Posted on 06/14/2007 11:25:13 AM PDT by COUNTrecount
Election day 1994 was a disaster for the Democratic party and for Hillary and Bill Clinton. Republicans would now control both houses of the US Congress, claiming their first Senate majority in eight years and first House majority since 1954. The Democrats lost an astounding 52 seats in the House, and eight in the Senate.
There had been historic losses in other elections. But this was a different kind of repudiation in that it was tied to the president and his wife. The Clintons could see that the country, not just Washington, was on the verge of a new political age, much of it informed by antagonism to them.
For the first time, the southern states sent more Republicans to Congress than Democrats. Equally important, these were deeply conservative (by their own definition) Republicans, far to the right of those who had come to power with Ronald Reagan in the previous Republican wave of 1980.
Bill recognised the practical implications of the loss: the Republican control of Congress would not only threaten to scupper the Clintons agenda, but it would also embolden the Clintons enemies including the new chairmen of several important House and Senate committees with jurisdiction to investigate any aspect of the presidency, or his and Hillarys past. Hillary knew she had mishandled her portfolio in trying to get healthcare legislation through Congress and had inspired anger, and that both had helped bring the Democrats down.
My view is Hillary Clinton destroyed the Democratic party, said Lawrence ODonnell, aide to Senator Pat Moynihan. the august Democratic chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. Her most prominent difficulty, he judged, was arrogance. When your purpose is to pass legislation, said ODonnell, you dont set up war rooms and you dont believe that you are going to vanquish the opposition.
Hillarys emotional state was now as fragile as it had ever been. The cumulative effect of her fathers recent death, the suicide of her close friend and White House counsel Vince Foster, the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the Clintons Whitewater land deal, the failed healthcare programme, and now a repudiation by the voters was devastating. She was overwhelmed.
I dont know whether she was seeing a doctor or not she wasnt, as far as is known but she was depressed, said David Gergen, who was counsel to the president. Deeply depressed. I just felt she went into a downward spiral. This was a near universal view in the White House.
Bills state, in the short run, was equally bad. Gergen thought it took about two or three months for him to come out of his depression. But for Hillary it was a matter of many [more] months. I think she still must be scarred by that, he said several years later, before she had decided to seek election to the Senate.
What was clear was not only her policy advice had failed, but she was politically at fault . . . Bill no longer asked her for political guidance after that.
As the president and first lady sank into a fog of depression, one of the strangest episodes of modern American governance proceeded from it: the ascendancy of Dick Morris as presidential regent. Morris had been the Clintons political adviser during their Arkansas years, and Hillary had called him in again after the collapse of her healthcare ambitions. For the next several months he virtually took over the White House. And for the period from 1994 to 1996 he was the real power in the Clinton administration after the president.
Morris replaced [Hillary] as consigliere though that may be a little simplistic, said Gergen. There was a real passage of power away from her and to Morris. And to some degree the president felt he was also liberated afterward from having to be deferential to Hillary. He took healthcare as a defeat, but because it was her defeat it was okay . . . He still needed her emotional support, but there had been a time in which he felt that he had to be very deferential. No longer. Morris was unambiguous about Clintons attitude toward his wife at this point: in terms of the co-presidency, it was over he pushed her aside.
Despite her confident manner, said Morris, Hillary could lose her bearings when things didnt go right. Her strong and resolute leadership has a brittle quality to it; when her basic assumptions are proven wrong, they undermine her resolve. Hillary has less flexibility, less give than Bill. When her way works, she does very well. But when it doesnt as in 1994 it can paralyse her.
As a girl and then as a woman, Hillary has almost always been desperate to be a passionate participant and at the centre of events: familial, generational, experiential, political, historical. Call it ambition, call it the desire to make the world a better place she has been driven. Rarely has she stepped aside voluntarily into passivity. Introspection has not been her strong suit; faith in the Lord, and in herself, is.
Three pillars have held her up through one crisis after another in a life creased by personal difficulties and public and private battles: her religious faith, her powerful urge toward both service and its accompanying sense (for good or ill) of self-importance, and a fierce desire for privacy and secrecy. It is the last of these that seems to cast a larger and larger shadow over who she really is.
Increasingly, what Hillary serves up for public consumption, especially since setting her sights on the Senate and the presidency, is usually elaborately prepared or relatively soulless. This is the true shame.
