Showing posts with label Hillary Clinton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hillary Clinton. Show all posts

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Why No Nightmare Ticket? Let's Count The Reasons

Now that the primary is finally over, the focus has turned to who Obama will pick to be his vice president. And, despite all logic to the contrary, people, mostly pundits and Hillary's surrogates, keep raising the prospect of an Obama-Hillary nightmare ticket (what they like to naively refer to as the "dream ticket"), ad nauseam. And I have to ask, are you people complete idiots?? The pundits no doubt raise the question to get ratings, because they don't want the primary to end, because it makes them money. Do they know better? Yes, I think most of them do. And I think most in the Democratic Party know that it is a horrible idea, yet Hillary's surrogates are pushing the nightmare ticket anyway.

It should never have come to this, because the reasons why she would make an absolutely horrible VP candidate are so plentiful and obvious, but apparently I’m going to have to spell out the reasons why this is a nightmare ticket that should never, ever, ever be.

I’ll break this into sections, starting with reasons that automatically disqualify her for VP, then moving on to major reasons she shouldn’t be VP, then I’ll go over some minor reasons, and then as a special added treat, I’ll go over a few of the other, non-VP options some people think would be good rewards for Hillary.

But first, why people say the nightmare ticket should be. There are generally two broad reasons why people say Obama should choose Hillary as a running mate. First, because Obama supposedly needs Hillary to bring in Hillary’s supporters, who might otherwise be bitter and sit out. Second, that Hillary has some sort of entitlement to the VP spot. Let’s dispense with the first right now: Obama most certainly does NOT need Hillary to bring in any votes. I heard that hack Pat Buchanan (why is he still allowed on TV?) say that Obama will need Hillary to get her 17 million voters. NO, her supporters are still Democrats, and the vast vast vast majority of them are NOT controlled by her. She does not speak for them. As Hillary supporter Hilary Rosen declared after watching Hillary’s non-concession speech,
She is waiting to figure out how she would "use" her 18 million voters.

But not my vote. I will enthusiastically support Barack Obama's campaign. Because I am not a bargaining chip. I am a Democrat.
I shouldn’t even call this their rationale for including her on the ticket, it is more like a threat—-many of these people are actually threatening Obama, telling him to pick Hillary or else. These people are a minority though, and they don’t have real power. Hillary can't even hold onto her superdelegates and big donors, let alone "her" voters. The vast majority of "her" voters are smart enough to realize what is at stake in this election, and they won’t scorch the earth and spite themselves and the country just because their preferred candidate didn’t win. Her hardcore supporters also believe, mistakenly, that Obama needs Hillary to bring in certain demographics that Hillary’s campaign (with the help of the media) have pretended Obama had some kind of "problem" with. I’ll get to this in more detail later, but let me say now that that is absolutely false.

Secondly, just a word about entitlement. Hillary and her most loyal supporters seem to have this idea that Hillary is entitled to be Obama’s VP. They seem to think she deserves it because she came in second place. I've said this before, she has no entitlement to the vice presidency (or anything else) because there is no consolation prize for losing the Democratic primary. John Kerry didn't get a consolation prize for winning over 59 million votes in 2004. And yet Hillary is under the mistaken impression that having 17-some million voters vote for her makes her special and entitled to whatever she wants in the world. She is wrong. Furthermore, she doesn't deserve a reward for the nasty, divisive campaign she ran against a fellow Democrat. The Democratic Party owes her nothing. The only people that owe Hillary anything are John McCain and the Republicans, because she helped them out early on by throwing every right-wing attack she could come up with at Obama, without any care of what impact that would have on the Democratic Party in November. No, she hasn’t done anything to deserve a reward. And the vice presidency isn’t a reward anyway, it is something that should go to the best person for the job, and that is what this blog is all about.




Reasons That Automatically Disqualify Hillary as VP. Each of these reasons by itself is reason enough to disqualify Hillary from being VP. You only need one, but there are a lot more than one

1.1: The Lieberman Threshold -- The most obvious reason that immediately disqualified Hillary for the VP position is that she endorsed John McCain over Obama, multiple times, saying that McCain was ready to lead, qualified to be Commander-in-Chief, while Obama was not. She said all that, even though by that time it was already fairly obvious that Obama was going to be the likely nominee. She said all that, despite how it would obviously be used against Obama by the Republicans in the general election. She did it anyway, because she was willing to say and do anything to win. And as predicted, McCain is already using that footage of Hillary’s comments to attack Obama, with the McCain campaign stating that "Senator Clinton articulated the fundamental difference between John McCain and Barack Obama as well as anyone." Thanks Hillary. And now she wants to be VP? She spoke of a "threshold" that she had crossed, and she is right, she did cross a threshold, the Lieberman Threshold, the point where you stab your own party in the back and support the enemy. This is worse though, because at least Lieberman isn’t even a Democrat anymore, but Hillary is, and much more, because she was running to be president (hey, Lieberman did that too...), and now she is trying to be vice president, and yet she stabbed her party’s nominee in the back, repeatedly, and said that McCain would be more qualified. This obviously disqualifies Hillary from being chosen as Obama’s VP, you can’t come back from something like that. It was inexcusable, and he can’t very well have a VP who thinks their opponent is better than her boss. As Rachel Maddow said quite succinctly,
That's what you say when you want to be John McCain's vice presidential choice, that's not what you say when you're trying to become the Democratic nominee for president.
Or, the Democratic vice presidential nominee.



1.2: The Authorization of the Iraq War -- The second thing that automatically disqualifies her from being Obama’s VP is her vote to authorize the war in Iraq, and her subsequent support for the war, up until the point it became politically unpopular to support it in the Democratic Party. This is a pretty simple one. If you’ve been following the back and forth between Obama and McCain over foreign policy in the last couple of weeks, you’ll notice that Obama is tearing McCain up pretty well over his support for the war, and his flawed judgment. Obama can easily juxtapose McCain’s positions with his own, because unlike McCain, Obama had the good sense to oppose the war from the beginning. This offers Obama the ability to make very stark distinctions between him and McCain on foreign policy, and he is very effective in doing so. However, because of her support for the war, Hillary couldn’t make such a case, and thus as I’ve said before she would have been a much weaker presidential nominee. This also applies to the VP spot. Having her on the ticket with Obama would muddy his clear record of opposition, and make it easy for McCain to avoid being targeted for his support of the war, by simply pointing at Obama’s running mate. This obviously cannot be allowed. It is all made worse by the fact that she has never apologized for her support of the war, or admit she made a mistake, as Edwards has. This is important in ANY vice presidential candidate, they have to have been anti-war from the start, just like Obama.

1.3: Change Vs Status Quo -- The third reason Hillary is automatically disqualified from being VP is that she epitomizes status quo politics, or essentially everything Obama is running against. His entire campaign has been about changing the way Washington works and the way politics is played. Hillary is the quintessential Washington insider. Hillary used some of the worst of nasty Washington tactics in her campaign against Obama. Not just Washington tactics, nasty Republican tactics. She has consistently engaged in the politics of personal destruction to get ahead. She has lied to voters, she has used fearmongering, she has used race-baiting. Her campaign was incredibly negative. And while Obama and Edwards refused to take any money from federal lobbyists and special interest PACs, Hillary encouraged money from these sources. Hillary ran a campaign that was the antithesis of everything good that Obama’s represented. The core theme of Obama’s campaign is change, and there simply can’t be change with a relic of the status quo like Hillary filling up the bottom half of the ticket. It would destroy his argument of change, and he simply cannot do that. Edwards said it well:



1.4: Over His Dead Body -- The final thing that automatically disqualifies Hillary from being VP is her repeated invocation of Bobby Kennedy’s assassination when asked to explain why she is still in the race despite it being mathematically impossible for her to win. You can read my full commentary on her controversial comments here, but I’ll summarize it briefly now. She basically showed us that the possibility of Obama’s assassination was on her mind, and it was the only rationale that explained how she could still win the nomination. After Obama is elected, her chances of being president disappear, so her only way to get there is to be VP, and then for Obama to die. Now I’m not saying that she would somehow conspire to have him assassinated, but the last thing Obama needs it a VP who is waiting there for 0-8 years for him to be assassinated so she can step over his dead body and finally put on her long-coveted crown. Simply put, I never want Hillary in a position where she would benefit politically from Obama’s death. I’ll just leave it at that. Again, if you want to know more about my views of her comments, read my original post. I believe these comments disqualify Hillary from being Obama’s VP, especially in the minds of the millions of Obama supporters who really fear for the safety of the likely first black president. Rachel Maddow had a good comment on this one too:



And you may want to review Olbermann’s impassioned response to Hillary’s comments:



So we’ve already disqualified Hillary as VP four times over, and I could easily stop there and have all the justification anyone would need to rule her out as a viable pick, but there are many more reasons. Let’s move on to the major reasons:

Major Reasons Hillary Shouldn’t Be VP. None of these reasons necessarily disqualify Hillary by themselves, but they come close. These are BIG reasons why she shouldn’t be VP, just not the biggest.

