Posted on 03/05/2015 3:17:14 PM PST by E. Pluribus Unum
There is no Plan B for 2016.
Ill say it, happily: Democrats should be worried about Hillary Clinton, and moderately panicked about the immediate future of both their party and their cause.
This is not, of course, because Hillarys latest scandale du jour is in any practical way going to disqualify her; and nor is it because leftward-leaning voters are likely to recall anything more from this rather awkward period in time than that the Clintons are as perennially sleazy as they ever were. Rather, it is because the last few days have underscored just how tenuous the Lefts grip on power and influence truly is in the waning days of the once-buoyant Obama era. At present, Republicans control the House of Representatives, they lead the Senate, and they enjoy pole position within a vast majority of the states. The Democratic party, by contrast, has been all but wiped out, its great historical hope having relegated himself by his obstinacy to the role of MVP on a team of just a few. For the next couple of years, Obama will dig in where he can, blocking here, usurping there, and seeking to provide for the Left a source of energy and of authority. But then . . . what?
After last years midterm elections, New York magazines Jonathan Chait contended grimly that the sheer scale of the Republican wave had rendered Hillary Clinton the only thing standing between a Republican Party even more radical than George W. Bushs version and unfettered control of American government. The customary rhetorical hysterics to one side, this estimation appears to be sound. On the surface, the knowledge that Clinton is ready to consolidate the gains of the Obama project should be a matter of considerable comfort to progressivism and its champions. Indeed, as it stands today, Id still bet that Hillary will eventually make a somewhat formidable candidate, and that, despite her many, many flaws, she retains a better than 50 percent chance of winning the presidency in 2016. In part, this is because she is a woman, yes, and because she will play ad nauseam upon this fact between now and November of next year; in part this is because she has been distressingly effective at selling herself as a moderate, and because her husband is remembered as a solid caretaker and remains popular across partisan lines; in part this is because the Democratic party is currently benefitting from a number of structural advantages that Republicans will struggle to overcome, whomever they choose to be their standard bearer; and in part this is because the economy will almost certainly be doing well enough by next year that the Obama saved us all narratives will seem plausible to a good number of voters.
But and this is a big but: Once we take Hillary out of the equation, the game looks rather different. As potent as it might be on paper, the Democratic partys present edge within the Electoral College is by no means infinite, and it does not obtain in a personality vacuum. Such as they are, the current predictive models tend to presume less that the Democrats are bulletproof per se, and more that the party will field a strong and popular candidate in the mold of a Barack Obama or a John F. Kennedy or a William Jefferson Clinton and that this good candidate will start from a position of structural strength. Does the party have such a figure, other than Hillary? I cannot see that it does, no. Certainly, it is amusing for us to sing Run, Liz, Run, to tease Bernie Sanders or Joe Biden, and even to pretend that Andrew Cuomo or Martin OMalley could ever be elected president of the United States. But, idle levity to one side, there is ultimately no hiding from the recognition that Clinton is the only viable game in town. Historically, running for a third term is extraordinarily tough. Are Americans expected to return a nobody to the highest office in the land purely because the on-paper estimates favor his party?
In the last few days, we have seen a host of progressive commentators begin to call for an alternative. And yet for all the thrilling Challenge! headlines that this dissent has inevitably provoked, it remains the case that pretty much every single person who has called for a contested Democratic primary has chosen to rest his argument on the presumption that a nomination fight would help Hillary to improve, not that it would help her party to select a more appropriate candidate. A quote, from radio host Deborah Arnie Arnesen, sums up the pattern well:
The Democratic base that isnt wedded to her is nervous about it, said Deborah Arnie Arnesen, a progressive radio host in Concord, New Hampshire. It makes her more vulnerable. What is this anointed candidate getting us? A much more flawed candidate than we thought. And Republicans now have material they never thought they would have.
We need to litigate this in a primary so that she will be better at it, or it will be the Republicans who will be doing it for her, she added.
