My Photo

Authors

Search

  • Google

    WWW
    obsidianwings.blogs.com

« The Arm Of The Law Just Got Longer | Main | There He Goes Again... »

January 04, 2007

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d834515c2369e200d834d3ecda53ef

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Question:

Comments

Do you spend much time at dailykos? There's a pretty loyal following of Hillary over there. But even on a democratic blog whose content is created by the masses, she has minimal support.

My apolitical mother asked me recently about Mrs. Clinton. I'm not sure why she asked about her specifically, but I got the impression that as a housewife, Hillary represents everything possible - kinda like Bush represents everything possible for the simpleton except in a good way. I bet Hilary has a pretty loyal voting bloc in the mundane housewife living vicariously through Hilary. I also bet, if Hilary were to win the democratic nomination, we'd hear about the shy Hillary voters post-election, after President Clinton erased a 4 point margin over night. I bet a lot more people could relate to her than would be willing to admit, especially if she relaxes a little. Politicians have to be likeable before anything else is possible.

Although I'm speaking for other people here; yeah, I think there's a group of people out there that genuinely do support Hillary, and I think if Hillary valued personality more a lot more people would look forward to her campaign.

1) I hold no Senator's vote for the Iraq resolution against them because I think Cheney/Bush would have preferred to go to war in defiance of Congress, with reference to Cheney's history on War Powers Act and Iran/Contra. It would have been a horrible constitutional crisis in the midst of a full war. Since the war was inevitable, unless the Pentagon supported Congress, the Consttutional Crisis was perhaps better avoided.

2) I favored HRC more when McCain and the Republicans looked more formidable. Her moderate hawkishness I considered a necessity, and still worry enough about another terroist attack or escalation in the current war or some other unpredictable foreign crisis that none of the ccandidates have established credentials or reputations to overcome the Republicans historical advantage on defense security issues.

3) The relationship of HRC to the media is complicated. She is definitely part of the DC and neoliberal establishment. The attacks on Bill Clinton never lowered his polls or really diminished his effectiveness. Whereas the press really tried to destroy Gore, and did him damage.

4) So I favor HRC on electability, competence, and toughness in an atmosphere that I expect to make the last ten years look easy and calm. I would prefer Gore, and Edwards and Obama are growin on me. Kerry is a loser.

5) I don't trust any of them on a progressive Economic or Peace agenda. Shoot, Pelosi is attempting to modify Sarbanes-Oxley, I hear, serving her corporate constituents. It is up to us.

Zero enthuthiasm for her. Her politics are old-school DLC. Her positions seem to reflect calculation rather than conviction. Does she lead on anything?

I have read that she has a significant fan base (though I have never met such a person). Her early lead is not just name recognition a la Lieberman in 1/03. She also has huge negatives -- name recognition works both ways.

While I may or may not hold a vote for the Iraq War Resolution against any particular Senator, my suspicion is that, by this time next year, it's going to be a death sentence for anyone seeking the Democratic nomination for President. The war is only going to get less popular from here, and it's going to be mighty easy for other candidates to stick those who voted in favor with a share of the blame.

The only likely exception to this is John Edwards, who pretty convincingly admitted to making a mistake a long time ago. At this point, I think that it's too late to perform a mea culpa, and I don't think Hillary Clinton is capable is capable of saying, "I made a horrible mistake." Full stop.

Edwards, of course, has already fired a shot across everyone's bow on the subject. Sure, it was McCain he just collared with the war, but don't think that he hasn't considered ways to do the same thing to hawkish Democrats.

In other words, I don't think Hillary is going to win the nomination.

Zero enthuthiasm for her. Her politics are old-school DLC. Her positions seem to reflect calculation rather than conviction. Does she lead on anything?

Eh. I think she makes a pretty good Senator. My problem is entirely different. I don't think she has the management skills to run a sidewalk lemonade stand. I'm okay with her as long as she isn't actually in charge of anything.

I could itemize the reasons I don't favor HRC for the Democratic nomination, but Hilzoy just did it. "Me too."

Any discussion of whether Hilary is electable that does not talk about gender is disingenuous.

What makes her unelectable is that she is a woman. What makes her negatives so high is that she is a woman. Her policies mean *nothing*. She is not on a level playing field with the other candidates, and it is ludicrous to pretend otherwise.

I would work for her, because I am so friggin sick of the Boy's Club. But I also think she's unelectable, because sexism in American life is just too pervasive for it to be otherwise. For a woman to be Commander-in-Chief breaks too many people's brains.

I suspect Doctor Science has it exactly right - look at the horror from the Boys' Club about Nancy Pelosi, who is only two steps away from being Commander in Chief herself. The UK has had only one woman as Prime Minister, though over the past 200 years a woman has been head of state a majority of that time, and it's notable that even now the default cultural assumption (shown in movies and novels) is that the Prime Minister will be a man.

