by hilzoy
I think it’s more or less beyond question that Hillary Clinton, and her husband, have told a series of lies about Barack Obama. (I’ve put some familiar examples at the end of this post: anyone who wants to consider the evidence can do so, but it won’t be as distracting to those who have already seen it.) I basically agree with what publius said about it:
“What’s so infuriating is that, in doing so, they assume their audience is too ignorant to learn the truth. It’s not so much that they’re attacking Obama – after all, that’s politics. It’s that Clinton’s attacks illustrate a deep contempt for voters. Call it “the rube strategy” – we’ll say what we want and most people will be too ignorant to ever figure out the difference.”
However, I don’t think the problem is exactly that they are assuming that most people won’t follow the news closely enough to know who is telling the truth and who is lying. As far as I can tell, that assumption is accurate. The problem is that they are playing on that ignorance in a way that displays a different sort of contempt for voters: not the assumption that most people do not follow the news closely enough to be able to say what’s wrong with criticizing Obama’s ‘present’ votes on anti-abortion bills, which is probably true, but the idea that it is OK to manipulate them into casting votes they might not cast if people were not telling them lies.
Consider, for instance …
… the email described in this story. It was sent to New Hampshire pro-choice voters two days before the primary, and was signed by “two dozen prominent women.” It said, in part:
“The difference between Hillary’s repeatedly standing up strong on choice and Obama’s unwillingness to vote ‘yes’ or ‘no’ is a clear contrast, and we believe the voters in New Hampshire deserve to know this difference,” the e-mail stated. “We support Hillary Clinton because she never ducked when choice was at stake.”
The claim that Barack Obama’s present votes on abortion bills in the Illinois Senate constitute “ducking when choice was at stake” is a lie. (See (3) at the end of the post for evidence.) And at least one of the women who signed the email says the Clinton campaign did not tell her any of this when they asked her to sign the email, and that she now regrets agreeing to:
Katie Wheeler, a former state senator, said the Clinton campaign had not given her background information about Obama’s record on abortion rights when it asked her to sign the letter calling him weak on the issue, and said that, as a result, she did not understand the context of the votes that the letter was attacking him over.
“It should never have gotten to the point where anyone thought Obama was not pro-choice,” said Wheeler, a founder of the New Hampshire chapter of NARAL Pro-Choice America. “I don’t think the Clinton campaign should have done that. It was divisive and unnecessary…I think it was a mistake and I’ve spoken to the national [Clinton campaign] and told them it caused problems in New Hampshire, and am hoping they won’t do it again.”
(Note to self: always, always find out the facts for yourself before signing things.)
The point of this email was to sway pro-choice voters by making them think that Barack Obama is not fully committed to women’s right to choose. In sending it, the Clinton campaign apparently thought that presenting Hillary Clinton herself, and saying true things about Obama, might not be enough to convince people to vote for her. There are ways of responding to this thought that demonstrate respect for people’s right to make up their own mind whom to vote for: trying to become a more compelling candidate, for instance, or accepting the possibility of defeat. But lying is not one of them.
Lying in an election is basically a way of saying: we know how you ought to vote, and if we can’t get you to vote that way by presenting you with facts and arguments, or even with truthful but emotionally shaded appeals, then we will get you to vote our way by telling you things that are not true. It’s hard to see what could be more profoundly disrespectful of people’s right to decide for themselves whom to vote for.
It is also, needless to say, at odds with one of the basic principles of democracy: that people have the right to decide for themselves whom to support.
But it also undermines democracy by placing intolerable burdens on citizens. As I said above, I think that the assumption that most people are not following the news closely enough to be able to tell who is telling the truth and who is lying is probably correct. In part, this is because (in my humble opinion) many people are not sufficiently politically informed. I think that it is our duty as citizens to learn enough to cast informed votes, and that this requires both following the news to some extent and also acquiring enough background knowledge (e.g., of economics) to be able to assess what people say.
However, I do not think that it ought to be our duty as citizens to become complete political junkies, the sorts of people who follow each and every twist and turn in a Presidential campaign. Some of us are like that (she said, bashfully), but I cannot see any reason at all why everyone should be.
But when candidates tell the kinds of lies that the Clintons have been telling, they place citizens in a position in which the only way to know what is going on is to become political junkies. Being merely informed is not enough: you have to be the sort of person who actually remembers the article from 2004 that Bill Clinton was referring to when he said that Obama had changed his position on the war, and so forth.
It’s like the tobacco companies’ attempts to confuse people by coming up with research that seemed to show that smoking was harmless. The strategy is to sow enough doubt that people who are not willing to slog through the science, the interminable debates about the methodological deficiencies of this or that study, etc., etc., etc., are likely to come away with a vague sense that the case that smoking is bad isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. It is designed to leave people with two options: either spend an awful lot of time working through the science, or be misled. In so doing, it asks a lot of ordinary people who have lives to lead: it prevents them from just reading stuff, forming a more or less correct view, and acting accordingly. And it is deeply wrong.
Likewise here: the Clintons’ strategy seems to be designed to leave people with two options: either become political junkies, follow every tiny detail of all these stories, and make up your minds on the merits, or not, in which case you will be left with a vague sense that Obama is not all he should be — a sense that is wholly unsupported by the facts. (To be clear: I am sure that Obama is not, in fact, all he should be. But to the extent that anyone reaches this conclusion based on lies, their sense that he is not all he should be is not based on facts.)
Ordinary people, who have actual lives, should not have to spend as much time on the minutiae of political campaigns as they would have to to assess the Clintons’ claims. In fact, most of them won’t. This is fine, or it ought to be: there is no more reason for everyone to be a political junkie (as opposed to merely well-informed) than for everyone to be a triathlete, or obsessed with the history of Renaissance coinage.
When politicians lie, however, they raise the amount of time it takes to do one’s job as a citizen adequately, and they raise it dramatically. It’s as though they walked up to people and said: if I weren’t around, you might be able to fulfill your civic obligations by reading the papers, but thanks to my lies, in order to exercise your right to vote responsibly, you will have to spend hours Googling and going over long-forgotten articles in order to find out the most basic facts. If you don’t, I’ll be able to deceive you. Ha ha ha!
People who do that have no respect for voters, no respect for their right to make up their own minds, and no respect for our democratic system. The only way they will stop is if we stop tolerating it. In a democracy, we get the leaders we deserve. I very much hope we deserve better than the Clintons*.
***
*Footnote: as I have already said, I will support Clinton if nominated, because I think that all the Republicans would be vastly worse. (Lies in campaigns versus selling out habeas corpus, or a hundred years in Iraq, or remaking the Constitution according to Biblical principles? Not a close call, for me.) Moreover, since I think the issues at stake in this election are very, very important, I will probably not just support Clinton over any Republican, I’ll donate to her and work for her. I’m not sure I ever had the impulse to insist on perfection, or even what strikes me as minimal OK-ness, in politicians; if I did, however, it vanished a long time ago.
I don’t have to like it, though. And I don’t have to accept it while we still have a choice.
***
Lies: a short, non-exhaustive list.
(1) The Reagan Quote
Hillary Clinton at the SC Debate:
“The facts are that he has said in the last week that he really liked the ideas of the Republicans over the last 10 to 15 years, and we can give you the exact quote.”
“”Her principal opponent said that since 1992, the Republicans have had all the good ideas,” Clinton told a crowd in Pahrump this morning.”
(See also here, and Clinton’s new ad.)
What Obama actually said (aka “the exact quote”):
“The Republican approach has played itself out. I think it’s fair to say that the Republicans were the party of ideas for a pretty long chunk of time there over the last 10, 15 years, in the sense that they were challenging conventional wisdom. Now, you’ve heard it all before. You look at the economic policies when they’re being debated among the presidential candidates, it’s all tax cuts. Well, we know, we’ve done that; we’ve tried it. That’s not really going to solve our energy problems, for example.”
Steve Benen’s takes on this is good, as are Mark Schmitt’s and Paul Waldman’s.
(2) Iraq
“The only thing I pointed out was that there was substantially no difference in her record and his on Iraq, and that he had said in 2004 there was no difference between his position and President Bush. And he said that was somehow dishonest, but he never answers how it’s not accurate. So this is crazy.”
Bill Clinton, earlier:
“Second, it is wrong that Senator Obama got to go through 15 debates trumpeting his superior judgment and how he had been against the war in every year, numerating the years, and never got asked one time, not once, ‘Well, how could you say, that when you said in 2004 you didn’t know how you would have voted on the resolution? You said in 2004 there was no difference between you and George Bush on the war and you took that speech you’re now running on off your website in 2004 and there’s no difference in your voting record and Hillary’s ever since?’ Give me a break.”
Big difference between Clinton’s and Obama’s record on the war: Obama opposed it in 2002, and said he would not have voted for the Iraq War Resolution, which, of course, Sen. Clinton did vote for. The 2004 quote, in context:
“He opposed the war in Iraq, and spoke against it during a rally in Chicago in the fall of 2002. He said then that he saw no evidence that Iraq had unconventional weapons that posed a threat, or of any link between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda.
In a recent interview, he declined to criticize Senators Kerry and Edwards for voting to authorize the war, although he said he would not have done the same based on the information he had at the time.
“But, I’m not privy to Senate intelligence reports,” Mr. Obama said. “What would I have done? I don’t know. What I know is that from my vantage point the case was not made.”
But Mr. Obama said he did fault Democratic leaders for failing to ask enough tough questions of the Bush administration to force it to prove its case for war. “What I don’t think was appropriate was the degree to which Congress gave the president a pass on this,” he said.”
(OMG, I’m repeating a right-wing talking point!!)
(3) The ‘Present’ Votes
Here are accounts (or, in the case of the mailer, a scan) of a mailer, emails, and attack websites about Obama’s “present” votes on anti-abortion votes.
From the NYT, in an article that came out several weeks before the Clinton flyer:
“Pam Sutherland, president of Illinois Planned Parenthood Council, said Mr. Obama was one of the senators with a strong stand for abortion rights whom the organization approached about using the strategy. Ms. Sutherland said the Republicans were trying to force Democrats from conservative districts to register politically controversial no votes.
Ms. Sutherland said Mr. Obama had initially resisted the strategy because he wanted to vote against the anti-abortion measures.
“He said, ‘I’m opposed to this,’” she recalled.
But the organization argued that a present vote would be difficult for Republicans to use in campaign literature against Democrats from moderate and conservative districts who favored abortion rights.”
More:
“The Obama campaign has argued his present votes were part of a legislative strategy devised by the Illinois chapter of Planned Parenthood to counter a Republican leadership strategy to force pro-abortion rights Democrats into politically damaging “no” votes against popular abortion restrictions. The legislators wound then be attacked at election time for voting no legislation with names such as “The Born Alive Infant Protection Act.” The present votes would provide political cover and still have the same effect as a no vote.
The Tribune last year found few lawmakers remembered such a strategy and many of those who joined with Obama to vote present were, like him, in politically safe districts. But leaders of Illinois Planned Parenthood have maintained since the controversy erupted that they did in fact devise the present-vote strategy and asked Obama to participate.
Pam Sutherland, president and CEO of the Illinois Planned Parenthood Council, vouched again in the conference call that Obama’s present votes were made a the request of Illinois abortion-rights advocates.
“It was our strategy from Planned Parenthood,” Sutherland said.