Hillary is neither the demon of the rights perception nor a feminist saint, nor is she particularly emblematic of her time perhaps more old fashioned than modern. She is an intelligent woman endowed with energy, enthusiasm, humour, tempestuousness, inner strength, spontaneity in private, lethal (almost) powers of retribution, real-life lines that come from deep wounds, and the language skills of a sailor (and of a minister), all evidence of her passion which, down deep, is perhaps her most enduring and even endearing trait.
As Hillary has continued to speak from the protective shell of her own making, and packaged herself for the widest possible consumption, she has misrepresented not just facts but often her essential self.
Great politicians have always been marked by the consistency of their core beliefs, their strength of character in advocacy, and the self-knowledge that informs bold leadership. Almost always, Hillary has stood for good things. Yet there is often a disconnect between her convictions and words, and her actions. This is where Hillary disappoints.
But the jury remains out. She still has time to prove her case, to effectuate those things that make her special, not fear them or camouflage them. We would all be the better for it, because what lies within may have the potential to change the world, if onlya little.
© Carl Bernstein 2007 Extracted from A Woman in Charge: The Life of Hillary Rodham Clinton, by Carl Bernstein, published by Hutchinson at £25. It is available for £23 including postage from The Sunday Times BooksFirst on 0870 165 8585
I first voted Republican in 1992. I guess you could say I’m a “Hillary Republican”. I never looked back.
Shouldn’t this have a barf alert?
Ah, the good old days, when I still thought a GOP Congress might actually do some good. At least they did less harm than the Dems would have.
Look for a Friday Afternoon Document Dump, about 5:45 tomorrow, showing that Hillary! Rodham (Clinton) has been on anti-depressant meds for a long, long time.
One of the scariest things about Hillary is the passion she brings to her whacked-out, leftist agenda. She now says what she has to to get elected, but she’s never fully hidden her passion and commitment to the issues.
When I read this, it made me wish that we had a viable candidate who was this passionate about conservatism. Not that I want them being emotionally unstable if they don’t win every battle, but someone who exhibited some tenacity and serious commitment to conservative issues would be really nice for a change.
Almost?
This guy has it all wrong.
First of all, Vince Foster was murdered.
Second, Hillary IS evil.
Oh, well, what can you expect from a Brit.
Nothing that a good brisk autumn ride on her broom couldn't cure.
This is Carl Berstein, of Watergate fame. He's as American as apple pie.
You can also be sure he is completely in the bag for the Clintons. If he wrote something about them, it is because the Clintons told him to.
Looks to me like they are trying to get out in front of the Hillary-is-crazy stories.
Carl Bernstein is no Brit.
Hillary wants a dictatorship and she can no longer hide it. She talks like a drunken sailor when mad, yells and screams, hates the military and the Secret Service. I’ve heard that no matter what happens, she will never sit in the Oval office.
‘But the jury remains out. She still has time to prove her case,’
Only among the delusional. The fact is, as Rush pointed out this week, 51% of all registered Democrats prefer somebody other than Hillary Clinton for their party’s top nomination.
Considering her name recognition, thats stunning.
Over half of her own party isn’t supporting her. If she does gain the nomination (which I still doubt) those numbers will change a bit, but not by twenty or thirty points, which is what she would need to match even Bob Dole’s pathetic 96 performance.
Last time I checked, the ‘I won’t vote for her under any circumstances’ polling number is around 45%, from all walks of life.
Given that, if the Democrats are dumb enough to nominate her, ANY GOP candidate will beat her, even without the support of Free Republic’s posters.
What is her "I will vote for her no matter what" number?
Insignificant in comparision I suspect, but I don’t know.
hileereee looked the other way with clintins bad behavior. She could have stopped this a long time ago. Feel sorry for her? Never. She knew what her ole man was doing and yet she still hung onto his coattails becuase of his power. Without him she is nothing. Without scripted interviews she is nothing. She is nothing...period except one big leftover from the clintin days that has spoiled because it has been left too long.
it made me wish that we had a viable candidate who was this passionate about conservatism. Not that I want them being emotionally unstable if they dont win every battle, but someone who exhibited some tenacity and serious commitment to conservative issues would be really nice for a change.
Give Fred Thompson a thought.
bump
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