There is the added factor that, so far as the Republican party and the media are concerned, the Democratic candidate for President will be presented as unelectable even after he's actually won an election. Avedon Carol pointed out last year that Al Gore seemed to be most people's favored candidate, and certainly he's already proved his electability in 2000, though he was prevented from taking office.

I really don't know. I don't support anyone at the moment, because it is far to early to think about it (at least over here on the Pacific Rim) However, I think Dr. Science has an excellent point and I'm wondering if anyone sees it a possibility that Hillary would be vice president (imagining that she garners substantial support but it is not enough to overcome the negative opinions) Would this be an option (both in terms of personality and politics) and what do people think of it? In a sense, it would be a redux of some of the arguments for the Bush-Cheney ticket.

My hypothesis is that however many political professionals and op-ed writers think that a Clinton candidacy would be a winner, very few ordinary voters would answer 'yes' to the question I just asked.

I suspect that readers of the always-erudite Obsidian Wings are not exactly "ordinary".

Re "I don't think she has the management skills to run a sidewalk lemonade stand" - Brad DeLong, who worked in the Treasury under Clinton, waxed eloquent on that subject. He also waxed any hopes he may have had for working win a Hillary Admin, but there you go.

An excerpt:

My two cents' worth--and I think it is the two cents' worth of everybody who worked for the Clinton Administration health care reform effort of 1993-1994--is that Hillary Rodham Clinton needs to be kept very far away from the White House for the rest of her life. Heading up health-care reform was the only major administrative job she has ever tried to do. And she was a complete flop at it. She had neither the grasp of policy substance, the managerial skills, nor the political smarts to do the job she was then given. And she wasn't smart enough to realize that she was in over her head and had to get out of the Health Care Czar role quickly.

That Brad DeLong entry was interesting, but I seem to remember it bouncing around the blogosphere and various people pointing to both extenuating circumstances and that HRC learned a lot from those mistakes. This is not to say that DeLong's take is wrong, but I remember wondering if we want someone who has never had a chance to make a mistake, or someone who has made them and learned from them?

The UK has had only one woman as Prime Minister, though over the past 200 years a woman has been head of state a majority of that time, and it's notable that even now the default cultural assumption (shown in movies and novels) is that the Prime Minister will be a man.

I suspect that's because if you wrote a novel in which the PM was a woman, people would assume that the character was a disguised Thatcher. Partly because Thatcher's been the only one, but mostly because Thatcher was such a divisive and well-known figure. Just as, if you created a US president who was an Irish Catholic, people would immediately make the link with Kennedy; or if you wrote about a centenarian senator, people would think you were referring to Strom Thurmond.
If your female PM was right-wing, people would think she was Thatcher; if not, people would think you were trying to set her up as an antithesis to Thatcher.
So, if you just want to write a novel and don't want to make people think about Thatcher, you make the PM male.
Douglas Hurd, incidentally, in his political thrillers in the 1970s, made the monarch male - to make it quite clear that it wasn't Elizabeth II, but a fictional and highly political monarch. Michael Dobbs did the same thing.

I should add that, although women are still a small minority in parliament, fictional female MPs are pretty common.
And fictional black senior British military officers seem almost de rigeur on TV and film, despite their being basically non-existent in real life. See, for example, the James Bond films and "Doctor Who".

Clinton is my Senator, and I voted for her twice, and will probably continue to as long as she wants to run. I'd vote for her for President, too, since her opponent would be a Republican. But not with enthusiasm. And I would prefer another candidate -- at this point almost any other likely candidate that the Democrats have.

Her Iraq vote is the main issue. She said at the time (I'm going by memory here) that she considered herself to be giving the President the support he needed to credibly pursue the issue at the UN, rather than a blank check to do whatever he wanted unilaterally. But then when he went in anyway, she didn't complain. That part was cowardice, which is bad enough, but I think that she too got caught up in the fever of Something Must Be Done. That calls her judgment into question.

HillaryCare (from which I presume she has learned) and the dynasty thing are smaller issues, counterbalanced by her sex -- I think it's high time for a woman President.

In general I disagree with Bob about crises -- when you "avoid" them, are you really just postponing them? In this case, I think Congress would have rolled over and let Bush and Cheney do what they wanted even without a war authorization, but that by this point the illegality of the war would be even more obvious, leading perhaps by now to a double-impeachable moment and President Pelosi.

The thing about crises is they cause issues to be resolved. That's why, for example, Ford's pardon of Nixon (and Nixon's resignation itself, IMO) felt like such a slap in the face -- it cut short the process of resolution.

I remember wondering if we want someone who has never had a chance to make a mistake...

Go, Obama!