“Sen. Obama was key to that present-vote strategy,” She continued. “He was always gong to be no votes on all of these bills. But we specifically asked him to vote present because he was so respected among his fellow Democrats that, if he did the present vote, they would follow suit. And that ended up being the case. They did follow suit. And not only did many of the Democrats follow suit. So did a couple of Republicans follow suit.”
“It actually worked, because the then-Senate President was no longer able to use these votes against candidates in their races,” Sutherland added.
This is also interesting. And in case anyone wonders whether Pam Sutherland, the head of Illinois Planned Parenthood who appears in many of these stories, is just saying this because of the present election season, here she is giving the same account in 2004. Another person from Planned Parenthood who was involved with this strategy writes about it here.
This line of attack seems to have convinced the former President of Chicago NOW to switch from supporting Hilary to supporting Obama. YouTube videos here.
(4) The Teachers’ Union Lawsuit
Bill Clinton on the suit to bar caucus sites in casinos:
“There were teachers who filed the lawsuit. You have asked the question in an accusatory way, so I will ask you back,” the former president said. “Do you really believe that all the Democrats understood that they had agreed to give people who worked in the casino a vote worth five times as much as people who voted in their own precinct?”
“Did you know that? Their votes will be counted five times more powerfully, in terms of delegates to the state convention, compared to delegates to the antional convention.”
Matthews noted the state party approved the set up.
Clinton: “What happened is nobody understood what happened..they uncovered it. And now everybody’s saying, ”Oh, they don’t want us to vote…what they really tried to do was to set up a deal where their votes counted five times, maybe even more, as much.”
“Well that sounds terribly unfair — the casino workers’ votes will count five times as much? Awful! Except it seems to be completely false. So where did Clinton arrive at this number? I can’t say for sure, but it seems he just made it up.
As is often the case in the Rube Goldberg delegate allocation system used in caucuses, there is an absurdly complex formula to determine how many delegates each precinct receives. But the Las Vegas Sun crunched the numbers, and according to their calculation, if 10,000 people voted at the at-large precincts, they would make up around 6 percent of the total delegates for the state. Now, does that mean that the votes of those who vote there will count five times as much as anyone else’s? Only if you assume that statewide turnout will be so large the at-large precincts will only make up 1.2 percent of the vote (6 percent divided by 5). That would mean, under this scenario, that total turnout in the Democratic caucus would have to be 833,333.
Will turnout be that high? Well, no. As the Sun recently reported, “Democratic circles are abuzz with excitement about Nevada’s caucus, and people are starting to think that the state party’s early estimate – recently repeated by Sen. Harry Reid – of 100,000 people might just be possible.”
In order for the at-large precincts to be over-represented, the turnout there would have to be incredibly low, while turnout everywhere else in the state is incredibly high, and there is no reason to think that will happen.”
(Actual Democratic turnout: 116,000.)
The idea that “nobody understood” what rules governed the apportioning of delegates in Nevada until a few days before the caucus, and a few days after the Culinary Union endorsement, is also pretty far-fetched:
“The state Democratic Party unanimously approved the caucus rules last March, and the Democratic National Committee signed on in August. Four of the six plaintiffs [in the suit to ban the caucus sites; hilzoy] are members of the committee that approved the rules.”
(5) Social Security
Clinton mailer:
Headline: “We need a president that will help hard-working families keep more of what they earn.” Description of Obama: “a plan with a trillion dollar tax increase on America’s hard working families. Lifting the cap on Social Security taxes to send more of Nevada families’ hard-earned dollars to Washington.”
In fact, Obama has no such plan. He has said he would “consider” raising the cap. Oddly enough, so has Clinton:
“Obama tried to describe his position at a campaign stop outside Las Vegas on Wednesday, saying the worst part about the mailer is that Clinton has said she would consider doing the same thing he wants to do.
He said he thinks requiring high-income earners to pay more Social Security taxes is the best way to prevent a cut in benefits.
Currently, workers pay Social Security taxes on the first $97,500 in income – anything above that is exempt. Obama said he would consider keeping the exemption for up to around $200,000, but anyone earning more than that should have to contribute more. He was not specific about what he would do.
“There might be some exemptions, but once people are making over $200,000 to $250,000, they can afford to pay a little more in payroll tax,” Obama said. (…)
Three months ago, Clinton told an Iowa voter privately that she would consider raising the income limit as long as there was a “gap,” with no Social Security taxes on income from $97,500 to around $200,000. An Associated Press reporter overheard the conversation.”
In addition, the $1 trillion figure is wrong. Eliminating the cap — not raising it, and not exempting people who make between from $97,500 and $200,000 — would raise $1 trillion over ten years (cite, pdf), but Obama has not proposed eliminating the cap. Moreover, not including the ‘over ten years’ part is deeply misleading. (I mean, I could describe a one cent increase in, say, drivers’ license fees as “a trillion dollar tax increase” if I got to add, under my breath: “over the next five millenia.”)
And let’s not even get into the question whether voters making over $200,000-250,000 count as middle class.
amen. very nicely done.
“It’s like the tobacco companies’ attempts to confuse people by coming up with research that seemed to show that smoking was harmless.”
Better: It’s like the Bush administration’s attempts to confuse people by coming up with alternative intelligence assessments showing that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, was in cahoots with Al Qaeda, sought plutonium from Africa … etc … etc …
Thanks for this wonderful work, Hilzoy.
My mood is gloomier and gloomier by the day.
This is, too, is a favorite tactic of some right wing elements. Biologists know well of the Gish Gallop, where the creationist offender throws out so many lies and warped half truths that the scientist spends 10 times as much time debunking the truths, leaving them little time to present a positive case. This doesn’t seem to be much of a difference here.
This is depressing.
thanks.
It has been truly depressing not only to see this strategy, & see it working, but to see how many people whom I thought saw politics a bit like I did? Actually don’t. The whole “contempt for the electorate” v. “not” distinction doesn’t seem to be particularly relevant to a lot of people.
For me the worst thing is the way that the Clintons have reawakened the racist element of the Democratic Party. It was always there, but at least it was heavily suppressed.
For me the worst thing is the way that the Clintons have reawakened the racist element of the Democratic Party. It was always there, but at least it was heavily suppressed.
The thing that amazes me is that they’re perfectly willing to damage the party’s long term future just to get a nomination that may be no better than a 50-50 shot at getting back to the White House. If there’s one way to get black voters to forget and forgive the Republicans’ shameful use of the Southern Strategy, it’s to use it yourself, with an added dose of “you’ll come back to me in November” contempt.
Well that’s the big worry amongst the Republicans isn’t it? That someone might be muscling in on the racist voters on which they have depended these 40 odd years.
Without the racist vote what do the Republicans have left?
Zilch.
No, they’ve still got the misogynist vote and the homophobic vote and the class vote.
“Well that’s the big worry amongst the Republicans isn’t it? That someone might be muscling in on the racist voters on which they have depended these 40 odd years.
Without the racist vote what do the Republicans have left?”
Huh? Are you arguing that the Clintons *should* be trying to appeal to racism first against Obama and later in the general election?
I will admit it is an interesting application of “Democrats have to do what Republicans do in order to win”. But by ‘interesting’ I mean “in an appalling way”.
Huh? Are you arguing that the Clintons *should* be trying to appeal to racism first against Obama and later in the general election?
I’m saying what I’m saying. I’m not saying what you’re saying.
Without the racist vote what do the Republicans have left?
Zilch.
Denial – not just a river in Egypt.
No, they’ve still got the misogynist vote and the homophobic vote and the class vote.
Elevating the level of discourse as always, I see.
Right on, Hilzoy. We live in the midst of a corrupt and degraded political discourse…but none of us is compelled to do our part to keep it running. We have to respond to it, but we can choose to respond with something other than more of the same. As for citizens, so for candidates. Clinton wasn’t forced to campaign this way, and should face proper punishment for it, starting with criticism for the tactics and scorn for the stupid justifications.
I’m certainly not the first to point this out, but it really reflects badly on her qualifications for office at this particular time. We’ve got a president who takes all disagreement as attacks to be crushed by any means possible, who rejects diplomacy as a thing losers do, and so on. A big part of the new president’s job will be repairing the damage from all that – giving potential allies and partners reasons to think we’re trustworthy again. It seems really unlikely to me that someone who campaigns this way can go on to govern effectively in the diametrically opposite style, and I don’t want to gamble on it.
Denial – not just a river in Egypt.
When you look up denial in the dictionary, the text reads:
If there’s one way to get black voters to forget and forgive the Republicans’ shameful use of the Southern Strategy
Figure it out, son.
A big part of the new president’s job will be repairing the damage from all that – giving potential allies and partners reasons to think we’re trustworthy again. It seems really unlikely to me that someone who campaigns this way can go on to govern effectively in the diametrically opposite style, and I don’t want to gamble on it.
Agreed. One of my strongest objections to Hillary is that she has a bit too much in common with Bush personality-wise for my taste.
Figure it out, son.
Don’t get me wrong, now_what. I’m not arguing that blacks will (or should) start voting Republican in large numbers anytime soon, given that the Republicans still are largely a white party and Democratic policies are still more friendly to most black voters. Using race-baiting campaign tactics and taking their support for granted isn’t going to help, though. If the Republicans get smart and make a total break from the racist elements of their past (something there is good evidence they’re doing), I don’t see any reason why the next generation of black voters, for whom the Civil Rights movement is something in a history book rather than something they lived through, would be inherently loyal to the Democratic party. I certainly wouldn’t expect it to continue voting Democratic at 90%+ rates the way the Civil Rights generation has. All I’m saying is, if Democrats think they can treat black voters with impunity on the theory that they’ll always be loyal nonetheless, they’re in denial.
I’m not arguing that blacks will (or should) start voting Republican in large numbers anytime soon, given that the Republicans still are largely a white party
That’s where your argument goes off into the weeds. It’s not about color.
What really pisses me off is that, to me, Obama represents the end to this style of politics, and Billary has utilized all the scumbag Repub tactics to muddy the waters and drag us back down.
And it pisses me off that it seems so obvious and apparent in every word they say. They know they are squeezing every once of sentimentality out of every distorted representation. It’s insulting upon insulting upon insulting.
To wit:
Great article Hilzoy.
One point I disagree with you on is supporting Hillary in the general. Against some republicans I would support her, but against most, I don’t think the effects of her election will be better in the long run.
(1) It will lock in this style of politics for both parties. It will be a prisoner’s dilemma where neither side will risk cooperating. With our politics ruled by lies, we’ll lose the most basic electoral check.
(2) Her election will reinvigorate the republican party. She’s the only thing that can do this.
(3) Her election will lock in her sick cabal into power positions in the democratic party for another decade or two. Stare long and hard at Mark Penn’s leering face. That will be the face of the democratic party if Hillary wins.
(4) Hillary is the least likely candidate to take a political chance in order to do what’s right in Iraq (whether that means withdrawing or whatever else is tactically required to give the best chance for as many Iraqis to survive this as possible). Between the hatred she generates in republicans and her craven pursuit of power, she simply won’t have the political flexibility to do anything but drag out the status quo.
The republican candidates are bad top to bottom, but many of them would be better able to actually make positive changes than Hillary. Presidents from weakened parties reach out for support (unless they’re run by people who think they’re on a mission from god).
I may well end up supporting Hillary in the general, but it depends entirely on who the republicans nominate.
Bruce said:
I think it’s almost certain that the Clintons’ governing style will involve lying and cheating. However, in the best-case scenario, they will lie and cheat in pursuit of a progressive agenda.
