Posted on 09/11/2005 8:59:44 PM PDT by snarks_when_bored
Bill and Hillary Clinton have never been modest in the scope of their ambitions, nor shy in pursuing them. And so it comes as no surprise to find the once and (aspiring) future presidents fast emerging as two of the dominant figures in the aftermath of Katrina. Here you have an event of possibly epic political consequences, a mirror-image 9/11. And here you have the preeminent power couple in the past two decades of American political life, a pair whose hunger to shape the course of human events is as ravenous as ever.
The Clinton-Katrina nexus will be on vivid display toward the end of this week in New York, when the Clinton Global Initiative gets under way at the Sheraton New York Hotel and Towers. Extravagantly ambitious, confusingly named (in case you havent heard, its a conference), and staggeringly expensive ($15,000 a head), the CGI is Clintons attempt to reanimate the internationalist vision of his presidency from a postpresidential platformthree days of panels and plenary sessions designed to spur governmentprivate-sector cooperation to tackle the worlds ills.
Until two weeks ago, there was every chance that the CGI would be dismissed as just another logorrheabut then the levees broke in New Orleans and the world shifted on its axis. Suddenly, America itself had provided a vivid First World object lesson in total system failure thats as shocking and as calamitous as any in the Third. Suddenly, Clinton had on his hands an event that promises to be charged with relevance and grounded in local urgency. And suddenly, Hillary had a gnarly stick with which to beat the White Houseno small thing for a putative presidential candidate whose vote authorizing Bush to wage war in Iraq is emerging as potentially problematic to her prospects.
Only the most cynical and rabid Clinton-haters would suggest that either of them takes pleasure in the still-unfolding nightmare on the Gulf Coast. Yet for politicians, as the Clintons well know, tragedy, though never to be wished for, breeds political opportunitythe opportunity, in this case, to reshape the partisan battlefield. And, perhaps, in the process, to bring about a Clinton restoration.
Clintons peoplewho, being Clintons people, are harried and sleepless most of the time, but especially right nowinsist that the CGI isnt going to be all Katrina, all the time. According to Clinton spokesman Jay Carson, the only New Orleansrelated adjustment to the agenda is the addition of a single session on climate change and natural disasters. We made a decision not to make this the Katrina Global Initiative, he told me. But Carson acknowledges that the topic will nevertheless be pervasive. Of the four primary subjects being addressed at the eventPoverty; Enhancing Governance; Climate Change; and Religion, Conflict, and Reconciliationonly the last seems likely to be an entirely Katrina-free zone.
Even so, there probably wont be much explicit Bush-bashing onstage at the CGI. For one thing, Clinton is involved in an intricate dance with the Bushesproviding political cover for the son by signing on to a Katrina relief effort with the father, whom he genuinely likes, apparently on the theory that it will shield Hillary from a degree of administration criticism. (Fat chance.) For another, Clinton believes that for the CGI to grow into a lasting institution, it must be, as Carson put it, scrupulously nonpartisan.
Certainly the attendee list750 entries long and full of geopolitical boldface namesappears to reflect that dictate. Blair, Chirac, and Peres will all be in the house. So will Murdoch, Soros, Rubin, Parsons, Condi, Gore, and Kofi. Its the World Economic Forum meets Renaissance Weekend with a dash of Bohemian Grove.
Yet whatever their partisan affiliations, the Clinton conferees actually share myriad traits in common. They are, almost to a man, hard-core internationalists, cosmopolitans, sophisticates. They believe that global economic integration is, by and large, a force for good. They believe that such integration has, like it or not, fostered a stout and growing degree of global interdependencethat problems, like capital, spill freely across borders. Most, if not all, are multilateralists to one degree or another, who believe in collective action. (This, indeed, is the very raison dêtre of the CGI.) They are, in short, all incarnations of what the Harvard professor Samuel Huntington once described as Davos Man.
George W. Bush, of course, is not now and has never been a Davos Man (though, arguably, his father is). Nor is Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, or almost anyone else of significance in the Bush inner circle. (Which isnt the same as saying that theyve never been to Davos; even the hardest-hearted men of the right have been known to enjoy the occasional skiing junket.) Its apt, in fact, to label the Bush high command as antiDavos Men, wedded to their now-familiar brand of go-it-alone, youre-either-with-us-or-against-us brand of unilateralism abroad and reflexive anti-governmentalism at home.
Say what you will about these stances as matters of ideology or principle, in practice theyve produced a litany of nightmareswith Iraq and now New Orleans right atop the list. In the international arena, the two disasters are widely seen as being of a piece. People dont fully understand yet that New Orleans is a global event, not a national one, says David Dreyer, a former aide to Clinton and Robert Rubin who now spends a considerable amount of his time consulting abroad. The reason that Hugo Chávez can organize across Latin America in ways contrary to U.S. interests is that the sheen has come off American exceptionalism. We are no longer seen as being able to order our own universe.
For Clinton, a Davos Man to the depths of his southern-fried soul, and one for whom disaster relief was always a point of pride, the humiliation of America in the eyes of the world over New Orleans must be acutely painful. Straining hard against his desire to remain above the fray, he said last week, Our government failed those people in the beginning, and I take it now that there is no dispute about it . . . I have my own ideas about what caused it. And that was as far as he went.
Yet Clinton knows that the looming battle over who lost New Orleans may prove to be a pivot point in the larger contest between Democrats and Republicans, providing his party a chance to make a set of arguments not only about sheer competence but about the role of government. We know he knows because he did that very thing himself in 1995, in the aftermath of the bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City. With breathtaking subtlety and nimbleness, Clinton used that act of terrorism to illustrate the dangers of the wild-eyed anti-government rhetoric then in vogue among the Gingrichian GOPa move that set him on the road to political redemption.
