Posted on 12/22/2004 3:40:28 PM PST by EnigmaticAnomaly
Lets just get this out of the way now: Shes running.
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton has a re-election campaign in front of her in 2006, but as far as many around her are concerned, the train has already departed for a destination two years farther outthe Presidency.
"She is going to focus on going for Senate and getting that out of the way, but the eye is always on the prize," a former aide to Mrs. Clinton told The Observer.
Mrs. Clinton currently is gearing up for her re-election with a campaign whose cost and intensity are taking on the scale of a national race. The first, slightly frantic fund-raising letters already have gone out, warning of coming Republican attacks. And a veteran national Democratic player, Ann Lewis, will start work at Mrs. Clintons Washington, D.C., offices in January. Mrs. Clinton is on a path to finish her re-election campaign in November 2006 andassuming she isnt the first New York Democrat in a century to lose a Senate seatpivot swiftly toward the White House. A loyal circle of advisors led by her husband is urging her on, allies say, despite the doubts that some supporters will express privately.
And so the question isnt whether Mrs. Clinton is running for President. Its whether its already too late to pull the brakes.
Most of the comments by Mrs. Clintons current and former advisors were given on the condition of anonymity because using the words "President" and "2008" in public is something of a taboo in the Senators circle. The subject has the same effect on Clintonistas that the words "Skull and Bones" have on members of that secret society, who are said to be required to get up and leave the room when their club is mentioned. But as with the secret society, refusing to talk about the Clinton campaign doesnt mean you dont know about itit means youre a member.
Howard Wolfson, the former campaign aide who continues to serve as a spokesman for all things political in Mrs. Clintons life, stayed true to form on the question.
"Were focused on 2006," he said, offering: "You can say, Wolfson would not discuss 08."
But another Clinton insider said the refusal to talk about the next step doesnt mean nobodys thinking about it.
"In very, very small circles, people are thinking about it and talking about it," he said. "But theyre not using the term Presidency, not using the term national office. We talk about having a greater profile, a firmer stance on issues that Democrats are seen as weak on."
And Mrs. Clintons ramped-up Senate campaign will have much of the intensity and cash of a national campaign. The Clintons wide, tight network of political supporters and friendsfrom veteran brawlers like Harold Ickes to party media stars like James Carville and Paul Begala, to a younger, New Yorkbased set of former campaign aidesremains in the wings.
Mrs. Clintons top fund-raiser, Patti Solis Doyle, who is also said to be her closest confidante, has launched an intense fund-raising effort to build on the more than $5 million that Mrs. Clinton already has in the bank.
An e-mail message to potential donors earlier this month, first reported in The New York Sun, asked them to "fight back" against a "new flood" of attacks on Mrs. Clinton. The e-mail quoted unnamed groups as stating "Bill and Hillary Clinton are outlaws" who "must be held accountable for their crimes."
Mrs. Clintons fund-raising committee, the Friends of Hillary, recently asked donors to "fight back" against what it called a "new flood" of shrill anti-Hillary rhetoric coming from conservative groups it says are raising their own funds to defeat her.
The mainstream of the conservative press, however, has been enjoying Mrs. Clintons steady march toward 2008.
The Washington Times recently ran a story arguing that she is "more conservative than President Bush" on illegal immigrationa notion which made the gleeful rounds of Fox News punditry, despite its being based on comments drawn from a year-old radio interview.
And while theres no real evidence of a rightward shift on immigration, Clinton supporters say the centerpiece of her drive toward the Presidency is a careful self-definition in the Senate, where she has carved herself a place to the right of where some of her allies, and her critics, might have expected to find her. (Though anyone who paid much attention to the eight years her husband was President might have been less surprised.) She supported the invasion of Iraq from a perch on the Armed Services Committee, for example, and opposes gay marriage.
"If she decides to run" for President, said Harold Ickes, a longtime advisor to both Clintons, "shes doing totally the right things."
Mr. Ickes, who has spoken skeptically of Mrs. Clintons shot at the Presidency, called her a "brilliant Senator."
"Its something that a lot of us had as an open question about Mrs. Clinton early on, but she really does understand how the institution works," he said.
But earlier this year, Mrs. Clinton heard people like James Carvilleand, the rumor in Clinton circles had it, Bill himselftell her that her first term in the Senate should also be her last. She would have a clearer shot at the Presidency, the theory went, and be free of a damaging re-election campaign.
One influential Democrat, former Recording Industry Association of America chief Hilary Rosen, told The Observer that she had approached Mrs. Clinton with that suggestion more than a year ago, to be met with "that charming, non-answer Hillary laugh."
"If she is our best hope for a woman to be President some dayand I believe she isanother run for the Senate from New York is not necessarily the best way to get there," Ms. Rosen said. "Shes just going to have to keep talking about all of the issues of the left for the next two years, whereas if she werent running, she would be able to dictate the agenda. I just think its distracting."