But that’s not what really appals my conscience. What appals my conscience is that progressives will make excuses for them.
On the upside, Jonah Goldberg’s book should sell well. Just wait for the 2012 ‘Clintonian Fascism’ edition!
However, in the best-case scenario, they will lie and cheat in pursuit of a progressive agenda.
I’m curious to know progressive reasoning for hoping for this. Bill accomplished a few things, but could any of them really be called progressive? As soon as the progressive reforms he did attempt (healthcare, gays in the military) failed, he pivoted and started stealing Republican ideas (welfare reform, DOMA). History suggests that the Clintons’ primary allegiance is to the Clintons – not to progressivism.
With the stock market woes, if you’re looking for a good stock see who makes/sells popcorn. Many on the right are consuming large amounts as they kick back and watch this show.
As more and more Democrats/liberals/progressives express these thoughts on the Clintons there seems to be a lot of “Hey – welcome to 1992!”.
It seems more and more likely they will be the final two, and there will be a lot of pressure for the winner to choose the loser as VP. The only question remaining is if it will be a black/female ticket or a female/black ticket.
So the next act (and increase in popcorn sales) will be watching these two kiss and make up and have to start extolling each others virtues.
You think there’s lying going on now… 😉
It seems more and more likely they will be the final two, and there will be a lot of pressure for the winner to choose the loser as VP.
If Hillary wins the nomination, I could see her offering the VP slot to Obama – it’d be a good peace offering to the African-American community and might help her a bit with the wine track set. It makes at least tactical sense for Obama since it’d leave him in great position to run in 2016 assuming Hillary gets two terms – though it would undercut his whole persona of the above-the-fray outsider.
If Obama wins, though, what’s the pressure on him to pick Hillary? She’ll be old news, and adding her to the ticket would weaken the “candidacy of change” thing. Plus, she seems to want this so bad I have a VERY hard time seeing her swallowing her pride and settling for #2.
If either of them win, they’d do well to pick John Edwards, IMO…
Thanks for this wonderful work.
My mood is gloomier and gloomier by the day.
Thanks.
politicians are liars, and more often than not, lying works. obviously.
People who do that have no respect for voters, no respect for their right to make up their own minds, and no respect for our democratic system.
respect for voters? our ‘democratic system’ is broken. a candidate has to successfully appeal to voters only once, and then there’s zero accountability (ex. Bush). there’s nothing to lose by slatherin’-on the distortions and misrepresentations. lie lie lie and hope the press likes your tour bus better than the other guy’s because if the press doesn’t call you out on your lies, you’re golden; and if you’re really good, your lies will have made a new realty and left everybody else arguing about the way things used to be.
Bravo! Wouldn’t change a word.
“I think it’s almost certain that the Clintons’ governing style will involve lying and cheating. However, in the best-case scenario, they will lie and cheat in pursuit of a progressive agenda.”
Well, always assuming they’re not lying about what agenda they’re lying in order to advance…
But it also undermines democracy by placing intolerable burdens on citizens
I have an idea! Let’s establish freedom of the press, so that there is a public institution dedicated to investigating and publishing the basic facts of the matter for others to read.
Then, I woke up…
If the Republicans get smart and make a total break from the racist elements of their past (something there is good evidence they’re doing)
I think it’s fair to say that there is good evidence that Republicans are beginning to figure out that a total break from their racist elements might be useful.
I don’t really see a lot of good evidence that they’re actually *doing* much about it. On the contrary.
Re: the Clinton campaign — I think taking the low road is going to blow up in her face. The word that comes to mind is “unseemly”.
I also think Bill is doing her no favors. She would be better off with him in the background quietly raising money.
Thanks –
I don’t really see a lot of good evidence that they’re actually *doing* much about it. On the contrary.
Well, I think they deserve some credit for appointing the highest-ranking minorities in U.S. history. They’ve still got a ways to go in terms of outreach to blacks. But the Tancredo wing aside, they’ve made a lot of inroads with the Hispanic community – Bush won a majority of the Hispanic vote in Texas, if I recall correctly.
“Let’s establish freedom of the press, so that there is a public institution dedicated to investigating and publishing the basic facts of the matter for others to read.”
Have you ever taken a gander at what passed for a ‘press’ at the time the 1st amendment was written and ratified? The founders had a rather less lofty goal: Just making sure the government couldn’t silence opinions it didn’t like. Press objectivity wasn’t even a concept back then. (Of course, it’s never been more than a concept, it was just easier to pretend they were objective back when they had a stronger lock on public discourse, and a more united front.)
“I think it’s fair to say that there is good evidence that Republicans are beginning to figure out that a total break from their racist elements might be useful.”
Cool, that puts them ahead of the Democrats, who still think you can promote racial quotas without being racist, if you define “racist” in just exactly the right way…
On a similar vein to this essay, I urge everyone to join my crusade against “voice” votes. The practice has no positive justification since electronic tally machines with keychain remotes were invented, it’s only purposes are to allow legislators to lie about what they voted for, and to permit the leadership to ‘pass’ legislation by assembling only supporters in the chamber, at the cost of the constitutionally mandated quorum. The practice is today indefensible.
Great post.
World of politics. They are all dirty. People who own plenty of money and posses great power will win eventually.
Xeynon, the appointment of so many high-ranking minorities would be more impressive if any of them managed to be both honest and competent.
Well, I think they deserve some credit for appointing the highest-ranking minorities in U.S. history.
OK, I’ll give them that.
They pursue voter registration initiatives that are, clearly, intended to make it harder for minorities to vote. Most likely nothing personal, just business. But still.
Giuliani, Romney, McCain, and Thompson took a pass on the Morgan State debate last September. Scheduling conflicts.
And, as you note, they do still provide the “Tancredo wing” with a home.
More importantly, IMO, the conservative answer for the problems facing minority communities seems to be “pull yourself up by your bootstraps”. That’s a worthy ethic as far as it goes, but it ignores real, historical, structural issues that make it, basically, about 10 times harder for people with dark skin to do so.
I don’t really see Republican initiatives to address those. On the contrary, the standard conservative position seems to be that such initiatives are illegitimate.
Thanks –
Xeynon: Well, I think they deserve some credit for appointing the highest-ranking minorities in U.S. history.
I suppose George W. Bush is a minority of sorts…
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
I agree with hilzoy that, given the choice, Hillary is the one to support in the general (with my vote at least, at this moment I don’t know that I could bring myself to volunteer or give money). But I’m under no illusions about what I’d be supporting. Hillary has become what we used to call a liberal Republican, back before that sub-species died out.
There’s no question that she’ll have a greater engagement with reality that would be a substantial improvement over any possible Republican opponent on its own. And there are positions on specific issues (e.g. abortion, gay rights) that are worth supporting. But her entire campaign is an object lesson in how hard entrenched interests will fight to prevent real change. She’s the true candidate of “false hopes”. She’ll get SCHIP expanded, but she’s not even trying to build the political coalition required for health care reform (and I’m not convinced she’ll care outside of a primary race where supporting reform is a political necessity rather than a political risk). And I don’t even have words for how depressing I expect her Middle East policy to be. At least my expectations are so low that I might be pleasantly surprised.
I’ve been disappointed in Democratic nomination fights before. My first choices over the past 20 years are certainly the wonky, wine-track All-Stars (Dukakis, Tsongas, Bradley, Dean, Edwards, …). But at the end of the day I’ve always been able to pick myself up find some positive good in the winner to vote for. And I’m willing to admit my mistakes: choosing Bradley over Gore was short-sighted failure of judgment (it breaks my heart that Gore isn’t running – ever again, it appears).
This time is different. Should Hillary win the nomination it will be the first time I’m voting for the lesser of two evils rater than someone I believe has good to offer the country. And should she win the presidency I’d be hoping for a primary challenger to support in 2012. I don’t know what to do with that.
The Clintons’ pollution of the campaign leads me to suspect that they know more about where this is going than we do, and they are desperate to alter its course.
Another, related observation. Obama and Clinton are extremely well spoken. The clarity of their presentations has itself highlighted the mendacity of the Clinton campaign. And, it occurs to me that this creates a problem for the Clintons. In past Presidential campaigns, once the mud started flying it became impossible to sort through the mess, and the public just tolerated the condition until the election. Bush/Gore; Bush/Kerry – once the two campaigns started shaving the corners off the facts, the dialogue became incomprehensible, and everyone just tuned the prinipcals out.
Not so here. I think the precision that Obama and the Clintons bring to their words highlight the Clintons’ mendacity. (I also hoe that is the case.) IOW, they won’t get away with this. Say anything; change nothing.
Thank you for sorting through this issue.
Xeynon, the appointment of so many high-ranking minorities would be more impressive if any of them managed to be both honest and competent.
Well, I think that’s a bit hard on Powell, and to a lesser extent Rice, but yes, the Alberto Gonzaleses of the world hardly deserve to be praised for anything other than setting a good precedent.
don’t really see Republican initiatives to address those.
How about 1.)lower taxes and deregulation to lure businesses back to the inner cities and create job opportunities for minorities, 2.)more effective crime prevention in inner city neighborhoods? Both of these have been pushed by municipal level Republican governments in various places. Because there aren’t national initiatives doesn’t mean initiatives don’t exist, but I agree, I’d like to see the Republicans do a bit more on the national level.
On the contrary, the standard conservative position seems to be that such initiatives are illegitimate.
Well, insofar as there is a “standard conservative position” on any given issue.. A lot of objection to such initiatives is, I think, rooted in big government skepticism rather than racism. I agree with you that there are still structural hurdles facing minorities which need to be addressed, though.
What we are seeing is evidence of the VCWC (vast Clinton wing conspiracy). IMO the Republican party (specially with this administration) had become the party of the ends justify the means.
It appears Clinton has taken on that philosophy. And like others above, it makes me worry about how they would govern. Yes, by they I mean both Clintons in tandem.
Although I do think she would roll back some of the more egregious excesses of the Bush administration, i.e. torture, I can see her willing to keep some of the executive powers that Bush has assumed. And it doesn’t matter if she uses them for good or evil, they are powers that no President should have.
One thing about the Obama Iraq quote form above. I wish, when Bill had talked about it that Obama had come back and pointed out that basically he had the same info Senator Clinton had since she admitted not reading the NIE. And challenging her on being willing to send Americans to war without making sure she had all the information available.
It is not just her yes vote that bothers me, it is that she admits making that critical a vote without taking the time to get as many pertinent facts as possible. And she has yet to say that her vote and invading Iraq at all was wrong.
The obvious side point is that if we had a functioning press corps, they would be calling her out on truth-challenged statements, and holding her feet to the fire…instead of sitting at their lunch table smirking and going “Ooooh…good one….!!!”
The Republicans caught on years ago that they could say anything and the media would report “The Republicans today said X. Democrats disagreed. Now here’s Pat Buchanan for the right and some apologist for the left…”
The Clintons are playing the same game, and it’s stupid and sad. I refuse to believe we’re locked into either Clinton or Obama (who’s not all that he’s been built up to be) yet. I continue to believe that the convention will be open and Edwards still has a small chance, or even a draft Gore movement.
If the convention is open, there will be no narrative to fall back on. There was an open convention in 1960, and in 1968 (when one of the leading candidates was assassinated), but not really since then. Nobody knows what will happen if (and when?) a bunch of delegates take the first few votes and find themselves deadlocked.
