But none of what she ran on was politically feasible in that environment. So why even have a platform other than "veto foul shit republicans want to do"?
Congress wasn't going to support $12 minimum wage, or affordable college, or universal child care, or literally anything else Clinton wanted to do. With an expected Republican Congressional majority, all of those things were "ponies".
On a side note in the interview she says she doesn't support single payer, but supports UHC by expanding Medicaid and Medicare. Well... what's the difference, exactly? Presumably, you expand those programs to the oldest and sickest people first, because those are the people for who me healthcare is unaffordable. They are also the most expensive to insure by an order of magnitude. People who are 60 spend about 2x as much per capital people under 50. So by the time you lower Medicare to 55 or so, you probably already have the government paying like 60% of healthcare costs in the country. Even more so once we give baby boomers a few more years.
At some point, "I don't support expanding government healthcare but I do support expanding government healthcare for some people" doesn't make sense, because you're already paying for all the expensive people. The rest are a rounding error in comparison.