Eight-year-old Martha Kennedy Morales got a huge surprise when she opened a personal letter sent to her home. It was from Hillary Clinton, who was consoling Martha for losing an election for class president to a boy - by a single vote.
"As I know too well, it's not easy when you stand up and put yourself in contention for a role that's only been sought by boys," Clinton wrote.
Clinton, who lost to Donald Trump in the 2016 US presidential election, was the first woman to be nominated as a presidential candidate by any major political party in US history. Clinton won the popular vote by several million votes but lost in the electoral college.
The youngster attends Friends Community School, a small, private Quaker school in College Park, Maryland, and is a third-grader in a combined third- and fourth-grade class. Martha said that as part of a unit on US government, elections for class president and Congress were held, and she decided to run for the top job. Her opponent, she said, was a popular fourth-grade boy.
The election was held, but six ballots were declared invalid because students had not filled them out correctly. Another vote was taken. Martha lost by a single vote, she said, and was declared vice president.