Really, suppose you’re on the fifth ballot, and neither Obama nor Clinton is getting enough votes. The Obama people will not want to switch to Clinton, I daresay, and the Clinton people will probably not want to switch to Obama. Something will have to give….
Well, I think that’s a bit hard on Powell, and to a lesser extent Rice
Powell didn’t resign over the US’s aggressive war on Iraq, when he knew that Iraq was no threat to the US. (Nor did anyone else, mind you, but Powell’s I think the only one who’d gone on record, only a year or two earlier, as saying that Iraq was no threat.)
Rice lied to the 9/11 Commission. Not that she was unique there, either.
They’re high-ranking members of the Bush administration, therefore we do not expect them to be either honest or competent: it is a bit unfair to pick them out as examples of dishonesty and incompetence when there are so many so much worse.
Gonzales, on the other hand, I would say is perfectly competent at what he does: he sat there and went “don’t remember” to all questions to which honest answers would have incriminated both himself and his clients. A competent defense lawyer – even a brilliant one! Of course, I do believe the Attorney General was once supposed to be a bit more than the President’s defending attorney, but who can keep track of these hoary old traditions?
Jes, I think the word you want in the last sentence is “quaint”.
The founders had a rather less lofty goal: Just making sure the government couldn’t silence opinions it didn’t like. Press objectivity wasn’t even a concept back then.
Yes, I agree. And although it’s a concept now, it’s not much of a reality. That’s kind of where I was going with my comment, sorry if that wasn’t clear.
Cool, that puts them ahead of the Democrats, who still think you can promote racial quotas without being racist
In my mind, I’m imagining the 4,028 posts that will go back and forth arguing about whether affirmative action is, or is not, racist.
Now, using my amazing yogic powers, I’m dissolving the heavy karmic weight of those posts, and making them disappear into the ether with a mighty blast of pure light consciousness.
Poof!
Now we don’t have to have this argument again. No more trips around and around the same wheel. Doesn’t that feel better?
Brett, your position on affirmative action is, with respect, noted and acknowledged.
Both of these have been pushed by municipal level Republican governments in various places
That’s great. Both sound like constructive initiatives.
A lot of objection to such initiatives is, I think, rooted in big government skepticism rather than racism
I’m sure that is so. It does, however, yield the same effective result.
To my mind, that is placing an ideological stance above what really ought to be seen as a legitimate function of government.
The bottom line, to me, is that the US is still a pretty tough place to have dark skin, and there’s a lot that can be done at a policy level to make that less so.
Thanks –
…..Oh….and Bill Clinton now looks a lot like W.C. Fields with the potato nose and all…Godfrey Daniels!
yurt: “many of them would be better able to actually make positive changes than Hillary.”
Able, perhaps, but which of them do you think would be willing to?
We have desperately needed, for quite a while, someone who had some clue about economics, foreign policy, and the Constitution. I’m not asking for massive expertise, though that would be nice; just a clue. Republicans have had a clue before. (I think Dole did.) But none of the ones running this time seem to. Clinton does. For me, that’s what will matter if she is nominated.
As I said, I don’t have to just accept that she will be, though. Not when there’s an alternative we might yet choose.
Shorter Hilzoy:
Barack Obama does not have to held accountabe for his words or for his record.
“I’m dissolving the heavy karmic weight of those posts, and making them disappear into the ether with a mighty blast of pure light consciousness.”
Kucinich should have tried this at the debates.
ken, what took you so long?
At least this time you are not denying that the Clintons are lying about what Obama really said. I guess that is some progress.
To my mind, that is placing an ideological stance above what really ought to be seen as a legitimate function of government.
Well, whether it’s a legitimate function of government is the big question. Personally I think it’s difficult to legislate prejudice out of existence, so I’m not convinced the government should try.
The bottom line, to me, is that the US is still a pretty tough place to have dark skin, and there’s a lot that can be done at a policy level to make that less so.
I’d argue that it’s one of the easiest places in the world to be a minority on the whole, given that citizenship is guaranteed by native birth, civil rights violations are in general zealously prosecuted, anything even approaching outright racism is considered unacceptable by cultural consensus, advocacy for minority rights is strong, immigration quotas are high, and many academic and government organizations practice affirmative action. The only first world countries which are in the same class as far as minority rights (and not in all cases) are the UK and the former commonwealth nations.
In mainland Europe citizenship laws which are much stricter than the U.S.’ and have a racist tinge (“French, German, etc. blood”) disenfranchise dark-skinned people who’ve in some cases lived in their country of residence for generations – we may bemoan the relative shortage of minorities in government and other positions of power, but in Europe the number is between few and none in most countries. Anti-immigrant sentiment against various groups (Algerians in France, Turks in Germany, Albanians in Italy, north Africans in the Netherlands, etc.) is just as fierce as in the U.S., and in some cases fiercer – consider that Tom Tancredo is a fringe figure in American politics whereas equivalently anti-immigrant politicians like Le Pen or Pim Fortuyn actually have national clout in Europe. We’re dealing with the ugly legacies of slavery, which ended 140 years ago, and Jim Crow, which ended 40 years ago, and which, while abhorrent, pales in comparison to the racially motivated GENOCIDE which took place in Europe only 60 years ago.
In Asia, Japan only recently rescinded literal second-class citizenship for zainichi Kankokujin (Japanese citizens of Korean descent), and Korea doesn’t allow ANYBODY not of Korean blood to obtain citizenship. China and Russia literally have to deploy armies to maintain the peace in minority-dominated regions.
Let’s not even discuss the developing world…
By no means is the U.S. perfect on the question of ethnic minorities. It is, in my opinion, far better than almost any other society in the world on that score, however. And I say that as someone who’s got a lot of beefs with American culture and society.
Too self-congratulatory, Xeynon, I think. We’re really really crappy on class & we haven’t broken the correlation between race & class.
“I will support Clinton if nominated, because I think that all the Republicans would be vastly worse. (Lies in campaigns versus selling out habeas corpus, or a hundred years in Iraq, or remaking the Constitution according to Biblical principles? Not a close call, for me.)”
I respect this stance. I do not, however, share it. If the Democratic candidate gains the nomination by such tactics OR uses them against the Republican nominee in the actual election, I will find a third-party candidate and send local and national Democrats a letter telling them why they’ve lost my support.
I agree that the Republican platform is horrifying. But I believe it got that way because the Republican electorate has grown to accept the tactics you dissected so eloquently. Once people care more about victory than reality, it becomes easy to sell them on the plausibility of convenient threats and easy solutions, and it becomes almost impossible to hold anyone accountable for results. I think the Republicans reached their current nadir by constantly saying “I don’t like the lying and corruption, but I like tax-and-spend, pro-abortion, God-hating, anti-military Dems even less.” Which makes sense superficially, but look at what they’ve actually been getting in return.
I don’t think four more years of a Republican executive will be a good thing, but I don’t think they’ll manage to institute a true dictatorship or revoke any of the nicer Amendments in that period of time either. I also don’t trust an anti-democratic, selfishly mendacious organization to only use its evil tactics in pursuit of good, progressive goals.
America has no real conservative party right now. It has a corrupt, destructively selfish and short-sighted group with a proven ability to win by lying to the uninformed middle and taking the party loyalists for granted. The Democrats have been moving in that direction for a while, seeing the success the opposition has had. I believe that movement is a slower but much greater existential threat to our freedom and democracy than even the most deranged Republican president could manage to be.
Great article as usual, Hilzoy.
The New York Times endorsed Hillary today. Very depressing to me that it seems more and more likely that Hillary will get the nomination and I will once again be forced to choose between the evil of two lessers.
And if Hillary wins we can look forward to at least 4 years of divisive and cynical politics. It will be exactly what the Republicans would hope for. Issues won’t matter. Investigating the Clintons will be back in fashion.
This country depressing me so much.
Raka–I kind of see where you’re coming from, but I think that losing presidential elections to the GOP just reinforces all the Democratic pathologies that you worry about. Progressives’ demands for change in the party are most effective when people notice that we’ve WON the election & we’re still getting ignored or sold out by our nominal leaders.
Too self-congratulatory, Xeynon, I think.
I’m not congratulating – merely offering my opinion. As I said, I’ve got mixed feelings about America, on a lot of scores. I have lived abroad for five years and traveled quite a bit, though, and I’d say I’ve encountered more (and more overt) racism in pretty much every other country I’ve visited, with the exception of Canada. Leaving aside all the concrete differences I listed…
We’re really really crappy on class & we haven’t broken the correlation between race & class.
There are some class issues, yes, though I think the extent to which the U.S. is worse than other nations on that score tends to be exaggerated. Also, there are a lot of poor white people in Appalachia who wouldn’t understand how class divides are necessarily a racial issue.
The correlation between race and class is an ongoing problem, but:
1.)The correlation has weakened significantly over the past 40 years – there are a LOT more middle and upper class blacks and Hispanics than there used to be, even if they’re still underrepresented.
2.)I think the continuing disparity is less and less due to continuing racism as opposed to the vestigial effects of racism – blacks and Hispanics started out at a lower point 40 years ago and would have had to move up faster than whites to have leveled the field by now – a tall order.
Is there still racism in American society? Yeah, no question. The country still has a ways to go in some ways. And even as old forms (anti-black) die out, new forms (anti-Mexican, anti-Arab) rise up to take their place. No society will ever be free of prejudice – it’s part of human nature. As I said, though, I think the U.S. is a lot better than most on this score.
Well, whether it’s a legitimate function of government is the big question.
Yes, exactly right. I’m a big lefty, so I think it is. No apologies.
I’ll support folks who think like me. You can support folks who think however it is that you think. Whoever comes out on top gets to set the policy.
citizenship is guaranteed by native birth, civil rights violations are in general zealously prosecuted, anything even approaching outright racism is considered unacceptable by cultural consensus, advocacy for minority rights is strong, immigration quotas are high, and many academic and government organizations practice affirmative action
Great. Obviously the problem has been solved.
blacks and Hispanics started out at a lower point 40 years ago and would have had to move up faster than whites to have leveled the field by now – a tall order.
Your time frame’s off a bit, but basically, I think we’ve just arrived at the “Aha” moment.
Thanks –
I agree that there won’t be a literal dictatorship, but they’ll take us significantly further along that path, especially with a few more Supreme Court appointments, and with every year the electoral process will be tilted further and further against the Democrats. I’m not buying the “It has to get worse before it gets better” argument, and I don’t want to live through that “worse” if I can help it.
And I think the probability of a new disastrous war and turning more and more of the rest of the world into our enemies is *much* higher if a Republican wins the presidency. That’s a huge consideration.
John Miller, you got me wrong.
What I am saying is that Hilzoy is wrong about the Clinton campaign.
But there is no use arguing with her about it. She is way too self rightous to be swayed by anything as mundane as facts.
I said nothing about the Clinton campaign. But since you brought it up, I will say that everything that the Clintons have said is backed up by facts.
If I were to use the same stardards as Hilzoy uses I would say that there can be no doubt that Hilzoy is intentially lying and misrepresting the Clinton campaign. But I don’t think her standards, to the extent I can decipher them, are reasonable. They seem to be personal to Hilzoy, strongly held, and selectivly applied. So my using her own standards against her would seem unfair, in my opinion. I think standard we use to judge peoples truthfulness should be reasonable enough to be useful and should be applied evenly.