This fear is well placed. Indeed, were I a progressive Democrat, I daresay Id be saying the same thing. Suppose, arguendo, that I thought, as does Jonathan Chait, that there was quite literally one human being standing between my agenda and a sweeping set of market and political reforms that would destroy my dreams for a generation. Suppose I believed, as does ThinkProgress, that if a Republican president is given the opportunity to nominate two or three more Supreme Court justices, the dream of a progressive judiciary will be dead for a generation or more. Suppose that I considered Obamacare to be a great and historic political victory, and that I was desperate for an executive who would protect it against Republican or popular repeal. Wouldnt I be rather worried that Clinton might . . . die? Wouldnt I find myself lying awake at night, fretting that Hillary might become too sick to run? Would I not entertain with horror the possibility that this latest scandal might be the tip of the iceberg, and that Hillary might have one too many crimes in her well-stocked closet? Wouldnt it occur to me that she might begin to stumble and fall on the campaign trail, the better to be shown up by a young and fresh-faced alternative from the right?
The old adage holds that only a fool elects to put all his eggs in one basket, and, for all our technological progress and social ingenuity, this remains as true now as it ever was. In the New York Times yesterday, Frank Bruni inquired of Hillary: Does she have a political death wish? He might well ask that of her party as well. The lights are going out across Blue America. The amplifying fear that there will be nobody viable to light them back aflame is grounded in reality. Time for a little sweating, perhaps.
I will follow slick-willies lead on this!!!!
LOL.
“Republicans now have material they never thought they would have.....
many of us GUESSED we’d have something of this magnitude...
not there the “material” that already existed on Her Thighness wasnt enough to drown the average witch!
Hillary hasn’t had eggs in her basket for a very long while.
Thyme for a seasoned omelet.
Well, I’m off eggs for a while...
*SHUDDER*
The real candidate will be far worse. Hill is just a front. There to scare off the GOP into putting up some derp moderate. That’s when Obama II “comes out of nowhere”.
Do I smell rotten eggs?
Ask Huma...
Game plan
I’m sure she would know ;)
Good bet, :)
That being said I still think we are too far over the cliff to make it back.
I’m not content in breaking one egg. We need to destroy the chicken that roost. MSM is emphasizing only one facet of the fiasco. Who will put it all together? Connect Dots?
1. $6 billion missing from state department
. 2. Multiple email account under various fake names register out of the public eye ( an MO for money laundering )
. 3 Unlimited travel through out the world without going thru customs
. 4. A history of deceit and bending of the rules and ought right lies
. 5. Large contributions to a family controlled charity by foreign and domestics who have opportunity to gain
. 6. Questionable relationships with people of questionable background (including daughter, Inlaws and sibling
7. And
Oh goody Hillary as President and bubba as first ahole..
Sodom of biblical fame.. is a village.. a campfire weenie roast..
Compared to New York City.. or “Sodom Central Washington D.C...”
Is Lady Liberty now a prostitute?.. -OR- a crack whore?..
MAN you cannot make this stuff up.. it’s actually WORSE than that..
Is it possible Jeb Bush can win over the Hildebeast?...
YES..... it is possible.. voters are primates..
Just offer them a banana..
Both Clintons have practiced year and years of "smiling curruption" from pre-Arkansas years to Rose Law firm, Vince Foster, Jennifer Flowers to Monica et.al. to Hillary's 10k cattle investment, to whitewater, to China political contributions and on and on and on. Apparently the American people are too stupid and/or apathetic to recognize this illicit pair for what they are. And now, a run for POTUS? Far, far worse than we presently have. And that's pretty bad.
EXACTLY! Everybody is focusing on her, "emails" and no one seems to be questioning what else she has on this server. I don't understand how this server has not been impounded and searched for classified info. How can she be allowed to retain procession of material evidence without someone investigating more fully?
As to the article, why aren't people asking, "why are we all in this handbasket and were are we going?"
Politicians come out of the woodwork to run for president. It would be surprising if Hillary didn't have any challengers. So there will be somebody around to pick up the pieces if she shatters.
It would be really funny if it was Biden.
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