2.1: The Kitchen Sink -- I already mention how Hillary epitomized the worst kind of politics in her primary battle against Obama, but aside from ruining Obama’s message of change if she were VP, the ruthless attacks themselves give us plenty of reasons why Hillary doesn’t deserve to be VP. My entire blog thus far is basically one big resource of all of Hillary’s negative attacks, you could take your pick of countless examples. Suffice to say, her tactics became appropriately known as the "Tonya Harding Strategy" (or alternatively, the kitchen sink strategy), for her desire to kneecap Obama at any cost. She lied about Obama’s positions, she lied about what Obama has said, she lied about what he has done. She (and Bill) disparaged his very real and very important opposition to the war in a cynical attempt to make them look better by comparison. She played the most cynical games with guilt-by-association attacks against Obama, including questioning his relationship with Rev. Wright and trying to connect him with terrorists. She called him out of touch and elitist (another anti-Democrat talking point). Her surrogates accused him of being "terribly sexist" (and she never said she didn’t agree). She left the door open for right-wing Obama-is-a-Muslim smears by saying that Obama wasn’t a Muslim, as far as she knew. Her campaign tried to paint Obama as anti-Israel, and perhaps even anti-Semitic. Her crazy husband even accused Obama of coordinating some vast media conspiracy to attack the them. There are many many many more examples (again, browse through my entire blog), and every single one of them gives Obama a big reason not to pick her as VP, and taken all together, well Obama has about a thousand reasons not to pick her as VP. Going back to her style of old politics, her say-and-do-anything-to-win philosophy, all of her attacks highlight her less-than-savory character, and that simply isn’t the kind of person we want as a leader, president, vice president, or anything.

2.2: The Michigan-Florida Fiasco -- The next big reason is along the same lines. Obama has a big reason not to pick her because of her incessant attempts to delegitimize him by exploiting the Michigan-Florida fiasco to her political advantage. First, she agreed to the rules, then, when political convenient for her, she switched 180 degrees and started attacking Obama in these important swing states, trying to make it look like Obama was trying to disenfranchise voters, even though his campaign kept trying to find an equitable solution to the impasse (and Hillary’s campaign shot down all of them). This episode highlights her willingness to break the rules, to say and do anything to win, and to unjustifiably attack Obama in a way that could have hurt him (or maybe was intended to hurt him) in the general election. Even after the DNC’s Rules & Bylaws Committee reached a compromise position and it was inevitable that Obama would be our nominee, Hillary’s surrogates continued their media blitz trying to say Hillary was somehow robbed by Obama and that his nomination was somehow illegitimate. Even if Obama could forgive Hillary for employing such divisive and shameless tactics, her willingness to engage in that sort of transparent political game playing and hypocrisy would reflect poorly on the ticket if Hillary was VP. Resorting to that strategy is inexcusable. Comparing Obama and the DNC to Mugabe's murderous regime in Zimbabwe is inexcusable. You can also add her ridiculous and disingenuous "popular vote" claims, or her disparaging "states that matter" claims or her "big state" claims or any other fallacious metric she invented to try to deceive voters and delegitimize Obama’s nomination. All reflect very poorly on her character, and all were direct attacks on Obama's legitimacy, which he graciously tolerated, but should not now be rewarded.

2.3: Race-Baiting -- I briefly mentioned her race-baiting before, as an example of her stooping to Rove-like tactics to take down Obama. I think it deserves its own place on the list though, because her exploitation of racism to try to paint Obama as "the black candidate" (thus scaring away white voters) has been one of the most disturbing things to come out of this campaign. You can read a detailed analysis of examples of race-baiting from the Clinton campaign here, or if you want to see the bigger picture you can check out multiple posts on the subject here. Essentially they tried to sabotage the first viable black presidential candidate in the most cynical (and conservative) way by repeatedly injecting the issue of race into the campaign. It was shameless, despicable, and unforgivable. And as I pointed out the other day, not only did it not work, it actually resulted in greatly increased unfavorable ratings for the Clintons among African Americans. Putting her on the ticket, essentially rewarding these despicable tactics, would be a huge slap in the face to African Americans who have been appalled by her campaign’s use of racism to marginalize and sabotage Obama's historical candidacy. She should definitely not be rewarded for using those kinds of tactics.

2.4: Backseat Sabotage -- Another big reason Hillary should not be VP is because she simply doesn’t have the personality of someone who would be satisfied taking on the #2 role. She wants to have power, and the vice presidency doesn’t have power (not unless you are Dick Cheney, but that is an extreme exception, not the rule). Hillary has always been fond of this "co-presidency" idea, both in the 90s when Bill was president, and in this campaign where it has been a two-for-one special the whole way. It would be hard to imagine Hillary not trying to steal the spotlight as the bottom half of an Obama ticket. I think it is pretty easy to imagine her trying to lead from the backseat, and you can surely imagine how that imagine would play out publicly, especially on shows like Saturday Night Live. It would make Obama look weak, and that might very well be the point. There can be no doubt after watching months of Hillary try to sink Obama that the Clintons are very angry and bitter that Obama "ruined" what they both thought she was entitled to by divine right. They obviously think he is inferior, they obviously think he is undeserving (interesting how they define "deserving"), and they obviously resent his success. She has clearly engaged in a scorched earth strategy for the last couple months as evidenced by her nothing-to-lose (for her) blitz of negativity. Even after it was clear he would be the nominee, she continued to try to sabotage (most recently with claiming unfair treatment and sexism, trying to embitter her supporters), and there is no indication she won’t continue even in defeat. Being the vice president would give her unparalleled ability to try to sabotage his administration, and that is obviously something that Obama shouldn’t have to deal with. Hillary supporter Gov. Rendell even spoke of the big challenges Obama would face if he had Hillary (and by extension Bill) as a running mate:
"The Obama campaign would have to make strict rules, you know, about what President Clinton could and could not do during the campaign... For example, the Obama campaign would have to control his schedule; where he would go into, what states," Rendell told Carter.

"You know, normally politicians don't want to be outshone. Well you know you've got Bill Clinton lurking in the background. But Hillary Clinton, a very charismatic figure for many Americans -- generally a lot of politicians don't like to put somebody like that on the ticket," continued Rendell. "You know rule one for the vice president is make sure you never upstage the president, right? It’s rule one. You know, Hillary Clinton in some ways couldn't help but upstage, even if she was trying not to"
I believe this is also an important factor to take into account for any potential VP choice, they have to be able to defer to Obama. This is one of the reasons I think Jim Webb would be a poor choice, he is a fine senator, but he has a strong personality, not the personality of a follower.

2.5: Kyl-Lieberman & Iran -- Having not learned her lesson from Iraq, Hillary cast a vote in lockstep with Bush, McCain and the Republicans in September of 2007, which recklessly identified the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, an official branch of the state military of Iran, as a terrorist organization, all without evidence of any terrorism, or even killing, and all seemingly without recognition of the dangerous precedent such a declaration would make, and the fact that by the same logic of that declaration the US government represents the world’s largest terrorist organization. Let’s face it, Hillary is a foreign policy hawk, and just like the Iraq vote, her Iran vote put her on the wrong side of the Obama – McCain divide, and makes her a huge liability on the ticket. Obama has been hitting McCain very hard on Iran and foreign policy, and having Hillary on the ticket would limit Obama’s ability to draw a clear distinction between the failed policies of the status quo (Bush-McCain-Hillary), and the new smart policies of change (Obama). Add to this her comments a month or so ago when she threatened to “totally obliterate” Iran, and you can start to see why this is an important reason for her not to be on the ticket.