Outstanding post. In a very short time this has become one of my favorite blogs–even if, as others have pointed out here, the conclusion is profoundly depressing to those of us who wish for a progressivism of both reliable substance and admirable style.
Those adjective are necessary because, as many have pointed out, there isn’t a great deal of daylight between Obama and Clinton in terms of the policies they’ve proposed and the priorities they’ve suggested they would emphasize. So character counts; leadership style counts; transformative potential counts.
hilzoy has it exactly right that the Clintons’ tactical approach is geared toward the non-obsessive voter. They assume, almost certainly with justification, that the average Dem primary voter has vague warm feelings toward the Clintons based on the ’90s, but might be drawn to Obama’s idealistic appeal and powerful life story. So they distort on small points, exercising the powerful media megaphone of an ex-president and their legendary message discipline, and instill just enough doubt that the relatively low-information voter goes with Old Reliable.
This approach, combined with Hillary Clinton’s secrecy, self-righteousness and demonstrated bad judgment, renders it impossible for me to give her my vote. Then again, I’m a New Yorker, and my vote doesn’t matter anyway.
Were I a resident of a state like Ohio or Florida, I’d like to think I would suck it up as hilzoy suggests she will. Repellent as Clinton is, she would command a vast governmental apparatus and, probably, staff it mostly with good people. And then there’s the Supreme Court, of course. Securing the judiciary against the right-wing assault is worth putting up with a great deal indeed.
Let’s see. Hilzoy’s standards: Look into whether a statement matches reality; if so, it’s true. Ken’s standards: If a statement reflects badly on Obama, it must be true. I know which I consider reasonable.
Interesting first-hand report from Jim Addison at Wizbang on a Bill Clinton event he attended yesterday. Short version – Bill’s still got it.
Painting Obama as anti-choice is not a small point for lots of people.
Oh great. Ken is hear to spin the argument.
Hilzoy provides a detailed essay supporting her points with actual links to prove her points.
Ken’s piercing rebuttal? “Hilzoy is wrong!”
Honestly, who can argue with that logic?
Whenever candidate A says something about candidate B’s record, I assume it’s a lie until I can verify it myself. (Likewise with candidate B’s defense, of course.)
Do you honestly think that the Clintons’ distortions are anything new?
Mike,
That is a good point. That is also why I generally dislike candidates that focus on their opponents rather than themselves.
We have desperately needed, for quite a while, someone who had some clue about economics, foreign policy, and the Constitution
Chris Dodd.
Oh well.
the wonky, wine-track All-Stars (Dukakis, Tsongas, Bradley, Dean, Edwards, …).
I’m not sure exactly what “wine-track” means, but it’s hard for me to fit a reasonable interpretation of that phrase around either Dean or Tsongas.
Tsongas was from Lowell, for crying out loud.
But there is no use arguing with her about it. She is way too self rightous to be swayed by anything as mundane as facts.
When I look at this thread, I see that hilzoy presented five — count’em, five — specific, concrete examples of what she claims are lies made by the Clinton campaign about Obama. Her examples are backed up by extensive cites and other documentation.
When I look at this thread, I see that you have presented zero — count’em, zero — similar demonstrations of how hilzoy has lied.
Advantage, hilzoy.
Plus, not for nothing, but this is a statement that is unlikely to get any traction whatsoever with anyone who is familiar with hilzoy or her work, here or elsewhere:
She is way too self rightous to be swayed by anything as mundane as facts.
As far as I’m concerned, you need to bring your game up a notch, or go home.
Thanks –
“wine track” means “educated voters aren’t real Americans or real Democrats”, russell. Because, you know, exploiting divides between the students & the workers works GREAT for progressives.
with the exception of Canada.
YEAH! SUCK ON THAT, YANKEES!
Mike S: “Do you honestly think that the Clintons’ distortions are anything new?”
Well, no, but I don’t see any reason why I shouldn’t still be outraged.
Just to throw 2 cents in, re: nose-holding/Clinton-voting.
I’m a strong pro-Obama partisan, and a life-long lefty (don’t get me started on my substantive policy differences with Pres. Clinton’s legacy). Loved Kucinich, Dodd, Gravel (and, in his way, Nader), but, let’s face it, they’ve always been fringe candidates. Obama’s the first candidate in my lifetime that’s demonstrably liberal and actually electable (okay, okay; Edwards too, but that’s another argument). Hillary Clinton’s my Senator, and I strongly disagree with much of her voting record. Plus, I despise the Clintons’ political tactics.
However, despite all of this, I will unquestionably vote for Clinton against any Republican candidate whatsoever (even if, oh, say Hagel or Chafee, or whoever ran). I would vote for a dead rat against any Republican. Seven words:
The Supreme Court of the United States.
Those folk are old, people. Stevens is, what, 147 years old or something, right? And Souter desperately wants to retire and die in peace (you can see it in his eyes, poor guy).
Yeah, I didn’t like Bill Clinton’s presidency. But we have Justice Ginsburg. I’m willing to accept that trade-off.
flyerhawk: “The New York Times endorsed Hillary today”
Yes, everything they said was spot on.
They rejected Obama because he isn’t ready for prime time, and recommend Clinton because she is:
Oh, yes. I don’t trust Clinton much at all on my issues, but they’re issues where the judiciary matters a great deal, & her appointees would help an awful lot. It’s not just the Supreme Court either. You think the primaries are depressing? Try going before the D.C. Circuit yet again on detainee issues, knowing that if you don’t manage to draw a highly disproportionate # of Democratic appointees on your panel, you’re basically f*cked. I’ve never trusted the Clintons & this month I can’t stand them, but I couldn’t stand John Kerry at this point in 2004.
I find this tact that you and Publius have taken in which you are offended and outrage that politician like to win elections baffling.
Yes, its awful. Yes it shouldn’t exist. But then neither should poverty, war, and famine. Railing against its existence and suggesting what the alternative is are two different things.
Now I imagine, you’d argue that Obama is the alternative but that merely reinforces the argument against him. Because if it takes lies and distortions (which it probably will) to pass environmental legislation and health care (so for example monkeying with the numbers to minimize the cost to consumers) then I want the Democratic president to lie and distort.
If you are arguing that not only Obama shouldn’t lie to get that done but wouldn’t, while Hillary would then I think you have just made an extremely compelling case for Hillary’s presidency.
I suppose you could argue that Obama will create such an up swell of popular democratic support that politicians will be forced to go along with his legislation making lies unnecessary. But I find that extremely unlikely, those are very, very rare exceptions to the rule. And its not the kind of gamble I’d be willing to make.
lie not like…oui.
Jay,
When I read their endorsement and they acted as if they were an opponent of the invasion I realized exactly what was going on here.
Hillary represents a continuation of the current foreign policy dogma, which should not be confused with the Bush Doctrine. She offers no real solutions for Iraq but since she won’t commit to anything other than vague promises she represents a continuation of current foreign policy. Great.
The Times seems to believe that Hillary will be able to enact changes when, in truth, her election will almost guarantee that Washington will grind to a halt AGAIN.
I don’t need a President that understands the minutiae of policy details. The President has 5000 people that work for him that are responsible for working on the details.
The President needs to sell his or her message. THAT is, by far, the most important task of a President.
The moment a new President sits down in the Oval Office everything changes. And while people seem to think that Hillary understands this because her husband did it, I reject that notion. She did NOT walk into the SitRoom. She was NOT advised by 4 star generals on what we should do.
FDR didn’t give a crap about policies. He would have implemented ANY policy that he thought would work and he left it to people that spent a great deal of time working on policy to come up with the great ideas. What he DID care about was convincing the American people that his policy prescriptions were the right solutions.
Who are the Republicans that Hillary will get on board? Who are the conservative Democrats that Hillary will get on board. How will Hillary get the military brass, which is extremely hostile to the Clintons, to toe the line?
Qualifications don’t mean squat to me. HW Bush was qualified. Nixon was qualified. Taft was qualified. If you want qualified vote for McCain.
Why are we so afraid of trying to change the agenda of this country? Why must we continue to vote for the same candidate(Bill, 2000 Gore, Kerr, Hillary)?
yurt: “many of them would be better able to actually make positive changes than Hillary.”
hilzoy: “Able, perhaps, but which of them do you think would be willing to?”
Honestly, none of them. There are some I would take as more willing on particular issues, but none across the board.
However, while I think she might be more willing, I think she’ll be less able to accomplish what absolutely must be done. With Hillary as president, congressional republicans will completely unite to stop anything she supports, just because she supports it. For them it’s a political necessity. Any of them who work with her will have successful primary challenges the next election. (and I’d bet that, if she’s the nominee, they will have taken back at least one house)
More, I view taking serious action on these problems as partly a matter of building a new base of public support for that. Once again, I view Hillary as simply incapable of bridging those public divides.
Some (not all, as I said this will depend on who the republicans put up) of the republicans would aim lower, but accomplish more on these critical issues.
Combined with the damage I think her election would do to the future of the electoral process in this country and particularly to the future of the democratic party, it at least leaves me unwilling to commit to supporting her without knowing what the options are.
Sorry, I garbled my point at the beginning. Let me try again:
While I think she might be more willing to make changes, I think at the end of the day she’ll actually accomplish less. In some ways, I think she’ll do more harm than good due to her ability to lock in opposition on issues where there should be none.
Russell, if you would click on the link Hilzoy supplied regarding the ‘e-mail’ story you would see for yourself that Hilzoy can be accused of using distortion and deceit. She even gives you the evidence herself.
As I see it, if you were to apply Hilzoy standards to this you would be fully justified to say that there can be no doubt that Hilzoy is intentionally lying.
But the Hilzoy standards are not reasonable standards so I would ask you not to go there.
It’s possible for morally questionable means to serve one set of ends better than another!!!!! Jesus F. Christ, liberals are supposed to understand this. For instance: killing civilians works serves Al Qaeda’s strategic interests but it DOESN’T serve the strategic interests of the United States. Not that lying about your opponent during an election is an equivalent, at all, but, in general: bad means serve bad ends better than they serve good ends. If you support policies that are bad for the majority of the U.S. electorate, it’s in your interest for the electorate to believe false things & assume that they can’t trust any politician. But if you don’t? It’s NOT.
Liberal advocacy groups face this dilemma all the time, & the good ones have correctly concluded: in the short term, lying might work; in the long term, credibility matters.
Yes, about 99% of the people of the world can’t meet them, so I can see why you’re reluctant to go there.
Please. No innuendo. If you’re going to accuse hilzoy of deceit and deception, lay it out clearly and boldly.
Ken, you need to either be quiet, go away or change your attitude. Currently you are adding nothing to the discussion, and are subtracting significantly from it. If you’re going to attack someone for deceit and dishonesty, at least TRY to explain slightly. Telling us to read the link does nothing. Please explain what you are referring to when you accuse others of deception.
Mike S: “Do you honestly think that the Clintons’ distortions are anything new?”
Hilzoy:
Well, no, but I don’t see any reason why I shouldn’t still be outraged.
Because that’s how the game is played these days. It’s like watching a basketball game and being outraged every time someone isn’t called for traveling.
From the WaPo article you linked:
“Norelli, the [NH] House Speaker, said she had been aware of the Planned Parenthood defense of Obama’s Illinois record at the time she signed the critical e-mail but was comfortable with the letter’s attack against Obama nonetheless, noting the concerns of the Illinois NOW chapter had raised about the votes. “I would say that the record is clear that he voted ‘present’ seven times. Planned Parenthood, some of the time at least, says it was part of a deal. Well, NOW says that in 2004, they chose not to endorse Sen. Obama” because of the votes, Norelli said.”
