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Hillary Clinton cannot let go of her dream
Financial Times ^ | April 2 2008 | Sally Bedell Smith

Posted on 04/03/2008 11:24:51 AM PDT by kingattax

Hillary Clinton’s chances of winning the Democratic presidential nomination are now anywhere from 5 per cent to 20 per cent. By rights she should be flat on her back, declared the loser by technical knockout. But not only is she standing; she is plunging ahead with a dogged ferocity.

In spite of Barack Obama’s clear advantage in the popular vote and committed delegate tallies – a mathematical dominance unlikely to be reversed even if he loses most of the remaining primary contests – Mrs Clinton says she is being bullied by the “big boys” and vows to stay in the race until the Democratic convention.

Her relentless campaign has inspired reporters variously to compare her, with a mixture of admiration and horror, to the Terminator, a zombie, a cyborg and Anton Chigurh, the malevolent killer in No Country for Old Men. Even the coughing spasms that have seized her with alarming frequency these past few months have become an emblem of her fortitude. After she muscled her way through a foreign policy address, The New Yorker praised her ability to “suppress the coughing through sheer will”.

So what makes Mrs Clinton run, even as her win-at-all-cost strategy threatens her party’s chances against John McCain, the Republican candidate? The answer lies partly in her innately combative nature, the quality that drew Bill Clinton to her when “she was in my face from the start”. She is equally famous for a preternatural focus and what one of her friends called her “tunnel vision”, along with a determination so unshakeable that her husband once told a visitor to the Oval Office: “I might as well try to lift that desk up and throw it through the window as to change her mind.” To reach her goals, she long ago learnt to embrace any tactic, however destructive. As her mother noted, Hillary does “everything she has to do to get along and get ahead”.

One of the most fascinating aspects of Mrs Clinton’s tall tale about dodging snipers at Tuzla airport in Bosnia was her unwillingness to acknowledge that she had described her supposed derring-do to at least four audiences. This was no slip of the tongue created by sleep deprivation, as she claimed. Her capacity for self-delusion is nothing new. During the 1992 campaign, when ABC’s Sam Donaldson played audio tapes of Gennifer Flowers, her husband’s lover, saying “Goodbye darling” and Mr Clinton replying “Goodbye baby”, her reaction was: “Oh, that’s not true.” “Didn’t happen?” Mr Donaldson pressed. “Of course not,” she replied.

For decades Mrs Clinton has thought of herself as a woman of destiny. Even as a little girl she would stand “in a patch of sunlight” pretending “there were heavenly movie cameras watching my every move”. She willingly served in her husband’s shadow, in spite of the humiliations he inflicted on her with his womanising, on the assumption she would have her turn.

Back in 1974, Mr Clinton said she “could be president one day” and Linda Bloodworth-Thomason, one of their close friends, often remarked that when the Clintons were “dead and gone, each of them is going to be buried next to a president of the United States”. Mrs Clinton’s private sense that she was entitled to the presidency has expanded to the idea that the public owes her this ultimate prize as well.

She also benefits from a kind of political voodoo that makes her seem invincible, even to usually clear-eyed analysts who do the delegate maths over and over and keep finding she loses. The Clintons’ narrow escapes from political extinction haunt their memories like tribal drums in the night: from the suicide of their close friend Vincent Foster to an endless parade of scandals. In response they have built a fearsome political machine that attacks enemies and cuts loose friends they believe have wronged them.

A vital piece of this mythology is that, with the exception of Mr Clinton’s second race for governor in 1980, the Clintons do not lose in politics. Running for office is what the “Billary” tag team does; it is the glue that binds them together– “in her DNA as much as his”, according to their old friend Tom Siebert. The duo have spent their adult lives perfecting the permanent campaign, mastering its dark arts even as they went about the everyday business of governing.

Mrs Clinton has made a point of saying: “There are no do-overs in life.” Yet she and her husband are seeking the ultimate do-over, another term or two in the Oval Office. Both are deeply invested in the sequel: Mrs Clinton is driven to fulfil her destiny, and Mr Clinton covets a chance to burnish his legacy and purify Clintonism.

But this time the dynamic is different, and therein lies the catch. To win in 2008, the Clintons have had to reverse their roles of Bill the candidate and Hillary his chief adviser and advocate. The demands of an unexpectedly tight campaign have brought out the worst in both of them, dragging their popularity ratings to new lows.

The virtuoso politician who feeds on the adulation of the rope-line suddenly finds himself playing an off-key second fiddle. The methodical, behind-the-scenes chief of staff finds herself centre stage, her flatlander voice betraying a harsh edge as she experiments with slogans and personalities.

Mrs Clinton’s political mettle had never been tested. Her opponent in her 2000 Senate race was a lightweight and she had token opposition in 2006. Her candidacy for president was based on the assumption that she would face a weak field and again coast to victory.

Perhaps what propels Mrs Clinton more than anything is a determination to prove she can be as good at politics as her husband, who she once said “makes it look so easy”. But months on the hustings have shown she lacks his legendary political talents.

In any other year, just being Hillary Clinton might have sufficed. But she is up against a man whose political gifts, ironically enough, are often compared with those of William Jefferson ­Clinton.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008; 2008election; 2020election; election2008; election2020; hillary
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To: samtheman
For decades Mrs Clinton has thought of herself as a woman of destiny. Even as a little girl she would stand “in a patch of sunlight” pretending “there were heavenly movie cameras watching my every move”. She willingly served in her husband’s shadow, in spite of the humiliations he inflicted on her with his womanising, on the assumption she would have her turn.