2.6: The Electoral Typhoid Mary -- This is a big one that isn’t about what she has said or done, rather it is about what she would do to the ticket just by being part of it. She’d kill it. Let’s be honest, Hillary has incredibly high negative ratings among the general electorate. A full 50% of Americans dislike her. We didn’t have to deal with this in the general because she did fine for the most part among Democrats, but for the whole country it is another story. We have to face it, Hillary is very polarizing. She came into this race very polarizing, and she left even more polarizing, because now even many on the left, like me, who were fine with her when she began, can’t stand her now because of her negative and divisive campaign. We need to fight for the middle (and even take some disillusioned Republicans with us) in the general election, and Obama is very very good at this, and McCain is decent at it, to a lesser extent, but Hillary is very bad at it, and having her on the ticket would undoubtedly push many in the middle over to McCain. Past the independents, she would keep away disillusioned Republicans who may have otherwise crossed over to Obama. Instead, they would stay with McCain to take down Hillary, and McCain’s entire Republican base would rally and become energized by fighting Hillary. Even Republicans like Rush Limbaugh have acknowledged this upfront:
The Republicans do not seem to be relying on leadership in their party to unite the party. They seem to be relying on all these external things, nobody is going to vote for Hillary, negative turnout factor. What if she's not the nominee? We've got make sure she's the nominee if the Republican Party is to be unified.

[…]

She just polarizes people. I think she's going to gin up enough anti-Hillary turnout out there to perhaps be a boon to whoever the Republican nominee is.

Now, if Obama is the nominee, we are doomed, and you should get ready and prepared for it now.
That is the best articulation of it, straight from the fat bastard’s mouth. Having Hillary on the ticket, even as vice president, would be the best possible thing for the Republicans, and it would most likely completely negate the amazing gains Obama is making in the electorate. Having Hillary on the ticket would be the best way to slam the breaks on the massive victory we are heading for in November, from the White House to Congress to local races all the way down the ballot (this is known as the Hillary Effect).

2.7: Let The Vetting Begin -- Hillary spoke a lot of vetting throughout the primary campaign, generally claiming that she had been thoroughly vetted throughout the 90s, and so she was now squeaky clean, while Obama is a big question mark. The honest truth is that while Obama was vetted up and down by Hillary and the media throughout the campaign, and actually was pretty spotless (ridiculous attempts to tie him to his former pastor’s out of context comments aside), Hillary hasn’t actually been vetted all that well. Obama was nice enough not to tear through his opponent like she tried with him, and the media was asleep at the wheel, so we actually heard very little of the possible dirt on Hillary (and by extension, Bill) during the primaries. However the general election is another story, and it is Obama’s responsibility, and right, to thoroughly vet every single vice presidential option to make sure they wouldn’t become a liability in the general election, or even after taking office. Matthew Yglesias at The Atlantic gives a brief look at the VP vetting process:
The vetting process entails a rigorous schedule of interviews focusing on everything from politics to potential embarrassments -- Did they ever employ a nanny on whose behalf they did not pay Social Security taxes, for example; did they experiment with drugs or people in college? -- and potential candidates are required to give the search team access to their tax returns and other financial records.
I emphasized that last point for a reason. While the media didn’t make an issue out of Bill’s numerous shady business dealings and conflicts of interest, the Republicans surely would (you can be certain that they are sitting on a fat file cabinet of dirt just in case Hillary finds her way onto the ticket). There is a lot of dirt there, and the Clintons have been very secretive about disclosing that information. They didn’t come anywhere close to coming completely clean during the primaries, and there is little indication that they would submit to giving all that information up to Obama now for thorough vetting. Hendrik Hertzberg from the New Yorker gives us a look at what other problems Hillary might run into during the vetting process:
Hillary has her own vulnerability in this general area, and it is larger than the fact, mentioned by Obama in his riposte to her, that her husband, on his last day in office, commuted the sentences of a couple of old Weather Underground jailbirds. ...

My point is that Hillary Clinton has not, in fact, survived the worst that the Republican attack machine (and its pilotless drones online and on talk radio) can dish out. We will learn what the worst really means if she is nominated. The Commie law firm will be only the beginning. Many tempting targets—from Bill’s little-examined fund-raising and business activities during the past seven years to the prospect of his hanging around the White House in some as yet undefined role for another four or eight years to whatever leftovers from the Clinton "scandals" of the nineteen-nineties can be retrieved from the dumpster and reheated—remain to be machine-gunned. The whole Clinton marital soap opera, obviously off limits within the Democratic fold, will offer ample material for what Obama calls "distractions." To take the most obvious example, the former President’s social life since leaving the White House will become, if not "fair game," big game—and some of these right-wing dirtbags are already hiring bearers and trying on pith helmets for the safari. Is this a "there" where the Democratic Party really wants to go?
It wouldn’t be pretty, assuming they Clintons actually submitted to it (which is unlikely), and there is little chance she would come out the other side with a clean bill of health. The vetting process is actually the most likely explanation for why she won’t be chosen as Obama’s running mate, because she is a walking liability, her refusal to be vetted with disqualify her, and no one can fault Obama (and all Democrats) for wanting the strongest ticket possible. It could be his best friend in the world but if they have unsavory scandals in the closet they shouldn’t get anywhere close to being VP, period. It is nothing personal, it has nothing to do with Hillary or any other reasons on this list, it is simply business, and common sense. Hillary must be vetted.

Minor Reasons Hillary Shouldn’t Be VP. We’ve already seen a ton of reasons why Hillary would be a horrible choice for VP, but there are more still. This category is for the non-major reasons, but that doesn’t make them insignificant.

3.1: Excess Baggage --This goes with the vetting process above (2.7), but assuming she was chosen somehow, her (and Bill’s) baggage from the past, and present, would be a never ending issue. Most of us can recall the circus that the Clintons made of the Democratic Party in the 90s with all of their drama, and I think very few of us want to go back there (especially given how many electoral defeats the Democrats suffered during those years). Add to this Bill’s increasingly erratic and antagonistic behavior, and you have a Pandora’s box you don’t want to open. And the recent Vanity Fair article about Bill highlights that these problems aren’t going away. Leave the past in the past, and the Clintons off the ticket.

3.2: Brings Nothing To The Table -- When looking at any VP candidate, you have to ask yourself what they bring to the table. This isn’t so much something wrong with Hillary, but it is simply something that Hillary doesn’t do. It isn’t as if she just has to not have any reasons NOT to put her on the ticket, she still needs to have reasons TO put her on the ticket, and she doesn’t. This is what I alluded to at the beginning, Hillary brings nothing demographically to the ticket. Despite all her rhetoric about being the best to bring in those elusive "white, hardworking white Americans who are white, and hard working and not dark" Americans, she doesn’t actually do better among this group outside of Appalachia. In addition to that, the most recent poll out of West Virginia shows Obama not far behind McCain! And beyond that, West Virginia and Kentucky are not states that Obama has to win in November, and that is really all Hillary can claim she can do for him. Worse, she has never been able to offer any logical argument or empirical evidence to back up her claim that she can carry certain states better than Obama in the general election simply because she won among Democrats in those primaries. There is one state Hillary could possibly help in, and that is Florida, but the numbers out of Florida are deceiving because Obama has been unable to campaign there, thus his numbers are at their lowest levels, while Hillary’s are most likely at their highest. It is entirely possible that Obama will be able to carry Florida without Hillary, and there is a distinct possibility that he won’t even need Florida to beat McCain, because of how he expands the map (and remember the electoral Typhoid Mary, she is much more likely to hurt than she would be to help). The national polls already show Obama gaining huge leads over Hillary, even among her strongest demographic: women. He is even ahead in Latino votes nationally. He wins among the poorly educated now. He wins among low-income voters. He doesn't need Hillary to bring these groups, these are all Democrats, and they will vote for the Democratic nominee (and lets not forget that many of these perceived Hillary strengths were padded by Limbaugh Democrats). One last point, and this is important: even among groups she performs well in, like Latinos, that doesn’t mean she is the standard bearer of this group, and there is no reason to assume that there aren’t other VP options who would bring in that vote much better, for example Bill Richardson, who would probably help Obama win Florida, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and possibly even Texas (some of those states Obama can win without him, but Richardson would give him an even bigger boost). Simply put, Hillary adds nothing to the ticket, she doesn’t add states, and she doesn’t add demographic advantages (nor does she add good judgment, exceptional experience, or management skills, which we will see next).