That seems different from what you’ve described as an obvious attempt to twist the truth. Did NOW choose not to endorse Obama in 2004 or not? Were all 7 of those “present” votes part of a deal with Planned Parenthood?
It feels as if the charges leveled against HRC often boil down to the same thing: she cynically gives the voters selective information designed to fool them.
And yet when I follow the charges all the way back to see exactly what she selected and how it was designed to fool the voter, I land on information that wasn’t given to me. (NOW declined to endorse Obama in 2004, e.g.) Does this prove the writer is a ruthless liar? Not to me.
The whole exercise starts to feel pointless, and I’m back where I started. One of these people is going to be our candidate; all of them are qualified and competent. I’m voting for whoever wins with complete enthusiasm.
It just seems a very Rove-esque kind of tactic to muddy the waters, throwing up indirect accusations, hoping something will stick. Standard political tactic these days…
“Because that’s how the game is played these days. It’s like watching a basketball game and being outraged every time someone isn’t called for traveling.”
It’s not a game, & citizens aren’t supposed to be passive spectators.
Anybody interested in hearing the other side of these arguments should check out TalkLeft, as I’ve urged before, or TheLeftCoaster, e.g. here or here or here . The former presents a balanced view of the strengths and failings of both candidates (something I’ve repeatedly argued is plainly lacking here), the latter is pro-Clinton. Catch you again after the dust settles.
TalkLeft is absolutely not neutral. I’m not even finding them trustworthy; mileage may vary on that.
There are lots of objections to the whole “must get worse before it gets better” line of thinking, but the one that matters to me most these days is that it’s a young person’s argument. My father died in 2006 in his late 70s; Mom’s in her late 70s now. They came through the Great Depression, World War II, and all the rest, and worked very hard indeed to be good citizens as well as good parents. I simply don’t think anyone’s entitled to tell Mom that now, at the tail end of her long and often hard life, that it’s her responsibility to die without prospect of seeing some of the country she loves restored, for the convenience of elections eight or twelve or twenty years from now. Dad deserved a better world to pass away in than the one he got, where cowardly bullies had the gall to claim that they were, among other things, honoring the sacrifices men like him had made in earlier wars and where his own government was doing exactly the things given as justification for war in his instructional manuals from World War II. (I don’t exaggerate. I need to get those scanned and uploaded sometime.) Mom deserves better than that now.
And so do all the other mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, of every age. Demanding that they all wait for the sake of a possible future is…well, I might buy it from someone who accurately predicted this year’s state of affairs in 1998. But true prophets seem in about as short supply as ever, and I’m not going to surrender my family’s hopes for a better America to someone’s guess that isn’t backed up by a very good record of prognostication. Letting things get worse is a luxury for those who have long years ahead of them. But those who don’t are just as real and important.
flyerhawk, FWIW your paragraphs 4-9 are the best short-form argument for Obama that I recall seeing. I’m not convinced that Obama’s “bipartisan persuasion” strategy is preferable to Edwards’ “aggressive populism” strategy in terms of actually managing the changes* ahead, but that position was very nicely put and I hope I can borrow it for devil’s advocacy purposes.
(*I also think that the whole “platform of change” business is just so much shiny mind candy on everybody’s part. Dramatic geostrategic, socioeconomic and environmental changes are all looming whether anybody wants any of them or not. The issue in my mind is how the next president is going to guide/manage/mitigate those changes to make them less destructive and more creative.)
What Clinton is doing undercuts the long-term survival of the Democratic party in a really dangerous way. Over the past 15-20 years, the Republicans have performed the amazing feat of getting a large proportion of working-class Americans to vote against their own interests. They have done this by telling outrageous lies and dangling “bogeymen” which they associate with the Democrats (e.g. gay marriage, “Democrats hate the troops”).
To survive as a viable party, the Democrats have to do two things: educate many more voters about the actual consequences of Republican policies, and also create an atmosphere of accountability where campaigns that use outrageous lies pay a price.
This includes encouraging the media to do more fact checking- all too often, they simply report conflicting claims when they could easily determine what is actually true. It also means pushing back immediately when the other side lies- I will never understand why the Kerry campaign didn’t do that.
Using Republican tactics, against them or in Democratic primaries, may lead to short term gain, but in the long run will create a permanent Republican majority. Republicans do that kind of stuff better than Democrats, and they have talk radio and Fox news.
ken: “you would see for yourself that Hilzoy can be accused of using distortion and deceit.”
I hate to police accusations against myself, but: if you’re going to accuse me of deception — not just being wrong, but deception — then please tell us what your grounds are. Not just “click the link”, but what claim I made that you take to be false, and what your reasons are for thinking that I am not just wrong, but actually lying. Otherwise, feel free to go on in nonspecific ways about why I’m wrong, but don’t call me a liar.
To be clear: I thought that the emails themselves were deceptive — i.e., intended to deceive pro-choice voters about Obama’s commitment to choice. I did not claim that withholding that information from the people who signed the emails was necessarily deceptive. Not particularly nice, but not necessarily deceptive either. (That would depend on how the Clinton campaign represented Obama’s record to the signatories, which isn’t made clear enough in the article, imho.) — I mean, it’s not as though grown men and women ought not to check things out for themselves before signing them.
Sorry to throw a monkey wrench in the discussion. The Clinton bashing was going so well before I came along.
gwanggung is right when he says about that 99% of the people in the world cannot live up to Hilzoy’s standards.
I agree, at least as far as I can tell what they are. I am just pointing out that Hilzoy herself does not live up to those standards (in the case if the campaigns of Clinton and Obama) and that it would be unfair to apply them to her.
Joseph wrote:
“Because if it takes lies and distortions (which it probably will) to pass environmental legislation and health care (so for example monkeying with the numbers to minimize the cost to consumers) then I want the Democratic president to lie and distort.”
This is exactly the type of certainty that scares the hell out of independent voters like me. You are so certain that you have the answers and that no one has better answers or additional information that you are willing to lie to implement your answers. The concept of actually convincing people to go along with you on the merits of your position is an afterthought.
Your argument amounts to saying that “lies are bad, except when they favor my side.”
ken: like I said, back up your claims of deception, or stop making them.
All I want to say is if Hillary gets the nomination, the democrats will lose the election. I just want the Clintons to go away, they had their turn and it is time for somebody new
Also I am disgusted that an ex-president is campaigning this way, generally they deserve respect but Bill Clinton is changing that, he does not have my respect.
Finally if you are curious, I am a retired senior citizen.
And that’s the fundamental point of disagreement you have with Publius and Hilzoy (and me), Joseph. We reject that premise, just as we reject that it takes torturing people in secret prisons to protect us from terrorism.
Exactly how far are you okay with Hillary taking Rovian tactics? If she copied his technique of planting bugs in his candidate’s office so that he could accuse the opponent of doing it, would that be fine and dandy? If her campaign copied Rove by spreading word that Obama is a pedophile, is that acceptable behavior, as long as it gets results?
I have to disagree with you about voting for Hillary in the general.
What was the primary evil of the Bush presidency? It’s hard to narrow them all down to one single principle, or pick out one greatest evil, but if I had to, i’d pick the fact that the Bush administration lied to the American public to get us into the war in Iraq.
Specifically, the lie about WMD’s, that built the case for the war.
If Hillary will lie so blatantly to build the case for her candidacy, how is that any different? How is it any better?
What does that say about her projected conduct while in office? How many Iraqs will she lie to start?
This nation simply cannot afford another four years of a liar’s presidency.
It’s probably worth repeating Daniel Davies’ “Avoiding Projects Pursued by Morons 101”, or at least some of the highlights:
* Good ideas do not need lots of lies told about them in order to gain public acceptance.
* Fibbers’ forecasts are worthless. “If you have doubts about the integrity of a forecaster, you can’t use their forecasts at all. Not even as a ‘starting point’.”
* The Vital Importance of Audit. “Basically, it’s been shown time and again and again; companies which do not audit completed projects in order to see how accurate the original projections were, tend to get exactly the forecasts and projects that they deserve. Companies which have a culture where there are no consequences for making dishonest forecasts, get the projects they deserve. Companies which allocate blank cheques to management teams with a proven record of failure and mendacity, get what they deserve.
“I hope I don’t have to spell out the implications of this one for Iraq. Krugman has gone on and on about this, seemingly with some small effect these days. The raspberry road that led to Abu Ghraib was paved with bland assumptions that people who had repeatedly proved their untrustworthiness, could be trusted. There is much made by people who long for the days of their fourth form debating society about the fallacy of “argumentum ad hominem”. There is, as I have mentioned in the past, no fancy Latin term for the fallacy of “giving known liars the benefit of the doubt”, but it is in my view a much greater source of avoidable error in the world. Audit is meant to protect us from this, which is why audit is so important. ”
Relevant for this year’s campaigns just as they were for the march to war.
Hilzoy, Sure.
One of your standards seems to be that nuance counts, sometimes. An example would be calling Clinton a liar for her using Obama’s own words against him without any mitigation that might be derived from the context.
In the e-mail example you are condemming Clinton as by taking a paragraph from an article without any mitigation that might be derived from the entire context.
So if one were to claim that that nuance counts and pointing to your leaving the mitigation out of your indictment one can say you are being dishonest.
But in a broader sense your whole stchik is nothing but another form of campaigning. You selectively pick and choose among the information coming in to make an argument that supports your personal bias towards one candidate.
You don’t come across as an objective seeker of truth but as a prosecuter seeking to indict on whatever evidence, however slim, will work.
I made this comment on another thread, but it bears repeating. Why the lies? (And yes ken, they are demonstrably lies.)
If they really feel that she is the best qualified, with the best policy proposals, then why lie? Are they afraid that they may lose if they don’t?
ken, FWIW, the bashing is not Hillary bashing per se, but rather bashing a technique used in her campaign.
Re Obama, I know he’s not perfect, and he has probably said some deceptive things about Hillary as well. He may even have told a lie. But there is a distinct difference between misinterpreting someone and telling a lie about what that someone said, and the Clinton campaign has definitely done the latter.
And her condescendingness aftre the last debate “I think he was frustrated” was almost enough to make me vomit.
I will probably vote for her if she is the nominee, but it will be with the recognition that for at least 8 years, we will live in the same atmosphere of mistrust of the WH.
Ken: I do want to be clear on this. Take the Reagan quote case, for instance: in that case, Obama said that the Republicans were “the party of ideas”. Not “good ideas”, not “ideas I agree with”, but ideas. Clinton glossed this as: ” he really liked the ideas of the Republicans.”
In this case, the only way for Clinton, or a supporter of hers, to make the case that Obama said something that could be interpreted that way would be to produce the context. There is no such context: nowhere in that quote does Obama say any such thing, despite Clinton’s offer to produce “the exact quote”.
In the Vietnam case, again, the Clintons not only produced a quote, but drew conclusions from it that were plainly at odds not with some nebulous “larger context”, but with the sentences that preceded and succeeded “I don’t know.” They were the ones who glossed this as: Obama’s record does not differ substantially from Hillary’s. They therefore made an appeal to context necessary.
Please point out to me what claim I make that is in some similar way falsified by the context from which I drew it.
