By KEN THOMAS

Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Hillary Rodham Clinton says she supports President Barack Obama’s executive actions to protect about 5 million immigrants living in the U.S. illegally from deportation, calling it a `”historic step” and urging the House of Representatives to pursue a measure approved by the Senate last year.

Clinton placed the efforts aimed at changing immigration policy in the context of families, many of whom she said are longtime residents raising children and paying taxes.

“This is about people’s lives,” she said Friday during an appearance at the New York Historical Society, adding that it was about “people who serve us tonight, who prepared the food tonight.”

Clinton is considering a presidential

campaign in 2016 and her embrace of Obama’s actions come in sharp contrast to Republican condemnation of the changes the president has ordered.

“I think the president took an historic step and I support it,” the former secretary of state said in her first public comments on the issue. She had issued a statement shortly after Obama’s speech Thursday night expressing support.

Obama’s actions were in line with previous moves by Democratic and Republican presidents alike, she said. However, many Republicans in Congress accuse Obama of overstepping his executive powers.

Charging hypocrisy, the Republican National Committee released a Web video earlier in the day that included the audio of an April 2008 Clinton speech in which Clinton criticized President George W. Bush’s use of signing statements and other means “to transform the executive into an imperial presidency.”

Earlier Friday, dozens of her staunchest allies gathered at a New York hotel earlier Friday – even though she has yet to say whether she will run.

Ready for Hillary, a Democratic super political action committee unaffiliated with Clinton, convened the meeting of 200 financial backers and Clinton insiders to prepare for a campaign.

“It was a leap of faith,” Harold Ickes, who worked in Bill Clinton’s White House, said of the Ready for Hillary effort. “We didn’t know if people would come to us, but we now have 3 million names, which will be important to her if she runs.” The group has raised more than $10 million.

Clinton sits far atop a hypothetical field of Democratic candidates that is beginning to take shape.

Vice President Joe Biden and outgoing Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley are potential challengers to Clinton, as is former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb, who has opened an exploratory committee.