Is the bloom off the rose? In other words, is President Hillary
Clinton still inevitable?
In his column yesterday Frank Bruni suggested that she is
not. He intimated that the idea of a Hillary presidency is far more appealing
than Hillary herself as candidate or president.
Since Bruni leans left politically, he would normally be
expected to be a fan of America’s most famous cuckquean.
Bruni began his analysis by commenting on the precipitous
decline in Clinton’s favorability:
It’s
about time, because the truth, more apparent with each day, is that [Hillary] ... has serious problems as a potential 2016 presidential contender, and the
premature cheerleading of Chuck Schumer and other Democrats won’t change that.
In the
wake of the federal shutdown, in the midst of the Obamacare meltdown, voter disgust
with business as usual is at the kind of peak that ensures more than the usual
share of surprises in the next few elections. In one recent poll, 60
percent of Americans said that they’d like to see everyone in
Congress, including their own representatives, replaced; in another, a similar
majority hankered for
a third party.
These
unusually big numbers suggest a climate in which someone who has been front and
center in politics for nearly a quarter-century won’t make all that many hearts
beat all that much faster. Voters are souring on familiar political operators,
especially those in, or associated with, Washington. That’s why Clinton has
fallen. She’s lumped together with President Obama, with congressional leaders,
with the whole reviled lot of them.
That was just an opening gambit. Bruni continued:
And
some of the ways in which she stands out from the lot aren’t flattering. She
comes with a more tangled political history of gifts bestowed, favors owed,
ironclad allegiances and ancient feuds than almost any possible competitor
does. We’ve had frequent reminders of that: in the Anthony Weiner saga; in
reports of mismanagementat
the Clinton Foundation; in
coverage of Terry McAuliffe’s bid to become Virginia’s governor.
We’ve
also had glimpses of the Clintons as an entrenched, entitled ruling class. To a
degree that has turned off even some of the couple’s loyalists, Bill and
Hillary have been unabashed lately in their coronation of Chelsea as the
Clinton in waiting, the heir to the throne.
Dynastic politics? Who would have thought it? The ultimate
American political dynasty was the Kennedy family. The Bushes run a distant
second. But, is America looking for a Clinton dynasty?
Bruni said that this will work in her disfavor and I think
he is correct.
When he asked about the rationale for a Hillary presidency, Bruni came up empty:
And
what would the argument for a Hillary presidency be? Something interesting
happens when you ask Democrats why her in 2016. They say that it’s time for a
woman, that she’ll raise oodles of dough, that other potentially strong
candidates won’t dare take her on. The answers are about the process more than
the person or any vision she has for the country. There’s no poetry in them.
That’s not good.
And she has no real record of achievement:
She
sailed high as secretary of state because, apart from Benghazi, she could and
did position herself mostly above the partisan fray. The hellcat had become a
cool cat,wearing shades instead
of thick glasses, the meme of all memes.
But
nine months since she left that job, it’s hard to pinpoint what, other than all
those dutiful miles she logged, her legacy is. She has returned to her earth,
and it’s a fickle place.
Bruni was too kind to mention Clinton’s foreign policy
failures, from the Arab Spring to Syria to the Reset with Russia.
He closed with a devastating observation. During the 2012
presidential campaign the Obama team weighed the possibility of replacing Joe
Biden with Hillary Clinton.
Everyone, Bruni said, is reading it as an insult to Biden.
Yet, the Obama campaign dropped the idea when they discovered that adding
Hillary to the ticket would not produce any meaningful improvement in the
president’s poll number.
Bruni asked:
9 comments:
The phrase, "battlespace preparation", comes to mind. I think many-to-most will agree that Barry has no coat tails and no one he can suggest as or recommend to be his successor. I've no idea who Bruni might see, or like to see, as the next Dem presidential candidate. But apparently it isn't Hillary!.
No, there's another Barack Obama lingering out there somewhere. Who's the most charismatic, full of stuff, voting present person who came out of the (pick your state) legislature and just got elected U.S. Senator in 2012? There's your answer. No track record, no achievements, just an eloquent person everyone can attach their hopes and dreams to. Perfect.
That person can beat Hillary. Again.
Tip
One thing for sure: whether the Democrat candidate is Hillary or another interchangeable statist, they will win handily if the GOP fields another empty-suit RINO like McCain or Romney.
Ah, yes, Lastango... but whose TURN is it? That's the Republican establishment's excuse for choosing every nominee... Nixon, Ford, Reagan, Bush 41, Dole, Bush 43, McCain, Romney. It's THEIR TURN! That's the rationale for everything. Even Reagan, though in the end a good choice, had his turn after finishing runner-up to Ford in 1976. The only real exception was Bush 43's coronation, which set up McCain's "straight talk hot mess" for the next primary cycle. That's the way the stupid party chooses it's nominees. So... whose "turn" is it this time???
Tip
Unless the Republican party can get its act together, doesn't seem likely at this point, it really doesn't matter who the Dems run. The Republicans should have the elections tied up if they can become a real conservative party instead of democrat "lite."
Can't resist pointing out that no one had ever called Chris Christie lite, in any sense of the word.
Did anyone take a look at the returns from Virginia yesterday??? The Republican Party blew it. Libertarians will always be around. The amazing thing is that Cuccinelli came within 3 points. There is a lot of anger around ObamaCare.
Tip
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