But seriously... I think Hillary is plenty smart enough to learn from her mistakes. However, I wonder whether her inner control freak will ever let her get comfortable in an executive post where responsibility must be delegated and stuff happens.

any of you support Hillary Clinton for President?

Predictably: not me.

Not me, either. Last time, I supported Edwards, even though I described him as having incredible half-hours, followed by disappearing from the political radar for months at a time. Since then, my appreciation of his skills is even higher, and I think he has shown the ability to grab the spotlight in a positive way (as the recent McCain slam showed).

Of the top-tier candidates, Hillary is my least favorite, as I think she brings nothing to the table that any of the other candidates aren't better at. She'll still be formidable in the primaries, but I doubt she will win.

Ranking who I'd prefer to be President:

1) Feingold (grrrr)
2) Gore
3) Obama
4) Edwards
5) Richardson
6) Clinton
7) Kerry
8) Clinton
9) Warner
10) Vilsak

Ranking who I'd prefer to be the Candidate:

1) Feingold
2) Obama
3) Warner
4) Richardson
5) Gore
6) Clark
7) Clinton
8) Edwards
9) Vilsak
10) Kerry (Run John Run!)

So, um, no.

OT: How nice - Mischa riffs on Ann Coulter (surprise)

Remember how the Dhimmicrats, fueled by bloodlust and communist fervor, steadfastly refused to do so, rendering the word of the United States forever suspect, if not indeed meaningless?

Remember how the starved South Vietnamese forces, after a heroic and hopeless fight, were defeated by the Dhimmicrats’ faithful communist allies of Hanoi?

Remember the millions of innocent people that were brutally murdered as a result of the Dhimmicrats’ betrayal?

All of those innocents were murdered by the Democrat Party.

And now, just as we’re involved in another war that they desperately want us to lose, they’re back in power.

That is bad news for us, and it is seriously bad news for millions of Iraqis.

Deja vu all over again.

And that is why this world will never be a better place until every last socialist on the surface of it has been exterminated. Just as any other disease, they need to be purged from the body of mankind. Because if they’re not, they’ll keep popping back up, and every time the Socialist death toll will rise.

It is time for the vile, hateful, diseased religion of Karl Marx and all of its pathological mutations to be laid to rest permanently.

Because if we don’t get rid of it, we’ll keep seeing history repeating itself.

All inspired by Coulter's declaration that the Democratic party is 'a vast sleeper cell'.

I think she can win the general, and would be better than anyone the Republicans can possibly nominate. I think a great many supporters are motivated by belief in both points. And the wish, should she win, to have backed a winner. For this latter reason, talk of inevitability of her nomination is, to an extent, self-fulfilling.

I'm not a devoted follower at this point. Each of the potential nominees has strengths and weaknesses, and it's early. None are obviously better than Sen. Clinton -- well, if I had a magic wand, I'd put the former VP in the race. The good news is that most of our potential candidates broadly agree on most of the issues that matter, and so any of them are going to draw from the same pool for positions like Sec of State, Treasury, Labor, and the like. And the federal bench. Inasmuch as hiring is the most important thing a pres can do -- followed closely by listening to people hired -- I'm not afraid of any of them at this point.

I certainly don't have to listen to anyone, anyone, who has ever supported the current Pres in any way, on things like experience, temperament, intelligence, seriousness, character, policy positions, etc.

I stopped paying attention to Misha quite a while back. I'm not sure why I ever started, to tell the truth. He's always turned up to 11.

I mean, I completely get his desire to eliminate even the possibility of totalitarian socialist states, but I think that such sentiments really ought to be informed by what's going on now, and scaled appropriately.

Still stuck on 11, though.

wow, Misha making veiled death threats. what a shock!

I mean, I completely get his desire to eliminate even the possibility of totalitarian socialist states, but I think that such sentiments really ought to be informed by what's going on now, and scaled appropriately.

Er, so if circumstances changed, you'd support the extermination of EVERY socialist on earth (soldier or civilian, man, woman, child, me)?! Because that is what Misha meant when he demanded the extermination of "every last socialist" on earth (presumably including the 'murderous' Dhimmicrats): genocide.

;-)

I am convinced the only people who truly want Hillary Clinton to run for president, and the ones who constantly tout her as the "frontrunner", are the Republicans--and Dick Morris of course. Have you ever seen him on Fox news touting her campaign? He absolutely loathes her, but just loves the idea of her running for president and is sure she will literally stab anyone in the back to achieve her desires.

Er,

no.

I am convinced

It's that reactivating-the-base thing. Hilary is, to implant a completely Brillo-worthy image, Sean Hannity's wet dream.

Not technically insane until these kind of guys notice that it's not working, probably.

No. At the moment, of the potential candidates (eliminating people like Feingold and Warner who have already dropped out), I prefer Gore, Obama, Edwards, and Clark to Hilary. And it's not close.

