Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is planning to announce her intent to run for president on Sunday.
For those of us not living under a rock, the news came as no surprise.
Her highly anticipated announcement was pre-empted by signing a lease on a hip new (potential) campaign headquarters in Brooklyn and hiring a Google executive to head her campaign technology strategy.
And after months of speculation, it looks like the big moment is set for this weekend.
According to a report from the Associated Press, citing unnamed sources close to the campaign, Clinton plans to announce that she will be vying for the Democratic Party's nomination for the 2016 election. That announcement will reportedly come in the form of a video posted to one of her social media sites.
She will then travel to some of the key states for the primaries, including Iowa and New Hampshire, to meet with voters. Sources cited by the AP said Clinton might also make some home visits during the initial campaign launch.
The location and timing of the announcement are unclear, which prompted people on Twitter to offer their own speculation using #HillarysBigAnnouncement.
@YAFPSU Are you as excited as we are for Sunday?? #10;#HillarysBigAnnouncement— PSU College Dems (@PSUCollegeDems) April 10, 2015
The announcement that you're announcing that you're running for Pres. is the announcement. Aka transitive property #HillarysBigAnnouncement— Erin Conroy (@Erin_Mae) April 10, 2015
Others speculated that Clinton might not be planning to throw her hat into the ring after all, and instead saw other intentions for Sunday.
#HillarysBigAnnouncementShe's introducing her own line of polyester pantsuit. (I for one, am very excited!)— Dawn (@aurora_g96) April 10, 2015
#HillarysBigAnnouncement Golden Girls Reunion pic.twitter.com/aD54RygFWG— THE Chris Coon (@Coondawg68) April 10, 2015
This isn't Clinton's first rodeo. In 2007, she entered the race for the 2008 election with the words "I'm In" posted to her campaign website. She was considered a frontrunner for the Democratic nomination before losing the party's backing in the primaries to Barack Obama.
This will be Clinton's first official step back back into the political arena after serving as secretary of state under Obama from 2009 to 2013.