I guess that HRC is not allowed to say that NOW Illinois endorsed her over her opponents, or discuss their stated reasons for doing so, or invite undecided voters to consider those reasons.
She’s exactly like W if she does, and she’s destroyed the Democratic party by daring to mention that NOW Illinois thinks she would be more reliable on the subject of choice than her opponents.
Mentioning NOW Illinois’ reasons for endorsing her over her opponents is just what Karl Rove would do.
The women at NOW Illinois are not to be trusted; possibly HRC got to them and convinced them in 2004 that they should stay from Obama in his run for the senate.
This is the weirdest primary I’ve ever seen.
Preying on the ignorant is what dirty campaigning is all about. That’s why it’s so objectionable to intelligent, well-informed voters: because it relies on the votes of the ignorant and poorly-informed to nullify the votes of those who actually care. George W. Bush went dumpster-diving for the trailer park evilangelicals (hey, a vote’s a vote). Bill and Hillary are going after people who either don’t like blacks, don’t trust them, or don’t think a black man could beat the Republicans. It’s a filthy tactic because it relies, essentially, on racism. Bill Clinton may claim that he was “America’s first black president,” but the truth is, Bill doesn’t have the slightest clue what it means to grow up black in America. Bill’s a con man. A carnival huckster. A phony. But he may get away with it because he may just find enough rubes who are willing to buy his particular brand of snake oil.
Wait a sec–did Illinois NOW really refuse to endorse Obama over Allan Keyes? If so, what the hell are they smoking? If not, what are people talking about re: 2004?
John Miller: “I will probably vote for her if she is the nominee, but it will be with the recognition that for at least 8 years, we will live in the same atmosphere of mistrust of the WH.”
Well, yeah — that’s what you’re supposed to do, John — regard ALL elected officials with mistrust, ALL THE TIME.
It is the duty of the Patriot to protect his country from its government.
~Thomas Paine
Apparently so, Katherine.
Nice post, Hilzoy, and generally a good discussion. A question for the peanut gallery. If HRC becomes the candidate, and Bloomberg enters the race, how does that change your vote?
I voted for Perot, mostly as a protest, and thus “threw my vote away”. (I live in Ohio, so I guess my vote actually matters, eh?) But I still feel good about that vote; if nothing else I think it gave the professionals of both parties a moment of concern, and anything that gives powerful people a moment of concern is a good thing.
In the same way I’m thinking I might vote for a third party candidate again.
What bothers me about all this is how much the Times’ Paul Krugman seems to be toeing the Clinton line on all of this.
It is the duty of the Patriot to protect his country from its government.
~Thomas Paine
“The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: ‘I’m from the government and I’m here to help'”
~St Ronnie
b.t.w., ObWi is the 2nd hit on Google for those particular nine words.
In the e-mail example you are condemming Clinton as by taking a paragraph from an article without any mitigation that might be derived from the entire context.
Yes, quite right. There *might* be a larger context in which the sense that hilzoy takes from Clintons words is “mitigated”.
So, what’s that larger context? Are you aware of one that actually exists and can be shared with the rest of us, or is this larger context merely hypothetical?
Here is the way this works. If you want to baldly accuse someone of lying, while simultaneously being taken seriously, you have to at least *demonstrate the thing that is false*.
The mechanics are not difficult to master:
1. Tell us what the person said
2. Tell us what part of it was not true
3. Demonstrate, through some kind of tangible evidence, how and why the statement was not true.
That still leaves aside any kind of proof that the “liar” intended to deceive, versus just being factually mistaken, but we can leave that for lesson two.
First, we’d all like to see what it was that hilzoy said that was inaccurate.
Thanks –
well Hilzoy, it seems to me you are so fixated on finding blame that you are truly unable to see the bigger picture.
Obama while seeking the endorsment of a bunch of republicans, while simultanously seeking the votes of democrats, said:
‘…the republcan party was the party of ideas….they challenged conventional wisdom..’
His words enraged democrats all across the country.
That’s the context.
It did not take Hillary Clinton to twist his words into something they were not. His words clearly gave the nod of approval to republican ideas.
Note that he was talking about republican ideas over the last 10 to 15 years, well after Reagan was off doddering in dementia. The reagan era was over, the Clinton era had begun.
But according to Obama it was the republicans that had the good ideas. That’s what the the average democrat heard him say and that’s what Clinton held him accountable for.
But Hilzoy, I realize know none of this is going to convince a sometimes seeker of nuance.
And what’s this about VietNam? I don’t have time to research what you may be talking about, as I have to go pick up my son early today. Semester end, I think.
hitchhiker,
Hillary chose to use IllinoisNow’s position even though there is no QUESTION that Obama voted present based on the Illinois’ Planned Parenthood’s desired strategy. Hillary also knows what the effect was.
Hillary isn’t some blogger who is depdendent on google searches and reading tea leaves. She is an extremely savvy politician with a great deal of resources behind her. She has a staff. She has staff members whose only job is to do research on their opposition.
To suggest that she doesn’t know the reason for Obama’s present votes defies credulity.
Hillary’s campaign has made a choice. They decided they are going on the offensive and back to what they do best. Attacking opponents and complaining about how the big bad MSM is out to get them.
Ken, thanks for providing a glimpse into the future of internal democratic debate if Hillary is the nominee. Your dystopian street theater stands as a warning to us all.
ken: now that I understand the basis on which you called me a liar, I will treat your future moral pronouncements with all the careful attention they deserve.
russell, read the article. It is not as damning as Hilzoy falsely leads one to believe.
Nuance, baby, nuance.
Gotta go get up my son. Later all.
Ken. Keep saying black is white and white is black.
You’ll reap the just and correct fruits of your efforts.
His words enraged democrats all across the country.
What? Clinton and her supporters(i.e. Big Tent Democrat) were enraged. Who the heck else was enraged?
“the republcan party was the party of ideas….they challenged conventional wisdom..”
But according to Obama it was the republicans that had the good ideas.
Do you understand the difference between explicit and implicit statements? How bout implication and inference? Do you also realize that a direct quote requires an EXPLICIT statement not an implicit one?
His words clearly gave the nod of approval to republican ideas.
You’ve been running this trope out for a week now. I don’t care what you inferred from his statements. You are quite clearly biased and as such you will pull the most negative inference you can. What you publicly make a statement you can’t use inference as evidence.
Oh, Ken….
When people keep asking you to lay out your charges and detail them, not once, but multiple times, it is common courtesy to do just that.
The nuance from your repeated refusal to do that is quite…negative.
Well, its a good thing Obama has all the progressive blogs defending him because the true stories about him are just coming to light. I wonder how many of you will be willing to admit you made a mistake.
CW, if I lived in a state that where the election had any chance of being close, I would never vote for a third-party candidate under our current system, unless I truly believed there was no difference between the Republicans and the Democrats — something I am far from believing.
Since I actually live in the place in the United States with the least suspenseful electoral-vote outcome, and it makes no difference whether the Democrat gets 90 percent of our vote here or only 70 percent (which would be inconceivable), I suppose I might consider a third-party vote under some bizarre set of circumstances even while supporting Clinton. That would depend on having a third-party protest candidate that was actually saying something worth voting for, and I can’t see how Bloomberg could fit into the role.
I did vote for Nader in 2000, because I believed Gore didn’t deserve to get 90 percent of the vote in DC after the Clinton-Gore administration had done nothing on DC voting rights. I regret that now, even though it was purely symbolic, because Nader is not someone I want to encourage.
This time I want the Democrats to win with a significant popular vote majority and the most votes ever cast for a US presidential candidate. It’s essential right now that the Republican Party be repudiated as strongly as possible, regardless of the Democratic candidate. So I can’t really foresee voting for anyone other than the Democrat.
“Well, its a good thing Obama has all the progressive blogs defending him because the true stories about him are just coming to light. I wonder how many of you will be willing to admit you made a mistake.”
Please elaborate….
Either
A) This is a troll infestation…
or
B) This is a Typical Political Hack infestation.
Beginning to thing that we don’t need either…
Well, yes, it would defy credulity. Nobody’s asking you to believe it.
I am trying (unsuccessfully, apparently!) to point out that Illinois NOW did choose against endorsing him in 2004, and they also chose to back HRC in this race. Their stated reason is that she is more reliable on the issue of choice.
What I can’t figure out is why her campaign is not allowed to point this out without being accused of rank Rovian tactics.
If Illinois NOW had not done and said what they did in fact do and say, then you could accuse her of distorting Obama’s record. But they did, and they gave a reason. Sorry, but I don’t see how this is Rovish.
hitchhiker: I’m fine with her campaign pointing that out. I am not fine with them implying that Obama’s ‘present’ votes implied not a disagreement between two completely pro-choice groups over legislative tactics, but a lack of commitment to women’s right to choose.
Mark F: “Bill and Hillary are going after people who either don’t like blacks, don’t trust them, or don’t think a black man could beat the Republicans. It’s a filthy tactic because it relies, essentially, on racism.”
Mark – you be the racist, dude. A not too bright one, to boot.
These people Bill and Hillary are going after who don’t like or trust blacks, do they include former New York Mayor David Dinkins, and House Ways and Means Chairman Charles Rangel, or Stacey Jones the Benedict College Dean, or Bernice Scott, the Richland Virginia County Councilwoman, all of whom endorsed her today, at a gathering in Columbia, S.C.? (in case you don’t know, they’re all black Americans)
What about the 30% of registered black Democrats, who still support Hillary as of today’s poll, are they all black racists too?
And by the way, Mark, Bill Clinton didn’t claim he was “America’s first black president,” – that was a title given him by Toni Morrison, the black Nobel Prize-wining author, who wrote that “Clinton displays almost every trope of blackness: single-parent household, born poor, working-class, saxophone-playing, McDonald’s-and-junk-food-loving boy from Arkansas.”
And by those standards, Bill Clinton shares more in common with American Blacks than Obama: a half-white half-black kid from Hawaii (except for the few years he lived in Jakarta with his Indonesian step-father)raised in comfortable middle-class surroundings in Honolulu by loving, supportive white grandparents’s after his biological black father dropped him and his white mother like hot potatoes.
Wonderful post, Hilzoy. Thanks for speaking up so clearly.
I think part of the divide between those of us who are appalled by the Clintons’ tactics and those who aren’t is the question of how important the nature of the political process itself is, relative to the particular policies that it produces at a given moment. To some people, especially the ideologically committed, the process doesn’t matter much, so long as it produces the results they want. But for many of us, the process is important in and of itself. This is especially true for independents, because (since we’re not 100% committed to the ideology of either side) it’s harder for us to see how the end could justify the means.
I know that the political process can seem unimportant, compared to things like Supreme Court justices or universal healthcare, and it can be very tempting to resort to lying or distortion in order to, say, avert a disastrous war in the Middle East. But I still think it’s short-sighted. When we lie and distort, we weaken the political discourse of the country, with longterm results. And in the longterm, a less thoughtful public discourse is more likely to produce bad policies. (Think of some of the bad policies that we have now, and the dumbed down public discourse that allowed them to become law.)
I’m a grad student and I spend a lot of time studying the collapse of the Roman Republic. And I’m constantly struck by this: the fall of the Roman Republic was not caused by any particular policies or laws, or by the election of certain people, but rather by changes in the _tactics_ that were used to enact policies and laws, and elect magistrates. When nearly all elections were preceded by bribery and followed by lawsuits, and bloody precedents of mob or military violence had been set, in order to achieve political goals, it became impossible for the Republic to survive. Obviously, I’m not saying that the US is in such dire straits. (Why do I find myself adding, under my breath, ‘…yet.’?) But I do think that we need to recognize the importance of a healthy political process.