Freder:

I am convinced the only people who truly want Hillary Clinton to run for president, and the ones who constantly tout her as the "frontrunner", are the Republicans--and Dick Morris of course.

I think the positive attention Obama appears to have garnered from the center-right (if one uses the blogosphere as a yardstick) is at least slightly discomforting to the RNC leadership.

As Slart said, Hitlery is a more familiar, polarizing figure who would embolden many GOP stalwarts (and possibly alienating a number of progressive Dems at the same time.)

People: I am Hilary with one L. Ms. Clinton has two Ls. (Her spelling is right; mine is wrong, for a woman.) I very much doubt that I am Sean Hannity's wet dream.

Thanks. We now return you to your regularly scheduled commenting.

'Alienating' s/b 'alienate'.

Gah. Coffee.

Now.

No. My memory is that she was also responsible for the "admit nothing and stonewall" approach to the issues relating to Whitewater--since these were overblown, more disclosure would have been better in the end. I assumed this was her legal training overcoming any political sense--so she may have improved. I'd certainly admit she has done an OK job in the Senate--but so?

Re: Edwards, his wife has popped up commenting on various blogs. I've only seen it once and I've forgotten where, but I find it interesting, especially in light of Ezra Klein's analysis of his announcement (note our own Bob McManus in the comments with some contrary thoughts)

People: I am Hilary with one L. Ms. Clinton has two Ls. (Her spelling is right; mine is wrong, for a woman.) I very much doubt that I am Sean Hannity's wet dream.

The one-l Hilary, she's quite bright,
The two-l Hillary, provokes the right
Someone there is no need to pillory:
The non-existent three-l Hilllary

hilzoy,

"Her spelling is right; mine is wrong, for a woman."

These days, no such thing as wrong spelling for names, especially female names, exists. When we were considering names for our kids, we bought a book which includes lots of weird spellings. My all-time favorite was changing the name typically written "Michaela" to "McKayla", as if one were honoring a long-dead Scottish ancestor.

Nice one, Bernard.

(Very deep apologies to Ogden Nash)

HRC is my least favorite candidate for the Democratic nomination. Her health care work was a disaster, but she did not learn anything from it. Instead, she seems to have been scarred by the experience and now backs the insurance/pharma lobby on everything. In that sense, she has learned a lesson (never buck the industries) but it is the wrong lesson.

Iraq is a giant strike 2; if she had done anything in the last few years to demonstrate that she appreciates how wrong her position was, I could overlook that, but she hasn't.

Hilzoy, I think the one base of support that HRC has that you may not be seeing is her ability to raise cash. She has significantly more on hand than other D candidates, and in the minds of most pundits, nothing says electable like sacks full of cash.

While not taking up the mantle of HRC defender, noting the 'admit nothing and stonewall' approach reminds me of this

Perhaps ABC's most egregious journalistic misstep while chasing the Whitewater story came during a December 1995 "Nightline" broadcast, which cast an extraordinarily damning light on Hillary Rodham Clinton's explanation about previous Little Rock billings her law firm did on behalf of Jim McDougal's Madison Guaranty. Did Clinton, or a young lawyer named Rick Massey, do the work? After ABC's crude bit of editing of a 1994 press conference held by Clinton, "Nightline" viewers saw Clinton tell reporters: "The young attorney, the young bank officer, did all the work." Next the screen showed handwritten notes taken by Hillary Clinton's aides during the 1992 campaign: "She [Hillary] did all the billing," the notes indicated. The "Nightlight" telecast all but labeled the first lady a liar.

What viewers did not know was that ABC not only had taken Clinton's response out of context but had edited out 39 words from Clinton's 1994 press conference response to create a damning scenario. As Conason and Gene Lyons noted in their book "The Hunting of the President, "ABC News had taken a video clip out of context, and then accused the first lady of prevaricating about the very material it had removed." link

I'd just note that I'm not sure any approach can deal with that kind of reporting.

LJ: "Re: Edwards, his wife has popped up commenting on various blogs. I've only seen it once and I've forgotten where..."

I've only seen Ms Edwards pop up once, on this inside-baseball thread (also @ Klein's place, also featuring Bob McManus in comments).

I am a proud 4-time Clinton voter. I think Hillary has been an excellent Senator and I would love to see her as Majority Leader, but no, she's definitely not my #1 choice for President.

My impression, though, is that there is significant enthusiasm for her candidacy, much of it among low-information voters. Some of these people mentally pencil in Hillary because hers is simply the name they've heard bandied about for so long; some are Bill fans who would love to see him back in the White House in any capacity (even if he has to sleep on the couch); some are understandably excited about the idea of a woman holding the office; and so on. I guess the primaries will sort this out. Recent polls which have shown her ahead of McCain head-to-head are encouraging.