3.3: Poor Management --Again, let’s be honest, Hillary has run a terrible campaign, and I’m not talking about tactics this time, I’m talking about organization, staffing and strategy. She surrounded herself not with the best people, but with loyalists who were placed as favors, not because they were qualified. The most striking example of this was her placement of Patti Solis Doyle, someone without any campaign managing experience, as campaign manager. She also made horrible strategic decisions, like having a bad campaign message, poor grassroots organization, no long-term strategy, and basically ignoring half of the states. She also managed to take a campaign staffed with the party’s best fundraisers (that she did part right), and managed to run her campaign into debt by having absolutely no idea how much money she had, or how much money they were burning through (and spending excessive spending on luxuries). She ended up with around $30,000,000 in debt, and at times vendors were considering taking her to collection agencies to get their money. She essentially ran her campaign into the ground, which leaves you with the obvious question, who is really ready to lead on day one? The truth is, Obama, the person they so fatally underestimated, ran a well oiled and unprecedented campaign, bringing in unprecedented amounts of money from an unprecedented number of people and operated a grassroots level in 50 states with a massive number of volunteers. He ran a campaign for the history books, and all against Hillary’s establishment machine, and he won big as hers fell apart around her. She definitely doesn't bring management or organization to the table. And would you actually believe that she would run a better campaign if she were trying to win for Obama instead of herself? Not a chance.

3.4: Forced Ticket -- As Hillary’s surrogates work overtime to try to force Obama to pick her as his VP, it raises the potential of Obama looking weak if he did pick Hillary as VP in the end. This is the first big decision of the general election for Obama, and so far in everything else he has done post-primary he has been a strong leader. Now people are looking to who his VP will be, and Hillary’s surrogates are trying to force-feed him, the nominee and leader of the Democratic Party, Hillary Clinton as his VP. Taking her as his running mate under those conditions would make him look weak, and it would definitely give him an image problem, especially given the perils of the "backseat sabotage" I mentioned previously (2.4). As Hillary-supporter Gov. Rendell stated firmly:
There's no bargaining. You don't bargain with the Presidential nominee. Even if you're Hillary Clinton and you have 18 million votes, you don't bargain.
And frankly Obama isn’t weak. He was the proverbial David standing up to the doubleteaming Goliath, and he knocked them down against all odds. He won’t be threatened or forced into anything. He has always picked the best people for the job (not a single shakeup in his campaign for incompetence, compare that to Hillary’s record), as we just saw with his decision to keep Dean as DNC Chairman, and the VP position is no different. In fact, if Obama were to pick Hillary as VP, that would be the first time I ever had reason to doubt his judgment.

If somehow all of those reasons didn't prove beyond a doubt that she would be a horrible choice for VP, you can just listen to Jimmy Carter’s opinion about the nightmare ticket:
I think it would be the worst mistake that could be made.
Well said Carter, well said.

Other Ideas For Hillary’s Non-VP Future.Unfortunately many of the people who know better than to advocate for Hillary as VP have suggested other consolation positions for her, although those ideas are also ill-advised. And again, why the sense of entitlement? Why does she need to receive any special treatment not afforded to others like Kerry, Dodd, Biden, Kucinich, Richardson, Edwards, Ted Kennedy, etc?

4.1: Cabinet Position – Team of Rivals-- This one Obama brought upon himself, and I hope he was just thinking out loud in a very not-serious way. Here is what he said not so long ago:
One of my heroes is Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln basically pulled in all the people who had been running against him into his cabinet because whatever personal feelings there were, the issue was 'how can we get this country through this time of crisis?’ And I think that has to be the approach that one takes.
Now there has been much (legitimate) talk about the possibility of appointing some of his "rivals" to important positions, like John Edwards as Attorney General (he is a lawyer, and the social justice issues he advocates would make it a good fit), and perhaps Senator Biden as Secretary of State (he has a ton of experience in foreign policy), and perhaps Wes Clark (okay, not an '08 candidate, but he did support Hillary) for National Security Advisor (if there isn't anyone better. I would say Secretary of Defense, but military personnel must be at least 10 years removed from active duty before they can assume that role, and Clark retired in 2000). Those I understand, because these people are qualified, and they aren’t "rivals" to the extent that they are on opposite sides of the issues or hate each other. Hillary though, is another story entirely. Obviously it would be hard for Hillary and Obama to work closely together again, especially with Obama as Hillary's boss, it just wouldn't work. Also, I think it is a safe assumption that anyone who brings up the idea of a cabinet position for Hillary has the Department of Health & Human Services in mind for her. This sounds reasonable because she is all about health care right? Wrong. She has tried to brand herself as a expert on health care, but in reality she is far from an expert. She has no educational background in medicine or public health policy. She has never held a job in any field related to health care. The closest thing she has to experience in health care is a failed pet project in the 90s, and her current assignment on the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions. But does that make her an expert? Not even close. Does that qualify her to be Secretary of Health & Human Services? Most definitely not. Is she equipped to manage "one of the largest civilian departments in the federal government, with a budget that accounts for almost one out of every four federal dollars and more than 67,000 employees"? From the looks of how she ran her campaign, not a chance. Listen, with all due respect to Hillary, she just isn’t qualified. You know what? I’m not either, that’s why I’m not going to get put in charge of health policy for the entire United States. The cabinet is meant for EXPERTS, the best of the best, so the president can have the very best advice and so the federal government can run as smoothly as possible. Bush didn’t understand this, or didn’t care, so he put his corporate cronies in charge of everything, no matter how unqualified they were, and we’ve seen disastrous results across the board. Obama is not an idiot, he wants the best people supporting him, and so there is no room to be handing out Cabinet positions as consolation gifts for people who are bitter about losing the presidential nomination.

4.2: Supreme Court Justice-- Fine, except she isn’t a scholar, isn’t qualified, and failed the bar, even though 95% of Yale Law graduates pass the bar, she was in the bottom 5% who failed it. After failing the bar she jumped on Bill’s coattails and road them throughout his entire political career, eventually winning her a seat in the Senate in a state she didn’t belong to, not because she had any experience, but because of who she married (seriously, ask yourself if anyone who wasn't married to Bill Clinton could have done what she did). And now she is supposedly qualified to sit on the Supreme Court just because she came in second place in her party’s presidential primary? I don’t think so. Again, why are people floating the idea of putting Hillary in positions she isn’t the least bit qualified for?

4.3: Senate Majority Leader-- And then there is the position of Senate Majority Leader, currently held by Sen. Harry Reid. Well, let’s just ask Sen. Reid about what he thinks about Hillary deserving his job as a consolation prize:
I do this job the best I can, with the full support of my senators. I feel very comfortable with where I've gotten.

Keep in mind also, a senator coming back who's run for president is not a very unique one. Senator John Kerry ran, he's back. Chris Dodd ran, he's back. Joe Biden ran, he's back.

Those senators have been plenty busy since returning from the campaign trail. … Senator Clinton has some very fine committee assignments.
Hm, good point Harry, why is Hillary owed your job just because she ran a horrible campaign and spent months attacking her own party? Is it because she is more qualified than you? Let’s see, what did Harry Reid have to do to get to where he is now? He was the governor of Nevada for four years. Then, he spent two terms in the US House of Representatives. Then he served in the Senate for 20 years, including two years as Majority Whip. But apparently Hillary deserves to be Senate Majority Leader because she was married to a president, got elected to the Senate after carpetbagging her way into New York with no legitimate experience, then served a term in the Senate and ran a failed campaign for her party’s presidential nomination. Yeah, I guess that is more important than 24 years in the US Congress and four years of executive experience. Step aside Reid, people seem to think Hillary is entitled to your job.

