years will doubtless be carefully monitored to work out whether or not she is indeed manoeuvring for a 2016 power grab.