On a personal note, back when I was a low-information voter myself, Hillary came and spoke at my law school back in the 1992 primary season. In person, I thought she was an absolutely electrifying speaker, and she definitely won a lot of support for her husband that day. But I don't think she does as well on TV, for whatever reason.

My own first choice, by a long way, is Gore. Regrettably, I think he has no intention of running.

I'm more or less undecided about the active people, though I lean towards Edwards.

I don't have strong views either way about HRC, except the usual concern about her very high negatives hurting her ability to win. Yes, she's very calculating, but what serious candidate for President isn't?

George H.W. Bush William J. Clinton William J. Clinton George W. Bush George W. Bush
To be followed by Hillary R. Clinton? That no longer looks like a statistical error, nor a democratic republic.

OT: Anybody checked out Bizarro World today? They've totally outdone themselves with the graphic.

Curse you, Google!!

Anybody checked out Bizarro World today?

i was chuckling at the antics of Mr Lucifer Cornblossom, earlier. he's about to get Blammed for Moe's inability to read minds as clearly as Moe thinks he can.

Curse you, Google!!

:)

it was a good little poem, nonetheless.

There is no plausible circumstance in which I would vote for Sen. Clinton for the nomination.

i was chuckling at the antics of Mr Lucifer Cornblossom, earlier.

Was that really you?

Boy am I in trouble.

I am very far from excited about HRC (which is how I avoid the spelling problem). Her economic policies will be far too DLC/neo-liberal/Rubinesque to suit me. In many ways, I vastly prefer Edwards...my rhetoric in Ezra's threads were partly just because I became bored with Edwards enthusiasm. I expect HRC to make a deal on Social Security.

But she is a fighter, without illusions or ambitions about universal approval. We need big tax increases. We are almost assured of fragile economic conditions. I think HRC is capable of raising taxes in a recession while ensuring a safety net, thereby say lowering GDP a point and increasing employment a point. Like Carter, Reagan. So far, it looks to me that the only people Edwards is willing to anger are the wonkish free-traders.

And the war is hell. This is not Vietnam;at some point I think "they" will come back to America. If a)we pull out of Iraq by 2010, and b) lose 5000 people in a terroist attack (or lose the SA oilfields;or have an Islamist revolution in SA,etc), HRC is the only one I trust to act sanely under a mountain of pressure. Maybe Clark or Gore or Kerry. I do not have yet that confidence in Edwards or Obama.

Maybe the best move is to pull out of the ME and let Israel and whatever just happen; go Manhattan on Energy, slash and burn the defense budget, and build fortress America...turn into Denmark. I am for that. Edwards doesn't have the nerve for that either.

And I cannot emphasize enough:all the good stuff comes from the bottom-up, pushing really hard and mean. The Presidency is third on my list of priorities, after the grassroots and Congress.

I was talking about economics last night, how economists seek equilibrium and have difficulty with catastrophes. I fear too many people assume conditions next year of 5 years from now will be roughly what they are today.

I expect catastrophes, radical changes and discontinuities that require radical decisions and radical politics. Just me.

It wasn't that one MB, it was one where there was some talk about where people went to school and was a bit more civil. Atrios also posted something about how this was an unreported story, so I assume that she was around a lot more. I tend not to go into comments unless I'm following links and even then, not so often, so I may be assuming too much, though.

"All sorts of people have been writing as though the 2008 Presidential nomination is hers to lose. They have been writing this for years now. And I have absolutely no idea why."

As I understand the argument (maybe via Mark Schmitt) this is (was?) a simple combination of her having the black vote wrapped up and plenty of cash. (Maybe this included the claim that many women would vote for her as well, and there are of course other ideas too - e.g. that she's inoculated against smears). I thought the above was, if in fact held by the cognoscenti, part of the strategic basis of Obama's candidacy.

I dislike her candidacy on JM's grounds, plus the likely freak-out on the far right wouldn't be fun.

Emphatically no.

Don't get me wrong, I'd love to see a woman in the White House, and I'd love to see Bill back in a place where he at least has some input on policy through having her ear. And she is certainly a very intelligent person, which is more than can be said of the Boy King. She's also vastly preferable to any of the potential Republican offerings, even McCain.

But in the primaries: not only no, but hell no.

I have a friend. A very liberal, very intelligent friend. He is a natural Democrat in every possible way but one: he hates nanny-statism. I don't much like it either, and I suspect a lot of Democrats don't, I'm just under no illusions about how much worse the Republicans are when it comes to legislating a narrow morality.