4.4: Governor of New York-- Who knows. Like I said before, how she ran her campaign doesn't give me much confidence in her ability to manage, and the state of New York would be quite the management nightmare. This I’m less opposed to than other ideas though (although being Lt. Gov. first would make her more qualified), except one small problem, her supporter David Patterson happens to have the job now, and is planning on running for reelection, and he is fairly popular, and African-American, which probably wouldn’t go over well after the racial issues she stirred up against Obama. Pollster John Zogby put it well:
She'd be nuts to take on a sitting governor, an African-American governor, and let's assume a somewhat popular governor. It would be viewed, to say the least, as a hostile act.
Which means she’d probably try to take him on.




Here’s the bottom line: Hillary would be the worst possible pick for VP, for the many reasons listed above. Hillary isn’t entitled to anything just because she got a lot of votes but eventually came up short, it isn’t a unique occurrence, and no one else comes back from their failed bids thinking they deserve to given a special prize. I’m thankful that some people recognize the nightmare ticket for the disaster it is, but quit trying to place her in positions she isn’t qualified for or hasn't earned, just because she is Hillary Clinton. There are over 30 Democratic Senators with more seniority than her, and she is still maybe 8 years from having enough seniority to chair a committee, let alone be Majority Leader. People need to get realistic.

One last thing, for all those women who are sad because Hillary isn’t going to break the "ultimate glass ceiling":
Newsweek's Howard Fineman just said on MSNBC at 8:35pm Eastern that the Clinton campaign is demanding that Hillary be offered the VP position, which she will then decline, and then Fineman quotes the Clinton campaign as saying "don't you dare offer it to another woman." Isn't that special. Apparently, Hillary was only planning on breaking her own personal glass ceiling. For the rest of you, you can break you own.
I hope her supporters didn’t think she was doing this for all women, because she is doing it for her own political gain and fame, women are just a sympathetic tool at her disposal.

[In conclusion, please feel free to use these reasons to push back against people who are in favor of the nightmare ticket, because people need to start being realistic, this isn't something we want to screw up. Also, if I missed anything, let me know in the comments and I'll keep adding to the list. And if you read this entire thing, you are a hardcore, gracias!]

And read this to see why Richardson would be a very good choice for VP.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Hillary Concedes

Hillary is giving her concession speech, finally, after Obama has been the nominee for five days. Her speech started out by going on and on about the sacrifice of her supporters to her campaign, which I don't believe is necessary. Yes, people on all sides had a lot invested in ALL of the campaigns, your supporters haven't struggled any more than Obama's. It seems like she was trying to strengthen the "us" part of the "us vs them" dynamic, but call me cynical.

It took her almost six and a half minutes to mention Obama, and announce that she was endorsing him and that she wanted her supporters to work to make Obama president. She also said that we can't afford having another Republican president, which was correct. She said the words, but her energy wasn't there, her body language wasn't in it, it just wasn't all that convincing. But it sounded like the majority of her supporters in attendance were adults, and real Democrats, who are committed to supporting Obama and defeating McCain in the general election. There were of course some bitter, vindictive supporters there, but they are definitely the minority, even if they are vocal.

She didn't talk about Obama long, and then she talked about herself a lot more, talking about her place in history, talking about women and sexism and glass ceilings, reinforcing the idea that Hillary and women and women's rights are all the same thing. And that's basically how she finished it.

She didn't really take on McCain, she barely praised Obama, it seemed lacking. The pundits seem to like it, but I think many on the blogosphere share my feeling that she wasn't going out of her way to help him, and it was more about her than anything else.

Anyway, it (the primary) is over. Finally.

Update: Here's the video:

Clinton Insider Dishes: The Clintons Tried To Exploit Racial Divisions In Pennsylvania Primary

Wow, so this is probably the biggest news you won't hear anywhere in the MSM. Hillary supporter Rep. Rob Andrews (D-NJ) recently opened up in an interview and gave a disgusting inside view of the Clinton race-baiting strategy:

Andrews, a centrist who had been supporting Hillary in the primaries, told the Newark Star-Ledger that a high-ranking member of the Clinton camp approached him in the run-up to the Pennsylvania primary about using a strategy to exploit divisions between Jews and blacks, as a way of increasing Hillary's share of the Jewish vote in that big primary.

"There have been signals coming out of the Clinton campaign that have racial overtones that indeed disturb me," Andrews said at his campaign headquarters in Cherry Hill Tuesday night after he lost his bid for the U.S. Senate nomination. "Frankly, I had a private conversation with a high-ranking person in the campaign ... that used a racial line of argument that I found very disconcerting. It was extremely disconcerting given the rank of this person. It was very disturbing."
Now there is little reason to doubt what Andrews is saying, because after all, he is a Hillary supporter, not an Obama supporter with a grudge (not that Obama supporters would make up stories to score political points). Most disturbingly, it fits the Clinton M.O. perfectly. I've written before about their race-baiting tactics, and the strategy has been fairly transparent, as has the Clinton thought process, but until now we didn't have an inside look at actually discussions of using these tactics, and the African Americans vs Jews strategy isn't something that has really come up before. It does fit though, she has tried to make Obama look anti-Israel to get the Jewish community to turn on him, and she has tried to make him look "too black" so white people would turn on him, so why not put the two together I guess?

I hope Andrews elaborates on this at a later date, because I think we are owed a full picture of the horrible tactics the Clintons were willing to stoop to in order to win the nomination, or perhaps just to sabotage Obama.

Friday, June 6, 2008

The Consequences Of Race-Baiting

This will be short because I'm sick of the primary campaign.

A new Gallup poll came out showing, in striking terms, what Hillary (and probably Bill as well) has done to her approval ratings among blacks, mostly thanks to her race-baiting tactics:



A 26% drop in approval and a corresponding 26% increase in disapproval in a little less than a year. Wow. Was it worth it Hillary? Did you have to stoop to Republican levels to try to take down Obama?

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Obama, As The New Leader Of The Democratic Party, Calls The Shots

One of the things it was widely known that the Clintons wanted to do as soon as they won the nomination was to kick Howard Dean out of the DNC and load it with their DLC establishment cronies that share their same views of how the Democratic Party should be. For me this would have been one of many big negatives of Hillary winning the nomination. The DLCers have always pursued a narrow-minded, short-sighted, triangulating vision of Democratic strategy, and we can see what that got us: 8 years of Bill Clinton playing the role of Reagan-lite (in terms of corporations, deregulation, budget and gutting social services), we lost 12 Senate seats while Bill was running the show, we lost 47 House seats, we lost 11 governorships, we lost control of 13 state legislatures, we lost well over a thousand state legislative seats, and hundreds of elected officials nationwide switched parties to the Republicans. That was the state of the Democratic Party after the mismanagement of the Clintons and the DLC.
And it is no secret they were very much against Dean when he took control of the DNC. They were against his 50-state strategy, instead preferring the narrow 50%+1 strategy that had failed the Party for many elections. Since then we've seen that Dean really knew what he was doing, and has presided over huge victories for Democrats in every corner of the country. Dean has done a great job, shown great leadership, and left an indelible mark on this country.
Howard Dean, DNC Chair, Rockstar

So Hillary didn't win, the Clintons were unable to take control of the Party and kick out Dean, but the question of Dean's future was still unknown, as the DNC Chair's tenure is usually an open question after a nominee is chosen, because the nominee will usually install a loyalist at the helm. Today Obama gave us a look at what he has in mind for the future of the DNC:
Senator Obama appreciates the hard work that Chairman Dean has done to grow our party at the grassroots level and looks forward to working with him as the chairman of the Democratic Party as we go forward.
That's right, Dean stays. Obama, once again, showed exceptional judgment. He has always embraced the 50-state strategy and he recognizes that Dean has done a terrific job. Now we go on strong, with proven leadership both in the DNC and Obama, and we are going to unleash an electoral tsunami on the Republicans, essentially the exact opposite of what the Clintons and the DLC did in the 90s, and for the second election in a row.

