The reviews are not good. The reviews from normally
sympathetic commentators have been disappointing.
We can all agree that Hillary Clinton’s presumptive
presidential campaign needs a sympathetic press. What then are we to make of
the fact that normally reliable liberal supporters of all things Democratic
have nothing good to say about her news conference last week.
New Yorker editor David Remnick is the latest to weigh in.
His commentary is damning:
It was
hard not to think of this status report on the condition of women in the
twenty-first century while Hillary Clinton stepped into the lights before an
agitated crowd of reporters at the U.N. last Tuesday. A large tapestry of
“Guernica” hung behind her, and she looked no happier in that setting than the
tormented figures in Picasso’s image of civil war. And yet contrition was not
in her plans. Instead, she chose a familiar course, offering explanations that
were by turns petulant and pretzelled. Asked about the way she chose to deal
with federal guidelines on e-mail when she was the Secretary of State, she
said, “I opted for convenience.” Clinton’s further explanations were so
familiar, such a ride in the Wayback Machine, that you had to wonder, Why do I
suddenly feel twenty years younger yet thoroughly exhausted?
Remnick was thrilled to see Clinton advance the cause of
women’s rights. But when he compared her eloquent speech on that issue with her
defense of her email practices, he gave Hillary a failing grade:
This
was one reason that the press conference last week—given, presumably, as
Clinton was preparing to announce a run for the Presidency, in 2016—was so
dispiriting. At that moment at the U.N., she should have been returning to
those feminist themes, but she used the opportunity to claim that she was only
trying to protect the sanctity of her communications about her “yoga routines,”
her daughter’s wedding, and her mother’s funeral. This was a notably
transparent exploitation of gender. It’s one thing for a politician to be
stupid; it is quite another for her to assume that we are.
It looks like the liberal media is not going to be running
interference for Hillary Clinton. Savvy political observers should take note.
One notes that Remnick is still enamored of the Obama
presidency. And yet, when he wonders where the political talent went, why the
Democratic Party cannot field a second viable candidate, he ought to admit that
that is the direct consequence of six years of Obama.
As everyone knows, last year’s election was a crushing
defeat for Democrats. It effectively cleared the bench.
If Remnick is getting ready to wax nostalgic for the Obama
presidency, he ought to begin by asking how the great Obama has so thoroughly
damaged the party he leads.
But isn't that what a Hillary campaign is going to be, an exploitation of gender politics? Every challenge to Hillary is going to be "sexist." This will be a democrat rerun of Obama's campaign where any challenge to Obama was "racist."
ReplyDeleteNow we have come to the point where the only qualification for political office is to be a supposed victim and we need to have one of these and one of those no matter the qualifications to meet the requirements of diversity. What is next, people who belong to NAMLA?
Did you every wonder why people who run for political office, once elected, become advocates for only certain stereotypical groups? If the person is a woman she becomes a woman's advocate to the detriment of others. If the person is a minority then they become a African American /Hispanic advocate to the detriment of the other they were voted to represent. It almost seems to me that these people perpetrated a fraud on the electorate in order to get into office.
Hillary is at least honest in the fact that men can probably expect nothing good from an administration headed by her. Given the chance men will lose all semblance of "due process" rights and other rights will be eroded. I suspect that married women are not going to do well either.
The Dems may the ready for a female president, but they sure had a bad case of explosive vapors at the thought of a female GOP VEEP.
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