In 2000, this friend voted for Bush over Gore for two reasons: Gore's wife Tipper, and Lieberman on the ticket. Tipper, as most of you know, co-founded the PMRC, and Lieberman's support of legislating censorship and control over entertainment media is fairly well-known. Hillary has a history of backing similarly noxious legislation against entertainment media (movies, television, video games), and this--along with the way that she's triangulated on Iraq and helped move the center further to the right--are what make her a deal-breaker for him. If she wins the nomination in 2008, and the Republicans nominate a moderate, he'll vote for the Republican.

Anecdotal, perhaps, but his is not exactly a minority view amongst Democrats.

I expect catastrophes, radical changes and discontinuities that require radical decisions and radical politics. Just me.

Well, you and Pat (smileys all around)

I'm opposed to HRC precisely because, like Bob, I also expect radical discontinuities. I have no trust in her character at times of crunch, and no basis on which to form a judgment about the sort of thing she'd probably do.

Any discussion of whether Hilary is electable that does not talk about gender is disingenuous.

What makes her unelectable is that she is a woman.

I think this has truth and is a very important concept, but that it overstates the case. I think even Republicans would support the right kind of woman for President -- note the buzz about Rice (which is only buzz, but indicative of a point of view). For the bigoted about women, HRC is the wrong kind of woman.

But bigotry aside, there are plenty of non-sexist reasons to not like HRC (and yes, even by the non-bigoted Republicans). However, in close elections, all it takes is an added measure of bigotry by a slice of the electorate to make someone unelectable. But that does not mean that bigotry is the sole or even dominant reason why people do not want her as president.

JFK was brilliant for tackling the religious bigotry issue head on and spinning a negative as a positive (are you voting against me because you are prejudiced against Catholics?) I expect HRC to try to do the same thing, although not as successfully.

The problem with Hillary:

1) As a President -- she is no leader. She is not telegenic, not warm, and appears to have little gift for winning people over even in person. Worse, she has no vision -- her positions are mostly her husband's warmed-over stump speeches, and Bill was notorious for having shopping lists instead of themes. I don't know of any matter on which she has taken a strong and unpopular stand, nor has she articulated any particular view of America. In the words of an old Doonesbury strip, she seems to think she should be President because she is "best qualified to wing it." Even if she were (which I doubt), it would not be enough: a President should have a clear & reasonably self-consistent vision of where she wants her Administration, and the country, to go. Say what you will against George W, and I have said plenty, he has taken unpopular stands and changed the country tremendously. Hillary does not seem to have any desire to do that. Few Presidents achieve ambitious agendas, but I think much better of those that have them. Hillary does not.

2) As a candidate, she would be the single best GOTV ploy in history -- for the wrong side. Little old Republican ladies would rise up and drag their dialysis machines to the polls for the chance to vote against Hillary. I have not seen this level of bilious loathing for a politician since Nixon. Meanwhile, as our "one-l" Hilzoy suggests, few people on the Dem. side are passionate about her, so many would just stay home.

No.

Let me rephrase that: GOD, NO!

Was that really you?

let's just say i've consulted with Mr Cornblossom and he finds it interesting that he can only get a blank page from redstate.com.

as to whether i am Mr Cornblossom or not... i'm sure Moe Lane, if he still has privs here, could pretty easily tell if we're posting from the same address.

Catsy, I agree that a lot of Democrats find that sort of social legislation offensive or off-putting. With all due respect to your friend, I suspect few Democrats are stupid enough to think that even a "moderate" Republican would be less prone to legislate morality than she would be, but surely many people would stay home rather than vote for Hillary, for that reason.

somehow, my two sentences got themselves mixed together. an interesting mishap.

I like Hillary. I think she is a fine Senator, and would make a great Majority Leader of the Senate some day.

Yes, I would vote for Hillary if she is the nominee. NO, I would never list her as high on my list of choices, and I would go to the polls and vote for most anyone else in the primaries. (Probably John Edwards at this point, but maybe General Clark...)

I'm against Hillery because its seems she's been forced on us by people that don't wish us well. I'm for Hillery so that we can bookend a Bush like the Bushes bookended Clinton. I'd prefer Bob McManus though he can be something of a downer sometimes.

No. No enthusiasm for her, and I endorse Jackmormon's observation at 11:23 AM. I'd like to see Gore nominated (not that it has any chance of happening).

Not for the nomination, no. Better Edwards or Gore or Bill Richardson (though he'd have to lose a little weight to be taken seriously, God only knows why).

Hillary would be a disaster for the Democratic party, which is why so many Republicans desperately want her to run. The GOP has been campaigning against her husband practically nonstop since 1992, after all, and this would let them attack him and his wife at the same time.

There is a significant constitution of the public that believes Hillary is the antiChrist, or at the very least Satan's third cousin. The vitriol against her is like nothing I have ever seen, and for little reason I can tell (the fact that she actually took an active role in the White House, perhaps, rather than staying home and pruning violets).