Which brings us to Hillary. For all her husbands apparently sincere desire to erect a depoliticized aura around the CGI, its worth noting that he felt not the slightest hesitation to bequeath her a speaking slot at the conference. (She is slated to appear on a panel titled Promoting Prosperity With Climate Change Policy.) When I asked Jay Carson about this, he seemed startled by the query. It would almost be crazy for her not to be there, he said. Shes a senator from New York State, shes incredibly smart, and shes his wife.
The interesting question, however, is whether her posture on Katrina during the conference will be as restrained as her husbands. And judging from the past few days, I wouldnt bet on it.
Indeed, even by the rapidly escalating standards of her fellow Democrats, Mrs. Clintons criticisms of the administration have been especially adamant. She has called for FEMA to be separated from the Department of Homeland Security. She has demanded an independent investigation on the model of the 9/11 Commission. Hammering the Bush approach to state and local governments as a recipe for disaster, she has said, There was nobody in charge in the federal-government level, and there was nobody willing to take responsibility to work with state and local officials.
That Hillary has jumped so lustily into the Katrina fray isnt terribly surprisingeven apart from what must be the counsel of her husband. With an eye toward 2008, she has spent much of the past few years staking out positionson Iraq, on abortionthat would allow her to cast herself as a moderate. Against this backdrop, Katrina presents her with a nearly irresistible opportunity to full-throatedly champion an issue sure to resonate with the partys true-believing left.
But Katrina affords the senator another, more intriguing opportunity: to make an unvarnished appeal to Clinton nostalgia. In eight years of the Clinton administration, she said last week, FEMA was run by qualified officials who knew what they were doing. During the Clinton administration, she went on, as if chanting a mantra, the government took the lead in handling disasters of significance . . . and that is as it should be.
If George W. Bush has figured out the advantages of having the ex-president on his team (however instrumental and temporary that alliance may be), you can bet that lesson isnt lost for a minute on Hillary Clinton. Back in 1992, the buy-one-get-one-free concept was, if anything, a net loser for her husband. How ironic that in 2008, the very same bargain might prove to be Hillarys best chance to wind up in the White House.
With apologies to The Bard, I say
O brave new world,
That has such people in't!
---By John Heilemann Bill and Hillary Clinton have never been modest in the scope of their ambitions, nor shy in pursuing them. And so it comes as no surprise to find the once and (aspiring) future presidents fast emerging as two of the dominant figures in the aftermath of Katrina. ---
Huh?
Journalists of imagination are all the rage these days. Haven't you noticed?
"Back in 1992, the buy-one-get-one-free concept was, if anything, a net loser for her husband. How ironic that in 2008, the very same bargain might prove to be Hillarys best chance to wind up in the White House."
Buy-one-get-one-free is going to be a problem for the GOP in 2008 given the continued popularity of Bill Clinton with a large segment of the electorate.
With the death count from Katrina nowhere near the predictions,the 20,000 plus piled up body bags that Slick and Slickette prayed for will not materialize. Their hoped for photo-op and feel-your-pain moments will not happen.
They bet on the wrong horse... again.
Hillary's problem is now to keep Bill alive until the election is over. If she gets elected (shudder), then he'd better watch his back. His demise would make her even more popular.
"Buy-one-get-one-free is going to be a problem for the GOP in 2008 given the continued popularity of Bill Clinton with a large segment of the electorate."
This poses a huge problem for the Arkansas Grifters.
How many people really want Slick back in the Oval Office?
IMO this also poses enormous Constitutional problems, as well as major National Security and Intelligence issues.
They'll try to convince the electorate that their asses are horses.
I agree in principle but not sure on the timing... remember Jean Carnahan?
Manhattan liberals, how long will we continue to let them run this country?
three days of panels and plenary sessions designed to spur governmentprivate-sector cooperation to tackle the worlds ills.
That sounds like fascism to me.
Yes, but in Hillary's case, I'm guessing she'd need Bill around to have even a chance of getting in. Just a guess, of course.
Manhattan liberals, how long will we continue to let them run this country?
I guess for about as long as they control the billions of dollars needed to buy elections. We need better hackers.
I definitely include myself under the rubric of "cynical and rabid Clinton haters." As all-but-titular heads of the Democratic party I am astonished each day that they don't raise the party banner. You know, the one with "Free Stuff from the Government" written in big red letters. A disaster like Katrina has again stimulated the desire in many hearts for the assurance of a plump government teet not far from their greedy faces. And the ones whinging the loudest, it seems to me, are not the unfortunate victims of the hurricane. There's an undercurrent of envy, I think, among those who long to scream "Me too!!, Look at meeeee! I'm a victim too! And I deserve Free Stuff just as much as they do."
And the Clintons come to power by exploiting the illusion of Free Stuff. Consequently, these are dangerous times.
Nothing new, though. Don't forget the Kingfish and his ilk.
0 + 0 = 0. Run Hillary Run.
If I remember correctly, (IIRC) the last "big opportunity" Hill and Bill "smelled" was "Hillary-Care". Which backfired miserably.
As the supposed "Katrina Commission" Media Circus will miserably backfire for the Dems.
Jack.
Your arithmetic works for me. (grin)
Let's remember one thing. Hillary wouldn't even be a household name if she had not rode in on Slick's coattails.
"Share the Wealth" Old Huey. Very, very true!
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