John Kerry Presidential Run: Secretary Of State States ‘Never Says Never’ To 2016 Presidential Bid [VIDEO]

Though experts around the world have assumed for a few years that the obvious Democrat candidate for the 2016 run is former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, there's one man who wouldn't look it past him to run for his shot at the White House: John Kerry's presidential run could be Hillary Clinton's biggest fear.

In the last John Kerry presidential run back in 2004, the incumbent president George W. Bush beat the Vietnam veteran in a tight race that was later somewhat disputed, with Bush obtaining 286 electoral votes and Kerry, 251, with a 62.04 percent versus 48.3 percent.

Now, according to Weekly Standard, as the 2016 races becomes nearer and nearer, there's the chance of a new John Kerry presidential run for the upcoming election, as the current Secretary of State of Barack Obama's second term serving in the White House - right after Clinton, who is thought to be the obvious candidate, served in the same position in Obama's first term.

CBS News reports that interviewer Chuck Todd from NBC asked the former Senator for Massachusetts whether the country could expect another John Kerry presidential run in 2016, and the politician was somewhat coy about the subject, though stating that "nobody ever says never."

As a Secretary of State, Kerry was faced some tough challenges, such as the nuclear negotiations with Iran, constant issues with the Islamic State ISIS, the Ukraine war, the normalization of the long-running diplomatic and economic blockade between the United States and Cuba (which had been going on since 1960, almost 55 years) and big diplomatic and economic issues with Russia, following Vladimir Putin's controversial policy of adjoining Ukraine provinces to its territories.

As Zee News reports, though, John Kerry's presidential run isn't the only possible threat for Clinton's candidacy, as other names that have been called are those of Vice President Joe Biden and Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren.

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