OTOH, Democratic support for her seems to be apathetic at best. You know you are likely to have a losing candidate when the reponse to her tends to be a sigh and "Yeah, better than [opposing party's candidate], but I wish we'd have picked someone else." People are more likely to stay home.

I myself am tentatively favoring Edwards and Obama -- that is, I can see myself being enthusiastic about either, and don't really prefer one over the other at this moment. But Hillary? Eh. And I think many folks share the same response.

I can forgive HRC for voting for the authorization--after all I don't know for a fact that she did so out of moral cowardice. It's remotely possible that she was genuinely bamboozled by Bush bullshit. However, I can't forgive her for how long it took her to repudiate her vote or the weaselly way she did it. And now, while just about every Dem that has pretensions to leadership, has repudiated the surge, she has not. Waiting to see which way the wind blows. Waiting for it to be absolutely safe to come out against the surge. Sheesh.
I think she is insincere and unwilling to buck the conventional unwisdoms of the Beltway and I think those qualities make her a poor candidate.

I'm no fan of HRC. Her triangulating on issues like flag burning and her incredibly awkward outreach on morals issues make me believe that she has no moral center; she just wants the power.

Put me down as another lukewarm-to-hell-no for HRC.

I'd probably vote for her over whoever the Republicans are likely to put up in 2008 (assuming it will be McCain, Giuliani, or Romney), if I bothered to vote at all.

An interesting point about how sexism might affect the vote. I'd add that whoever our first female President is, she's going to be under an inordinate amount of pressure. Baseball fans in the audience doubtless recall the pressure Jackie Robinson faced as the first black player in the major leagues; not only did he have to face off with horrific racism, he had to prove to the world that blacks could play baseball as well as whites. Of course, he proved that in spades (Robinson's brilliance as a player is often overshadowed by his performance as a barrier-breaker, but he was one of the all-time great ballplayers).

It doesn't seem unreasonable to assume that a female President would face similar pressures, though; if she were to come up short, the sexists would have a field day claiming it proved they were right all along. Granted, they'll claim that anyhow, but how those claims are received will rely heavily on actual performance. As if being President doesn't carry enough pressure already.

I'm with hilzoy -- I think Hillary's clout is overrated. She's got money -- so did Steve Forbes. She's got Bill, a significant but depreciating asset. She knows how to run a national campaign.

Normally, that would be enough to be a lock on the nomination. Now, all she has a lock on, is second place. Either Edwards or Obama could give her serious problems as both of them have no where near the disenchantment in the base.

I wish she'd stay out and let Edwards, Obama, or Gore take the Dem pennant more cleanly. And I think she has the potential to be one of the best Senators in 50 years -- her talents are perfectly suited for that body.

And now I'm having to do the blogcomments equivalent of bite my tongue. Thanks, Andrew.

And why is that, Slart? I expect that somebody (actually, probably many somebodies) will have responses to that; it's part of why I decided to post it.

Not sure what slarti meant, but perhaps a more care in choice of words would have been a good idea, Andrew :-)

he had to prove to the world that blacks could play baseball as well as whites. Of course, he proved that in spades

Oh, ****. I play bridge; that particular connotation never even crossed my mind.

I feel compelled to add, btw, that I think we're well overdue for a female President and that, yes, there's tremendous latent sexism in the country with regards to that office -- as well as religionism, ageism, lookism and a whole passel of subtle and not-so-subtle bigotries that we as a country are resolutely in denial about -- and that yes, once she takes office there will be tremendous and unfair pressure on her to prove she's As Good As A Man.

I'm still only lukewarm on Hillary, mind, but that's because I don't really like her politics and policies. I'd probably still vote for her over a Republican, mind, but I wouldn't be particularly happy about it.

I'd definitely vote for her over a Republican, but in the primary I'd vote for almost anyone over her -- definitely Obama, Edwards, Gore, Clark, but maybe not Kerry, and definitely not Lieberman (if his delusions grew enough that he decided to run again). There are a few I don't really know enough about to judge, I guess.

I keep hearing there are a lot of Hillary supporters out there, but I don't know where they're hiding. Somewhere in the "real America" perhaps.

Oh, ****. I play bridge; that particular connotation never even crossed my mind.

Let's get Sebastian and then maybe we can get a fourth somewhere.

OT, but I don't think black players really had to prove much, at least to people who were familiar with Negro League stars.

Sorry to embarrass you, though.

Ixnay on the Intonclay. I've never been convinced that she had any leadership ability -- only ambition.

I'd prefer Clark or Edwards, Richardson, or Obama with Clark as VP (since I don't see Clark getting the nomination outright...not enough of a crony). Please not Clinton.

