The
cars, usually carrying families or groups of friends, gawk as they
drive timidly up the driveway, cautious about breaking any laws or
spooking the Secret Service agents they believe could be hiding in the
bushes.
Tourists
are flocking to Hillary Clinton's New York home, hoping to catch a
glimpse of the presumptive Democratic nominee or her husband, the former
president.
The more than $2
million home is the top tourist attraction in Chappaqua, locals say,
with people driving from all over the state and further afield to take a
picture in front of the large white gate the Clintons live behind.
Very
little of the home, which was purchased in 1999, is visible from the
street, though. When the gate opens -- which is rare -- people can get a
glimpse of the stately house and its driveway.
But that isn't what people are there for. Many just want to say they have been.
"I'd
like to be able to say we give them their privacy, but the truth is
when Bill is in town, you can trace his steps by the Facebook posts,"
said Robert Greenstein, the New Castle town supervisor, which includes
Chappaqua.
Greenstein, who was
sworn in by Clinton when he was elected to the town council, said he was
"a big believer in highlighting your assets, and while not everyone
will agree with her politics, I think having a former president, a
former senator, security of state and candidate for president living in
your town is a good thing."
After
picking up a large piece of antique furniture on Saturday, Jamie Fishman
and Carol Merle-Fishman pulled up to Clinton's home on a mission: Take a
picture of their "NOTTRUMP" license plate in front of the place the
woman who could stop Trump spends most of her time.
"We
were just up the road picking up this furniture, so I said, 'Hillary
lives nearby. Let's go over there and take a picture,' " Jamie Fishman
said, who was making his second stop at the house.
Fishman
despises Trump enough that he went to his local New York Motor Vehicle
Department office in April -- right before the New York primary -- to
purchase his vanity plate. This has become Fishman's thing: During the
George W. Bush presidency, Fishman tried to get a "BUSHLIED" license
plate, but after the department wouldn't allow it, he settled on
"EXITIRAQ."
"I felt I needed
something more than just a bumper sticker," he said, even though above
his vanity plate sat an "Elizabeth Warren for Senate" sticker.
Both Jamie and Carol said they would vote for Clinton in November, with Jamie more reluctant than Carol.
"I was a supporter of Bill and now I am a supporter of Hillary," Carol said. "I feel very secure in her hands."
The couple was just one of the more than two dozen cars that drive by Clinton's house daily.
One groups of friends was in the area for a high school reunion and was making their regular trip to the home.
Credit: CNN
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