From The Wall Street Journal:
"This is death by a thousand cuts." That's what they keep saying about Hillary Clinton.
Think of what this week was for her. She awoke each day having to absorb new sentences in a paragraph of woe:
Three more primary losses, not even close. Now it's eight in a row. A slide in the national polls. Staff shakeup: soap-opera-watching campaign manager out, deputy out. Bill's former campaign manager, David Wilhelm, jumps for Barack Obama. Josh Green, in a stunning piece that might be called a meticulously reported notebook dump, says, in The Atlantic, that Mrs. Clinton made personnel decisions based only on loyalty, not talent and skill. (There's a lot of that in the Bush White House. The loyalty obsession is never a sign of health.) The Wall Street Journal reports "internal frictions" flaring in the open, with Clinton campaign guru Mark Penn yelling, "Your ad doesn't work!" to ad maker Mandy Grunwald, who fires back, "Oh, it's always the ad, never the message." (This is a classic campaign argument. The problem is almost always the message. Getting the message right requires answering this question: Why are we here? This is the hardest question to answer in politics. Most staffs, and gurus, don't know or can't say.) On a conference call Tuesday morning, Mr. Obama's campaign manager, David Plouffe, told reporters Mrs. Clinton simply cannot catch up. It is "next to impossible" for her to get past him on pledged delegates, she'd need "a blowout victory" of 20 to 30 points in the coming states, the superdelegates will "ratify" what the voters do. (I wrote in my notes, "not gloating--asserting as fact.") Within the hour Mr. Plouffe's words were headlined on Politico, made Drudge, and became topic one on the evening news shows. Veteran Associated Press reporter Ron Fournier took a stab at an early postmortem in what seemed a long-suppressed blurt: The Clintons always treated party leaders as "an extension of their . . . ambitions," "pawns in a game of success and survival. She may pay a high price for their selfishness soon." He cited party insiders: Superdelegates "won't hesitate to ditch" Mrs. Clinton if her problems persist. To top it all off, Mrs. Clinton has, for 30 years, held deep respect for her husband's political acumen, for his natural, instinctive sense of how to campaign. And he's never let her down. Now he's flat-footed, an oaf lurching from local radio interview to finger-pointing lecture. Where did the golden gut go? How did his gifts abandon him? Abandon her? Her campaign blew through $120 million. How did this happen?
The thing about that paragraph is it could be longer.
And it all happened in public and within her party. The dread Republicans she is used to hating, whom she seems to pay no psychic price for hating, and who hate her right back, are not doing this to her. Her party is doing this.
Her whole life right now is a reverse Sally Field. She's looking out at an audience of colleagues and saying, "You don't like me, you really don't like me!"
Although of course she's not saying it. Her response to what from the outside looks like catastrophe? A glassy-eyed insistence that all is well. "I'm tested, I'm ready, let's make it happen!" she yelled into a mic on a stage in Texas on the night of her latest defeat. This is meant to look like confidence. Whether or not you wish her well probably determines whether you see it as game face, stubbornness or evidence of mild derangement.
I vote for derangement. I am seriously beginning to think that there is no master plan to steal the nomination. If Hillary had everything in the bag she wouldn't be melting down the way she is. I think she went into this with such a sense of invincibility that she didn't bother to come up with a "plan B".
I think that she and Bill really had convinced themselves that the people loved them and missed them and desperately wanted them back in the White House. The fact that they, or at least she, is not liked and their own party was just waiting for an opportunity to be rid of them was so alien to their mindset that they have been in denial. At least until very recently.
I don't know if there is any way they can save things now. Polls show that Obama has taken the lead in Texas and Nancy Pelosi is asking the super delegates to vote in tune with the popular vote and she is reported to be leaning toward endorsing Obama. Jackson and Sharpton are threatening to derail the Democrat convention with protests if the delegates from Florida and Michigan are seated Al Gore is said to be in communication with the Obama campaign to coordinate his endorsement.
I'm still not willing to completely discount the Clinton machine's ability to steal the nomination through bribery or blackmail, but the proverbial Fork of Damocles is certainly hanging over Hillary's head getting ready to stick in her and pronounce her "done".
Friday, February 15, 2008
Hillary, confident or deranged?
Posted by Lemuel Calhoon at 9:12 PM
Labels: Campaign 2008, Mrs. Bill Clinton
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