I, for one, can't wait to see who Obama picks for his cabinet, because his judgment is impeccable, and unlike Bush, he surrounds himself with the best qualified people, not loyalists he is rewarding for political favors. I'm confident he will assemble a great team, and the times are gonna be a-changin' when he gets into the White House.



Oh, and I think it is time to bring Samantha Power back.

Jon Stewart On Our Last Election Night For Five Long Months

Last night Jon Stewart hit up the high points and the low points of the final night of the Democratic primary. Highlights include Hillary's masturbatory "Me Me Me" non-concession speech, and juxtaposing her attack on the "biased" media with a dollop of clips of the media back in the day declaring Obama didn't have a chance in hell (special shoutout to Joe Scarborough here, playing the part of ignorant douche so well, as he is accustomed to), and John McCain's painful speech-like thing. The McCain part made me laugh out loud, and it wasn't even at a joke, it was at McCain himself, give it a watch:

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Hillary's Not-A-Concession Speech

Now for Hillary's speech.

Terry McAuliffe, chair of Hillary's campaign, introduced Hillary, rambling off the list of states she has won, and no doubt some distortions about the popular vote they didn't actually win. For the actual intro he asked the audience "Are you ready for the next President of the United States?!" The Clintons missed their entrance cue, kinda awkward.

The big question is whether or not Hillary is going to be a good loser and congratulate Obama and concede the nomination, and vow to support him, or, if she will continue to throw out lies about the popular vote and electability and all the rest in a desperate attempt to kneecap Obama.

First thing, she did congratulate Obama and his supporters for the campaign they have run. I'm expecting that to be as far as she goes.

Annddd yes, she unleashed the popular vote lie on her audience, and of course they eat it up, either because they actually think she is being honest, or because they just want their candidate to look like not a loser.

Now she is attacking the pundits for declaring the race over weeks ago...I can't say that was really an "I told you so" moment, so I'm not sure what her point was, the pundits (and mathematicians) were apparently right. The crowd booed.

Now she is talking up the swing states she won, and her disingenuous electability argument. The crowd chants "Yes she will! Yes she will!", apparently not getting the memo.*

Then she fits in a dig that the Democratic Party didn't want to count all the votes. And she claimed that each vote was sacred, she must not be talking about caucus votes though, or Obama supporters in Michigan, or the union members she tried to disenfranchise in Nevada. Oh well, I guess they aren't all sacred.

Now she is talking about fighting the Republicans on the issues. I'm not sure how trying to undermine Obama's victory fits into that big picture..

Hillary says she wants the 18 million who voted for her to be respected and listened to...not sure what she is getting at there...as if Obama is somehow going to single out Americans who voted for Hillary and ignore them? Oh wait, yes, this is part of her setting up that "us vs them" paradigm against Obama and the Democrats, trying to give her supporters the sense that they are victims, and that the big bad Obama might not listen to them or respect them.

She is trying to paint herself as the battered little soldier that could, spurred forward by the love of her supporters. Her supporters responded with chants of "Denver! Denver! Denver!" Apparently forgetting all that crap about fighting for a better America that she just finished talking about, and instead deciding to try to scorch the earth for the Democratic Party. Which, of course, is what Hillary wants from her supporters.

She announced that she isn't going to be making any decisions tonight about what to do next. She mentions the 18 million voters again, and then I think she just asked her supporters for advice on what to do. Interesting.

And a supporter just yelled "Don't vote for Obama" during a pause. Gotta love these people. And of course she doesn't tell them that that isn't what she is about, and that they should vote for Obama.

Hm, so she didn't even acknowledge that Obama won the nomination, or even that he won the majority of the delegates. Not even a mention, just thanked him for running. It wasn't a concession speech, it was essentially nothing but a call for the Democratic Party to remain divided. It is pretty despicable that for someone who demands respect for nothing, won't even show a fellow Democrat ANY respect by so much as acknowledging the history he just made. It just shows how rotten her character is, rotten to the core. She is no leader, she is a spoiled child.

*MSNBC notes that she chose an odd location for her rally, that doesn't have TV monitors, or cell phone service, or any contact with the outside world, so it was essentially a cut off reality, separated from our reality in which Obama had been declared the Democratic nominee about half an hour before she began her speech.

I, for one, am hoping she continues to fight and not be gracious, because the longer she puts her political ambition over what is best for the Party and the country, the harder it will be for people to try to push her as a VP candidate. Joe Klein points this out, in laying out what Hillary needed to do starting tonight, if she wants to heal the Party and have a shot at VP (bolded remarks mine):
But, if Hillary Clinton wants to have any shot at the vice presidency--and, more to the point, heal the Democratic Party's wounds and win back the affection of those Obama supporters she has offended in this long, brutal campaign, she will take the following steps:

1. Turn her concession speech into an Obama endorsement on Tuesday night. (She didn't even concede, let alone endorse Obama. She refused to even acknowledge that he won the majority of the delegates)

2. Money talks: Have her finance team contact the Obama campaign finance people tomorrow and announce that they will begin a massive, coordinated fundraising effort for Obama among her supporters--with some big number as a goal. (This might also encourage the Obama campaign to help settle some of Clinton's debt when the campaign is over.) (Doubtful, since she is still trying to drive a wedge between Obama and her most loyal supporters)

3. Agree to barnstorm immediately--like next week--with Obama in the big states where she did well that Democrats will need to win in November. Ohio and Pennsylvania come to mind. (Didn't happen, goes without saying, see #1 and #2)

4. Ask her friend and supporter Ellen Malcolm to organize a massive "Women for Obama" rally to be held in some major city. She should introduce Obama at this event and say, "This man will be the best president for the women of America since my husband held the job." She should do the same with her Latino supporters and also for Jewish voters on Florida's southeast coast. (No way in hell, she is trying to divide, not unite)

5. At her speech to the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee meeting on Wednesday morning, she should include this sentence: "Israel has no greater friend than Barack Obama...and just imagine what a message it will send when President Barack Obama makes plain his unflinching support for the state of Israel to the international community." (If she wants to take a risk, she might add the Hussein between Barack and Obama.) (Again, she isn't trying to help Obama, she is trying to hurt him)

In other words, if she wants to be considered as a possible vice president she's going to have make herself indispensable to the Obama campaign during the month of June...and even if she doesn't want the job, she can begin the process of winning the affection of those Democrats she lost in this tough, tough campaign.



The countdown to Hillary's concession begins now, or actually about half an hour ago. I'm kinda thinking she'll never actually officially concede.

Update: If you had any questions about whether or not she wants to continue to divide the Party, if you go to her website there is a pledge you can sign which says:
I'm with you Hillary and I'm proud of everything we are fighting for.
"I'm with you Hillary and I'm proud of everything we are fighting for." She doesn't want them to be with Democrats, she wants them to be with HER. And she continues to use words like "we" not to talk about Party unity, but to separate Hillary and her supporters from the rest of the Democratic Party.

Update #2: Jeffrey Toobin injected a little sense into CNN's election coverage last night, calling Hillary's refusal to concede "deranged narcissism." Check it out here. Just don't confuse "derangement" for uncontrolled derangement, she knows what she is doing, this is political calculation, not just craziness. Although I do think the label of deranged narcissist sticks.

Update #3: Hilary Rosen highlights much of what was wrong with Hillary's speech, and notes what I mentioned above, that her supporters are NOT bargaining chips she has control over, they are Democrats:
Senator Clinton's speech last night was a justifiably proud recitation of her accomplishments over the course of this campaign, but it did not end right. But she didn't do what she should have done. As hard and as painful as it might have been, she should have conceded, congratulated, endorsed and committed to Barack Obama. Therefore the next 48 hours are now as important to the future reputation of Hillary Clinton as the last year and a half have been.

[...]

So, I am also so very disappointed at how she has handled this last week. I know she is exhausted and she had pledged to finish the primaries and let every state vote before any final action. But by the time she got on that podium last night, she knew it was over and that she had lost. I am sure I was not alone in privately urging the campaign over the last two weeks to use the moment to take her due, pass the torch and cement her grace. She had an opportunity to soar and unite. She had a chance to surprise her party and the nation after the day-long denials about expecting any concession and send Obama off on the campaign trail of the general election with the best possible platform. I wrote before how she had a chance for her "Al Gore moment".