Bernard,

No harm done. While I concur that from a purely objective standpoint, the Negro Leagues had nothing to prove (Negro League teams that played white teams won ~66% of the games prior to integration), from the perspective of the racism that existed at the time, I think it's quite fair to say that Robinson was under tremendous pressure to disprove the prevailing, incorrect, wisdom. Had Robinson not been such a great player, it's not inconceivable integration could have been set back quite a few years as racist owners used that failure as a rationale to continue keeping blacks out of the game. (I'll note here that this is the point I'm making about a female President as well; objectively, I cannot think of any plausible reason why a woman could not be just as capable a President as a man, but there are certainly plenty of people in this country who disagree with me based on emotion, and emotion is a lot harder to overcome than logic.)

I was a bit surprised to see Richardson's name several times above. I have the vague sense he's not the sharpest pol out there, maybe due to his time running DOE - is that unfair?

I'm not likely to vote based on my guess at which candidate is smartest, but I might impose a cut-off.

I've seen the polls showing that Clinton has plenty of support, and, like others, I haven't ever met an enthusiastic Clinton supporter. However, I don't think that means anything. My friends and relations are not a representative sample of the US electorate. I'm inclined to believe the polls.

Why in the world would the folks at RedState decide that Jane Harman as the new DNI is a good idea? I mean, I think she is vastly preferable to any choice that the administration would make, but were they paying attention the last few months of the last session? Harman, while perhaps not the right choice for head of a Democrat led intelligence committee, showed that she isn't nearly the friend of Bush's policies that they seem to think she is.

No enthusiasm for Hillary here. She tends to make bad decisions, and stick to them. And like 'Francis' says, the triangulation just snuffs out any budding warmth.

"Oh, ****. I play bridge; that particular connotation never even crossed my mind.

Let's get Sebastian and then maybe we can get a fourth somewhere."

Count me in.

Rilkefan- I'd say Richardson mostly on strategic grounds, in that he would represent a step away from the prevailing power center in the Democratic party and an embrace of the Western strategy in opposition to the Southern strategy. I think he is more centrist and more of a swing threat.

Can't say much about him as a candidate, otherwise.

I'm not sure many of us are up for bridge with Sebastian. I know I'm not.

Jackmormon,

The system I play differs from his (mine's more of a simplified Precision), but I am used to tournament bridge games.

In that case, you are more hardcore than I, sir, and I congratulate you.

Matt Austen: consider the polls in Jan. 2003, which, as I said (since I looked them up!) showed Lieberman leading. And since I was pretty seriously following the primaries, I remember pretty clearly how pitifully that turned out.

I honestly don't think she has much real support at all, outside pundits and political establishment types. She's not the last person I'd vote for in the primaries -- I'd vote for her over Kucinich or Kerry, for instance -- but she's certainly the last of the people who are presently thought to have a snowball's chance in hell.

Well, I'm just a duffer at bridge, so we'll have to agree on a system before we sit down at the table.

Bridge...haven't played that since I was 14 or so. Can't recall what system we used, though; it was whatever my parents used. They were avid bridge-clubbers for quite a while.

I learned bridge in college, and played again a few years later when an old college buddy wound up in graduate school at the same place/time as I. We played basic Kaplan-Sheinwold, and scored what would have been a few* master points (*in the single digits) if we'd bothered to register them.

But that was more than 30 years ago, and since then I've rarely played. I still read the bridge column regularly, and I suspect my play of the hand has not deteriorated too much. But my bidding would be hopeless without not just review, but actually learning conventions new since my time. ("New" including conventions known then only by experts, but now widely spread.)

Nevertheless, if this game ever materializes, count me in. I will style myself as the HRC of social bridge, the player "best prepared to wing it."

(Oh, and just to swerve back on-topic, I don't have the anti-Hillary animus of some here, but neither am I bubbling with enthusiasm. Probably wouldn't vote for her in the primary [depending on her opponents], but certainly would in the general election, against any conceivable Republican.)

Bridge has become insanely hot in the department here, with a regular group meeting at least once, and sometimes as many as five times, a week. I haven't really participated, alas, so I've had to downgrade my skills from mediocre to "pathetic-but-interesting".

Well, if people are interested, I know you can play via Yahoo Games. Who would like to set up a time to get together and give it a shot?

I'll put myself up as player least prepared to wing it, but willing to do so anyway.

Kind of like the rest of my life, really.

Beyond "...I'd rather not run a pre-demonized candidate and spare them the trouble." there is also the fiasco of health care in the early days of the Clinton admin -- Hillary's doing for those too young to remember.

I like Hillary but I am with you on this one: why the annointment? The only reason I can think of (understood broadly) is advertising dollars -- the media likes a good fight.

The comments to this entry are closed.

Whatnot


  • visitors since 3/2/2004

December 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    
Blog powered by TypePad

QuantCast