No where here do we get an explanation of why it would be good for the country to have this witch as our president...it's all about her achieving her "destiny."

21 posted on 04/03/2008 11:50:53 AM PDT by Snardius
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To: kingattax

“Perhaps what propels Mrs Clinton more than anything is a determination to prove she can be as good at politics as her husband,...”

Well, she’s is clearly not. Go home beast!!


22 posted on 04/03/2008 11:52:36 AM PDT by jackv (DEMOCRATS HATE BUSH MORE THAN THEY LOVE THEIR COUNTRY!!!)
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To: Snardius

We are little people. We don’t matter.

All that’s important is that Queen Hillary stand in the light or the Mullah Hussein walk on water. (Or do muzzies walk on oil?)


23 posted on 04/03/2008 11:52:58 AM PDT by samtheman
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To: kingattax

Thanks - tried Googling it but it came back with sites from March and before TX and OH .... now to see who can get those last delegates .... and where the count will end ...


24 posted on 04/03/2008 11:53:21 AM PDT by SkyDancer ("I Believe In Law Until It Interferes With Justice")
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To: Michael.SF.
I agree. She is bar none the most dangerous one. She knows exactly what she's going to do when, where and how when she gets elected to fulfill her plan to dismantle this Republic. Her efficiency in accomplishing this will be likened to the NAZI efficiencies of the 1930s. The timetable will only be limited by the margin of Democrat/Republican Legislators.

Obama on the other hand, has the same basic goals but is limited by experience - the experience of expertly wielding power. He may be just as evil as she is, but he is a novice compared to her.....

25 posted on 04/03/2008 11:54:45 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: Snardius

More than anything, maybe, she thinks she has to prove something to HIM!


26 posted on 04/03/2008 11:55:50 AM PDT by SMARTY ('At some point you get tired of swatting flies, and you have to go for the manure heap' Gen. LeMay)
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To: utherdoul
In an ironic sort of way I actually feel bad for the Dimms

please repeat this over and over until you are cured : "conservatives think....liberals feel"

27 posted on 04/03/2008 11:56:01 AM PDT by kingattax (99 % of liberals give the rest a bad name)
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To: kingattax
Hillary Clinton cannot let go of her dream

Only from her cold dead fingers.............

28 posted on 04/03/2008 11:57:18 AM PDT by OB1kNOb (The Presidential election is a race to the bottom. Which Party will out stupid the other to lose ?)
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To: OB1kNOb

Well, if it has to be that way....


29 posted on 04/03/2008 11:58:13 AM PDT by Judith Anne (Just another FR chick that doesn't know jack.)
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To: Red Badger
"a man whose political gifts, ironically enough, are often compared with those of William Jefferson ­Clinton."

What, he's a reflexive liar who blames everyone else for his own mistakes?

30 posted on 04/03/2008 11:59:44 AM PDT by Jagman (Liberalism is a "progressive" disease)
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To: kingattax

Hillary will make the argument that Hussein is unelectable. Which is true. I think she should stay in the race.


31 posted on 04/03/2008 12:03:17 PM PDT by TexanToTheCore (If it ain't Rugby or Bullriding, it's for girls.........................................)
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To: kingattax

Maybe she will ‘suck-out’ on the river?


32 posted on 04/03/2008 12:08:14 PM PDT by 38special (I mean come on.)
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To: Michael.SF.
She'll be worse than Obama and the two grifters will sell our future to the highest bidders. These people have to be beaten back now.
33 posted on 04/03/2008 12:08:39 PM PDT by mimaw
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To: samtheman
Someone should convince the idiot Limbaugh of that instead he's sending the robots out to vote for her.
34 posted on 04/03/2008 12:11:06 PM PDT by mimaw
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To: TexanToTheCore

Why? Do you want McCain defeated?


35 posted on 04/03/2008 12:12:19 PM PDT by mimaw
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To: kingattax

For decades Mrs Clinton has thought of herself as a woman of destiny. Even as a little girl she would stand “in a patch of sunlight” pretending “there were heavenly movie cameras watching my every move”.

PUKE!


36 posted on 04/03/2008 12:14:58 PM PDT by maggief
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To: kingattax
I noticed this cartoon on the Today's Toons. Look at the shape of the "medal" with the red streamer over the left pocket. HMMMMM...


37 posted on 04/03/2008 12:15:26 PM PDT by Arrowhead1952 (Just say "No" to BO.)
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To: Snardius
it's all about her achieving her "destiny."

She's already achieved her density.

38 posted on 04/03/2008 12:21:15 PM PDT by JennysCool (They all say they want change, but they’re really after folding money.)
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To: kingattax; All

Take this with a huge grain of salt, but there are whisperings out there that she’ll be out by 04/15, the day after she releases her tax records. I don’t have any links to back that up, but I’ve seen it posted at some leftie sites by people who have been right about other happenings in her campaign - Doyle leaving, Williams being hired, etc.

I don’t believe it and I think she’ll hang on until the last vote in Denver.


39 posted on 04/03/2008 12:22:03 PM PDT by Theresawithanh (McCain in 2008. Because our liberal is still better than both of theirs.)
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To: Arrowhead1952

I like the blue dress ribbon. I never knew congress authorized this ribbon for that “battle”.


40 posted on 04/03/2008 12:26:44 PM PDT by wrench
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