And if she had done so, the whole country ALL would be talking today about how great she is and give her her due.

Instead she left her supporters empty, Obama's angry and party leaders trashing her. She said she was stepping back to think about her options. She is waiting to figure out how she would "use" her 18 million voters.

But not my vote. I will enthusiastically support Barack Obama's campaign. Because I am not a bargaining chip. I am a Democrat.
Update #4: Good article.

Update #5: And so her supporters act like this:
(SC Rep James) Clyburn told FOX News Radio’s "Brian and the Judge" that the callers identified themselves as Hillary Clinton supporters. Clyburn, an African-American and the third ranking House Democrat, said a white intern in his office was so upset by the calls that she had to be consoled by other workers and left the office early.

"We got more vitriolic, nasty phone calls, really racially tinged phone calls in my congressional office, so much so, until one of the interns, a young lady who is not a stranger to politics ... and she is not a black person, she left the office, had to be consoled because of the kinds of phone calls from people who identified themselves as Hillary Clinton supporters," he said.

"I was absolutely shocked, could not believe that this happened. I could understand people saying, ‘Why are you doing this or why would you not support Hillary Clinton?’ but to call me the kinds of names I have not heard since the ’40s and ’50s," he said.

Clyburn said some of the callers threatened to "sabotage this election." He added that he does not think Clinton understands her role in unifying the party.
THAT is what happens when you have a candidate trying to divide her own Party, scorch the earth, sow animosity among her supporters with lies, and refuses to concede defeat, or even acknowledge that the nominee has won anything at all.

Media: Shut Up About The Nightmare Ticket

You know, Senator Barack Obama is about the make history. He is about to officially become the Democratic nominee after a staggering year and a half long primary battle, and at the same time becoming the first African American presidential nominee of a major political party in the history of the United States. But you wouldn't know it by the way the media talks, because for hours they have not shut up about Hillary Clinton and the vice presidency. For an amazing night for Obama, one and a half years in the making, it is shocking how it is ALL about Hillary.

I'm so sick of hearing idiot pundits raise the question of the nightmare ticket, especially when they frame it in a way that assumes Hillary is entitled to the VP spot or in a way that assumes Obama somehow needs her on the ticket to compete in the general. Both are absolutely wrong.

I've said this before, she has no entitlement because there is no consolation prize in the Democratic primary, just like Kerry didn't get a consolation prize for winning over 59 million votes in 2004. Hillary is under the mistaken impression that having 17 million voters vote for her makes her special and entitled to whatever she wants. She is wrong. I was more than tired with her sense of entitlement throughout this entire primary campaign, and it is getting even more disgusting as her supporters and the media go running with this nonsense.

And Obama most certainly doesn't need Hillary to bring in any votes. I just heard asshole Pat Buchanan (why is he allowed on TV?) say that Obama will need Hillary to get her 17 million voters. NO, her supporters are still Democrats, and the vast vast vast majority of them are not controlled by her. She does not speak for them. She can't even hold onto her superdelegates, let alone her voters. The national polls already show Obama gaining huge leads over Hillary, even among her strongest demographic: women. He is even ahead in Latino votes nationally. He wins among the poorly educated now. He wins among low-income voters. He doesn't need Hillary to bring these groups, these are all Democrats, and they will vote for the Democratic nominee (and lets not forget that many of these strengths were padded by Limbaugh Democrats).

So I know I'm going to have to do a long post comprehensively laying out why Hillary would be a HORRIBLE choice for VP. It won't be tonight, but it'll be coming soon, because I'm going to have to get this off my chest, because the media and her supporters obviously aren't going to shut up about this nonsense. [Update: Read my comprehensive breakdown of why we can't have a nightmare ticket here.]

And read about why Richardson is a great choice.

Update: In case you were looking for another one to add to the list, and it will be on my list, remember when Hillary essentially endorsed McCain over Obama, multiple times, saying that McCain was ready to lead the country while Obama isn't? Well now McCain is sending around the video of that to attack Obama, with McCain spokesman adding, "Senator Clinton articulated the fundamental difference between John McCain and Barack Obama as well as anyone." Thanks Hillary, thanks for telling the country that the Republican is better qualified to lead the country than the Democrat. And now we are supposed to accept you as Vice President...?

Update #2: This is telling:
Newsweek's Howard Fineman just said on MSNBC at 8:35pm Eastern that the Clinton campaign is demanding that Hillary be offered the VP position, which she will then decline, and then Fineman quotes the Clinton campaign as saying "don't you dare offer it to another woman." Isn't that special. Apparently, Hillary was only planning on breaking her own personal glass ceiling. For the rest of you, you can break you own.
Like we actually thought it was about women, or anything but herself.

Face Facts With Dignity

Today I opened a fortune cookie, and instead of getting my fortune, I got Hillary's:



That is what she needs to do. She needs to face the facts, let reality seep past her iron barrier of denial, and show some dignity. She needs to start acting like a representative of the people, a leader, not a spoiled child who was never taught the lessons of being a good loser.

Somehow I don't think she is going to take this route (actually, I think leaving with her dignity flew out the door weeks ago, if not months). Here is what her spokesman said today:
"I think its pretty clear that she is not conceding." Elleithee said, "I think its pretty clear that she is staying in this race. She is going, in the coming days, to be aggressively courting uncommitted superdelegates aggressively courting unpledged delegates, making the case to them that she is a candidate best ready to take on John McCain."

When asked directly when Clinton will step aside, Elietthee told reporters, "as she has said dozens and dozens of times she is in this race until we have a nominee...Until there is a nominee she is going to try to win support."
Note the new term "unpledged delegates", who used to be "pledged delegates", who represented the will of the people, the sanctity of the vote she is running around everywhere saying is the great cause of our time, and yet as far as she is concerned pledged delegates are no longer pledged, they are open to stealing, like I wrote months ago, her only plan to the nomination (aside from waiting for Obama to die) is to hijack democracy. Of course that won't happen, which is where the iron barrier of denial comes into play.

And Bill? Today he said, "I want to say also that this may be the last day I'm ever involved in a campaign of this kind." Thank god, no more angry, red-faced, paranoid, lying rants from Bill, it is finally over. Oh, well maybe it isn't quite yet. He apparently wanted to go out with a bang:
"[He's] sleazy," he said referring to Purdum (who recently wrote an unfavorable article about him, sourcing several anonymous Clinton aides). "He's a really dishonest reporter. And one of our guys talked to him . . . And I haven't read [the article]. There's just five or six blatant lies in there. But he's a real slimy guy," the former president said.

When I reminded him that Purdum was married to his former press spokesperson Myers, Clinton was undeterred.

"That's all right-- he's still a scumbag," Clinton said. " Let me tell ya-- he's one of the guys -- he's one of the guys that brought out all those lies about Whitewater to Kenneth Starr. He's just a dishonest guy-- can't help it."

Purdum's piece, featured in this month's edition of Vanity Fair, included former advisers criticizing former President Clinton for bringing negative attention to Hillary Clinton's candidacy and for surrounding himself with friends who might discredit her campaign.

The former President's tirade continued:

"The editor of Esquire-- he sent us an email yesterday and said it was the single sleaziest piece of journalism he'd seen in decades. He said it made him want to go take a shower and he was embarrassed to be a journalist when he read it."
This not being crazy enough, Bill doubled down:
"You know he didn't use a single name, cite a single source in all those things he said. It's just slimy. It's part of the national media's attempt to nail Hillary for Obama. It's the most biased press coverage in history. It's another way of helping Obama. They had all these people standing up in this church cheering, calling Hillary a white racist, and he didn't do anything about it. The first day he said 'Ah, ah, ah well.' Because that's what they do-- he gets other people to slime her. So then they saw the movie they thought this is a great ad for John McCain-- maybe I better quit the church. It's all politics. It's all about the bias of the media for Obama. Don't think anything about it."