Mrs. Clinton has chosen to ignore the advice. In the Senate, she will have an opportunity to defy stereotypes in the coming years. This term, with its looming battles royal over Social Security and other Bush-agenda items, offers her particularly potent opportunities on the policy front.
Mrs. Clinton has also moved, in an act of political jujitsu, to turn health-care reforma political albatross since she led a task force on reform during her husbands Presidencyinto an advantage. On that front, shes pushing for legislation to modernize the information-technology infrastructure of the health-care system.
Despite the impression that she has moved to the right, Mrs. Clinton has yet to make any major departures from the Democratic Party mainstream, and while shes picked eclectic subjects and shown a talent for working across party lines, shes hardly a conservative. Americans for Democratic Action, the liberal group, for example, gave Mrs. Clinton a 95 percent rating last year, chiding her only for her vote in favor of an appropriation for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Meanwhile, Gun Owners of America recently bestowed on her its prized (well, in some circles) "F-minus" rating.
But while some of Mrs. Clintons advisors view the coming Senate race as a threat and a source of pressure to embrace New Yorks liberal base, others see a campaign that will be conducted largely in upstate and western New York as practice for Ohio in 2008.
Heartland, N.Y.
"Upstate, thats all the Midwest. Thats Cleveland and Detroit," said one Clinton backer. "The themes that will be tested, well see how they work also on a national level."
That may take some doing. A recent Quinnipiac University poll found that 23 percent of Americans say they dislike Mrs. Clinton "a lot." (A larger share say the same thing about President Bush.) Butas around many Presidential contendersthe confidence of her supporters provides a powerful source of momentum.
"Im one of the few in the semi-inner circle who [doesnt] think she can win," Mr. Ickes told Time magazine not long after this years election. He told The Observer he thinks Mrs. Clinton hasnt yet made up her mind about 2008. "My sense is she hasnt made any decision to do it," he said.
But theres no harm in being prepared, particularly for a woman who has an industry devoted to destroying her. One of its leading spokesman, former Clinton advisor Dick Morris, was asked recently by Fox News Allan Colmes, "Are you going to spend the next four years blasting Hillary Clinton, going after, attacking Hillary Clinton?"
"You bet I am," Mr. Morris replied.
You may reach Ben Smith via email at: bensmith@observer.com
Does anyone really think people will vote to put Bill Clinton within sleeping distance of the Oval Office?
Oh I hope she runs! The Republicans have the alter ready, the incense burning and the nicely sharpened, because all the Democrats are going to do by nominating her is offering up to be sacrificed.
I like many am salivating at what will surely be the deathnell of the Democrats when she runs!
Yes....the American electorate has done it before....twice....
I can think of almost no person I detest more than Howard Wolfson. I sure don't look forward to seeing and hearing him on all the talking head shows.
Can you imagine having to have both Hillary and Howard in your face night after night?
The Democrat road to the WH is going to look more like "The Trail of Tears" before everything is all said and done. Some one(s) will challenge the Clintons for control of the party. To do it some dirt will have to be dropped on Hillary before she literally has it dropped on them.
God help us. There are enough dumbasses in this country who will be fooled by her sudden shift to the middle left.
It took until late night on Election Day to ensure that Flurch Munster didn't win...OF COURSE I think that people will vote to put BJ Clinton within sleeping distance of the Oval Office.
Now, I won't be ONE of them...however I do wonder about who our side is going to run in 2008. The return of Dimocrats to the WH was only delayed, not destroyed. I hope I don't have to bite the bullet and vote for someone like a Senator MeVain, just to keep Hitlery out of the office.
Prayer warriors and fact-checkers, it's never too early to pray, even if it's for elections that are two and four years away. Let's enjoy this last vestige of the Reagan years (as 41 learned from 40 and 43 learned from 41), and get ready for what comes next.
To paraphrase PM Blair, "It (America)is worth the fight: now let's get out and do it."
OK, I'll bite - I'll consider voting for Hillary if she proposes, supports and obtains the repeal of the Brady and Lautenberg laws, the '86 machine gun ban, the '68 Gun Control Act and the '34 NFA, followed by drilling in ANWR and off of the Cali coast, permanent tax cuts, beefing up the military by $100 billion/year for new weapons, ammo and training, cutting welfare expenditures and immigration from 3rd world nations, and tossing out all of the illegal aliens. Until then, she won't have any credibility in the Red States or my eyes.
Be afraid, be very afraid. The dims will be counting and recounting for months after the elections. Due to the lack of stellar Republican choices, she could steal this one. The democrats will come out in droves to elect her. She will be a much stronger candidate than Kerry. It is going to be an ugly election. When Lazio tried to go negative against her, the press had a field day painting him as aggressive and cruel.
Time to start planning for a possible move to Alberta.
Hillary got to be driving that egotistical Chuck The Schmuck Schumer bonkers
Nobody even hears his name anymore
Isn't that disgusting how that happened. If Hiter were alive, would it be cruel to get in his face? It makes me ill. Hillary is too much like Hitler, she is given too many passes, only an evil person is capable of eliciting such symapthy from others who are equally black hearted.
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