"But I'm telling ya, all it's doing is driving her supporters further and further away-- because they know exactly what it is-- this has been the most rigged coverage in modern history-- and the guy ought to be ashamed of himself. But he has no shame. It isn't the first dishonest piece he's written about me or her."

"Anytime you read a story that slimes a public figure with anonymous quotes, it oughta make the bells go off in your head. Because anytime somebody uses those things-- he wrote the story in his head in advance, and he just goes around and tries to find some coward to say whatever they want to say, hoping to get some benefit out of it. It didn't bother me. It shouldn't bother you."
Yes, a vast...left-wing conspiracy against the Clintons, orchestrated by Obama the evil kingpin, who apparently asked a priest semi-associated with his church to say controversial things about Hillary in order to beat her at a game he already had in the bag, at the risk of having the media jump on his ass about his church yet again. Yes, because that makes so much sense, and because that is soooo Obama's M.O. And you'd think if Obama had wanted to make Bill look bad, and if it was in his power, he might have done that, ummmm, a couple months ago when it actually mattered, instead of saving it until he had virtually secured the nomination?? Think Bill, Think.

Yes, and why did the media, if it loooovvveeed Obama so much, spend TWO MONTHS trashing him for crap his former pastor said, which had nothing to do with Obama whatsoever? Why did they spend two months attacking Obama for that while trying to paint with Hillary's talking points about a nonexistent "white problem"? Hell, if that is what it looks like when the media is giving the "most rigged coverage in modern history" in favor of Obama, I imagine "fair and balanced" would be the media waterboarding Obama. Give me a break Bill.

Oh yeah, and did I mention that Bill said he hadn't actually read the article he is freaking out about? Also, the article clearly states that there is no evidence of Bill committing any post-presidential marital indiscretion.

And seriously, a Clinton giving people a lecture on honesty???

So much for leaving with your dignity, Bill.

Update: Having slept on this a bit, I gotta say, this is pretty messed up. Let's step back a few steps and look at the big picture here. We just saw a former US president attack the presidential nominee for his own party, and likely next president, accusing him of orchestrating some covert conspiracy of media attacks against him and his wife, another high profile Democratic politician. That is INSANE! This man held the highest office in the world, and he is running around the country acting like a complete child, leveling baseless and paranoid attacks against a presidential candidate, for his own party. He shames the office of the presidency, as if he hadn't shamed the office enough with his conduct during his administration, he is making it even worse now. I honestly can't even imagine Bush making that big a fool of himself after leaving office. It is just shocking. Bill Clinton is shameless, pathetic, such an angry, sad and petty man. I'm disgusted that he is a representative of my party. He is an embarrassment to all Democrats. A total disgrace.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Puerto Rico Sunday

Today is the Puerto Rico primary, which is the largest remaining primary, with 63 delegates. We are basically going into the primary blind, as it hasn't been polled very well, but all expectations are that it should be a big win for Hillary.
Puerto Rico is hers to lose, so the real story will be if she doesn't win by much, or if Obama actually pulls out an upset win. Regardless of the outcome, nothing will change, because Hillary could win 100% in Puerto Rico, South Dakota and Montana, and still not even come close to catching up to Obama. Obama is our nominee, that much is crystal clear.

Anyway, while we wait for the results, here is Obama's ad in Puerto Rico, where he showed off his Spanish (Hillary never spoke in Spanish to the Puerto Ricans):



Update: Hillary won Puerto Rico, as expected. Her aides are running around the media whining about Michigan and Florida, and pointing to her non-existent popular vote lead, as if that were a legitimate measure anyway, and as if the votes of people who have no vote in the general election has any bearing whatsoever on electability. Oh well, let them spin spin away, this will be the last bit of good news they get, because the last two races they will lose, and those are actual states that vote in presidential elections.

Update #2: Kos just made a good point about Puerto Rico. Turnout there was only 16%, incredibly low, especially given how incredibly how Puerto Rico's turnout usually is. And that 16% got 63 delegates, more than 27 states, and they can't even vote in the general election. It doesn't make a whole hell of a lot of sense to have an essentially meaningless (electorally) territory to have THAT much say in a primary, especially given they don't even have a Democratic Party on the island! Besides, the elections there concerning mainland politics usually revolve around the issue of Puerto Rico's statehood or independence, which is obviously not what the Democratic primary is all about. Anyway, it is pretty ridiculous that a territory with no voice and little stake in the general election has more say than 27 actual states. And by Hillary's own standards, if a state can't be won by Democrats in November, it is meaningless, so I think Puerto Rico applies. Yet she is trying to hype it up anyway. How's that for hypocrisy?

Oh, and Obama still wins the popular vote. Not that it matters.

McCainocrats?

As you may recall, yesterday I provided you with a sampling of some of the vitriol coming from hardcore Hillary supporters are the DNC Rules & Bylaws Committee, these included claims that Obama is gay, a murderer, a misogynist, a Nazi, a socialist and many frenzied vows that they will vote for McCain in November. Some even chanted that Fox News is "fair and balanced". Now you tell me, are these Democrats? If I just heard these comments out of context, I would assume they were coming straight out of the mouthes of Ann Coulter and Rush Limbaugh, even too vile for the scum on Fox News. Yet no, the come from supposed Democrats, supposed Democrats who are now vowing to scorch the earth and vote for a third term of Bush. Meteor Blades over at Daily Kos had some good analysis of who these small and petty specimens really are:

I’m not prescient or plugged-in enough to have any special window on how many of you Clinton supporters who are saying you will vote for John McCain in November will come to your senses by then. Many people I respect think that most of you will. I suspect they’re right. I hope they are. But it’s obvious that more than a handful of you are serious in your vindicativeness and will join Joe Lieberman to support the Senator from Arizona over Obama. That would be the anti-choice, hundred-year-war, two-faced, Republican Senator from Arizona.

Thus is born a new subspecies, McCain Democrats, McCainocrats.

If your shrieking can be believed, you McCainocrats are premeditating ballot support for an exclusive club of racist, union-busting, woman-suppressing, bedroom-peering, rights-scoffing, warmongering, torture-backing, buccaneering, global warming-denying, privatizing, public land-grabbing, Supreme Court stuffing, empire-building, Constitution-shredding raptors. All for self-indulgent revenge. You’re unhappy that your candidate has not won the nomination. I understand that. Mine didn’t win either. But you’re not just unhappy, you're also willing to contribute to the election of someone who stands against most of what your candidate has been promoted as standing for. That, I don’t comprehend at all. Emotionally, intellectually or morally. I get the feeling you would vote for George W. Bush in 2008 if the 22nd Amendment weren’t in the way.

You McCainocrats might recall that you have ancestors.
Here Meteor Blades goes on to explain past species of traitors to the Democratic Party, the "George Wallace Democrats", the "Nixon Democrats" and the oft-mentioned "Reagan Democrats", but these people weren't so much traitors as simply belonging to the wrong party. They were really Republicans, who just hadn't officially switched over to the party of racism and corporate greed, yet. Meteor Blades goes on to explain how these "McCainocrats" aren't threatening to leave for any ideological reasons, which may be excusable, they are threatening to leave out of revenge, showing the true shallowness of their characters:
You McCainocrats don’t run in a direct lineage from all these ancestors. For one thing, they had issues, many of them unlikable, even detestable, but understandable. You, however, clearly have no guiding philosophy beyond surly revenge. John McCain can’t possibly give you what you want if what you really want is what you say Senator Clinton has been in the running for this year. Only on the margins does he contravene the rightwing cabal that over time seized the party and has now left it in disarray. His discernible stances on almost everything of note are, or should be, anathema to any Democrat who is a Democrat. Much of the rest of his views are just contradictory meandering. When he opens his mouth, you never know which side he will speak from.

I’m no fan of third parties because history shows only one making the leap to even the lower rungs of national power. But I can at least understand voters who jump ship to a third party based on principle and symbolism and hope for a breakthrough in a direction amicable to their beliefs. You McCainocrats, on the other hand, are incomprehensible. Is the idea that voting for another four years of rightwing Republican rule would be worth it as long as you could say: "See? We told you Obama couldn’t win." Does the McCainocrat lunacy embrace the idea that four more years of a Republican in the White House would make Clinton a shoo-in