Like most countries, we have a set of rules that govern how officials are elected, what they do, and how laws are passed. The ones that are set down in writing are called the Constitution. But there are others, based on precedent, common practice and tradition (like, say, the filibuster rule) which form a sort of informal constitution, which is also vitally important to the healthy functioning of our country. Because this informal constitution is so heavily influenced by precedent, it matters when a candidate can use Rovian tactics and win as a result. In effect, it changes our ‘informal constitution’. (Another example of such would be the precedent set by having an election determined, indirectly, by the Supreme Court.)
That is why, even though I think many of the Republican candidates are pretty much insane, and I think the Republicans generally deserve a massive kick in the posterior right now, still, depending on which Republican was the nominee, I might actually vote for him if Hillary was the Democratic nominee. (Obviously if it’s, say, Giuliani, I’d have to vote for pretty much anyone in order to stop him; I think he might actually kill other world leaders if we sent him to summits.) But if it were Hillary v. McCain and McCain ran a decent, truthful campaign and Hillary behaved as she has been behaving…. Well, I’m not sure how I would vote, but I know what it would come down to for me. I’d have to ask myself whether I was willing to weaken the longterm health of the US democracy (both through dynasticism and through damage to our political discourse) in order to make it less likely that we would invade Iran or some other country under a president McCain.
I would still agree with more of Hillary’s policies than McCain’s. But I also care deeply about the health of the political process in this country. I think Rovian campaign tactics ultimately spell disaster for our system’s ability to function (as Hilzoy has so eloquently shown), and I think the only way to stop Rovian tactics is to punish any politicians who use them. And unfortunately, I think the only punishment that certain shameless politicians would understand would be a loss of votes.
Regards,
Beren
If we’re talking about how NOW acted toward Obama in 2004, surely this is relevant?
What Hilzoy said. I have absolutely no problem with Hillary pointing to NOW supporting. I find that about as surprising as the sun rising in the morning but I have no problem with that.
I do have a problem with an email that says “”The difference between Hillary’s repeatedly standing up strong on choice and Obama’s unwillingness to vote ‘yes’ or ‘no’ is a clear contrast, and we believe the voters in New Hampshire deserve to know this difference,” the e-mail stated. “We support Hillary Clinton because she never ducked when choice was at stake.””
This was an email written by the Clinton staff and signed by various women in New Hampshire.
And apparently Katie Wheeler, the NH head of NARAL, had a problem with the email when she found out the truth…
“”It should never have gotten to the point where anyone thought Obama was not pro-choice,” said Wheeler, a founder of the New Hampshire chapter of NARAL Pro-Choice America. “I don’t think the Clinton campaign should have done that. It was divisive and unnecessary…I think it was a mistake and I’ve spoken to the national [Clinton campaign] and told them it caused problems in New Hampshire, and am hoping they won’t do it again.””
If IllinoisNOW wants to oppose Obama, that’s their choice. I don’t care about them. I care about someone trying to become President of the United States who willfully distorts things.
Fuck Hillary Clinton. Enough said.
JustMe: the posting rules prohibit profanity. Thanks.
I’m not sure exactly what “wine-track” means, but it’s hard for me to fit a reasonable interpretation of that phrase around either Dean or Tsongas.
russell, I’m sorry I wasn’t clear. I’m referring to an analysis of Democratic primaries that distinguishes between with “wine-track” candidate and the “beer-track” candidates, with the observation that the “beer-track” candidates have almost always beaten the “wine-track” candidates. In this case, “wine-track” and “beer-track” aren’t descriptions of the candidates – they’re descriptions of each candidate’s *supporters* (and, on that basis, I think Dean and Tsongas fit).
hilzoy, I don’t think there’s much daylight between you and me on this . . . I agree that HRC’s campaign has tried to make something out of not much; I disagree that anything she did falls to the level of a lie. In fact, I think that you kind of did what you’re accusing HRC of.
She conveniently left out the mitigating circumstance–that Planned Parenthood claims it had talked Obama into those “present” votes. You conveniently left out a mitigating circumstance–that Illinois NOW had stated outright that they were not buying that story and preferred Clinton because she’s more reliable than he is on the issue of choice.
If there’s disagreement between NOW and PP about what happened and why (and there seems to be), then that’s what the discussion should be about.
Not HRC = Karl Rove.
“F**k Hillary Clinton. Enough said.”
Figuratively or literally?
The only problem kate is that planned Parenthood is a credible source for what happened (since they were actually involved) and NOW was not.
“Well, I think they deserve some credit for appointing the highest-ranking minorities in U.S. history.”
Nonsense. Men have always been appointed to the highest ranks since the beginning of the Republic.
zmulls: “There was an open convention in 1960, and in 1968 (when one of the leading candidates was assassinated), but not really since then.”
Hubert Humphrey had sufficient delegates to get the nomination prior to the start of the 1968 convention; it wasn’t an open convention. I’m afraid that’s just wrong.
In 1960, Kennedy crushed the opposition in the primaries (a rather different system then than it was now, to be sure). Although Kennedy came into the convention a few votes short of securing the nomination, the actual voters had made overwhelmingly clear that JFK was their choice; although there was a wavelet of support from delegates nostalgic for Stevenson, and some handfuls for Humphrey and Johnson, and therefore it’s technically fair to call the 1960 convention “open,” there really wasn’t serious doubt as to who the nominee would be.
The last really open Democratic convention was, of course, 1956, when it really wasn’t clear if it would be Sen. Estes Kefauver (the eventual Veep nominee), Albert Gore, Sr., Stevenson again, or the long-shot newcomer, JFK. (unlikely, put a reasonable choice for Veep then, if he’d sought it, which he wisely did not).
Just for the record.
russell, I’m sorry I wasn’t clear
Hey ravi, no worries. Thanks for the explanation. I hadn’t heard the term “wine-track” before, now I see where it’s coming from.
Are there any Democratic figures anywhere who are considered to be “beer-track” by the powers that be?
Thanks –
Speaking of Clinton tearing apart the party.
Russell, I think Ravi’s point is that Obama is wine track and Hillary is beer track.
Hi, I recently discovered your blog, and it’s quickly becoming a favorite. I thought I’d add my $0.02…
Lies don’t just hurt the democratic process. Sliming an opponent’s record and muddying the issues (and having his/her own record slimed) hurts the candidate who wins by doing it. A president who engages the public’s hopes, asks them to choose between different, clearly laid out directions for the country, and then wins will be a very powerful president. S/he will have created a large (hopefully over half the country), energized, and loyal base that can be called upon to put allies in Congress and put constituency pressure on Congress. In contrast, a president who wins by being the least worst option faces an uphill struggle to build popular support for his/her proposals, and s/he will have a harder time overcoming resistance.
This creates the classic prisoner’s dilemma for candidates. The winning candidate would be best off if both candidates ran clarifying campaigns (which mean engaging the other side hard, but fairly), and worst off if they both run slimy campaigns. (I think the losing candidate is better off in the clarifying scenario than the slimy one, too). But if only one person runs a slimy campaign, s/he is more likely to win, so the equilibrium outcome is that both run a slimy campaign.
The good news is that the prisoner’s dilemma is so common that there’s a lot of research (particularly game theory) on how to overcome it. For example…
1) Changing the payoff structure: most likely by making it so arguments that boil down to “my opponent is slimy” don’t work. One possibility is having a more wonkish electorate, but I think an easier one might be a media (or opposing campaign) push to disqualify all charges that can’t answer the question “what does this have to do with what so-and-so will do as president?”
2) Threats: for example, signaling that if the other side distorts a candidate has something fairly substantial to whack them with, but s/he won’t do it until they distort. Perhaps it could be something along the lines of attacking the smear itself as reflecting badly on the opposing candidate’s willingness to sacrifice the country’s health for their own gain. Threats work particularly well in a repeated game.
I know there are many more, but that’ll do for now.
————-
P.S. What’s the story behind the mascot? The caption is hilarious.
I think this will hurt HRCs candidacy:
Hilzoy’s not the only one who has noticed all this. Plenty have, and plenty are upset. It does no good to have other Democratic faithful come out in the MSM and calling her a liar, which is now happening.
The manifest degree of contempt for voters has disillusioned a lot of people who supported her in part because they saw her as above that sort of thing.
And while for a while she was doing a great job establishing an independent identity for herself apart from WJC, that’s all gone down the tubes these last few weeks.
I’m encouraged by the number of people who are noticing:
(a) just how Bush-esque HRCs tactics are
(b) how selfish these moves are, with respect to the unity of morale of the party
(c) how the Dems are taking a good thing (Obama) and just killing it
As for (c), this is how institutions and powered interests destroy good things and reform in this country. They sully it. They kick up mud. They confuse people. They scare people.
Hillary is beer track.
Now I’m really confused. I thought Hillary was the uber-liberal?
It is, really, hard to keep up without a scorecard. Modern politics is obviously too many for me.
Thanks –
That’s just cold, Hilzoy. That’s just cold. I laughed out loud when I read that.
russell: Are there any Democratic figures anywhere who are considered to be “beer-track” by the powers that be?
Powers that be: Yes, Zed.
KCinDC: Russell, I think Ravi’s point is that Obama is wine track and Hillary is beer track.
Bass Ackwards IMO.
I think Hilary is coffee, Obama is wine, and Edwards is beer. Romney is urine, Giuilani is liquid excrement, and McCain is thin vomit. You can drink them all, but people generally know which they prefer.
now this is some bare-knuckle politics.
HRC is utterly without honor.
More on the beer/wine tracks.
I agree, cleek.
Looks like John Kerry is pulling a Hilzoy as well and criticizing Clinton for abusing the truth.
KCinDC wrote:
That analogy is merely begging the question.
There’s a very clear empirical case that torture does not in fact protect us from terrorism. There is no such empirical case that lying does not aid you in winning electoral and legislative battles. In fact, I am arguing that experience and history would argue that lies and distortions are key to political victory.
Politicians lie because they want to win elections. Politicians historically and currently lie a lot because it helps them win elections.
Now if you are arguing that it is morally troublesome, regardless of lying’s efficacy, then that’s an entirely different argument altogether, which has nothing to do with the pragmatics of lying.
Kevin continues:
It depends. There are limits. I wouldn’t for example advocate that Hillary torture people or break the law in order to win elections. Rather I expect her to deploy power to achieve progressive goals.
The following scenario is what I am talking about; one that I’d imagine would be very likely.
Hillary realizes that if we don’t pass an environmental bill in the next few years catastrophic global warming will occur. In the long run it would be in our country’s economic, social and political interests (as well as moral) to pass such a bill. However, it’s a well known fact that Americans are not willing to do anything that could potentially raise the price of energy (particularly gas) because it would require some short term economic sacrifice on their part.
She also considers that the Republican party has and will endlessly demagogue the costs of this to the American consumer in the correct belief that it would stall such legislation. Therefore, she decides to communicate a message that distorts the true costs of her legislation in order to get it passed into law.
From what I am understanding you, Hilzoy, and publius saying is that such tactics would not be necessary and even if they were they shouldn’t be used.
I think the first premise is clearly and empirically untrue and I think the second premise is morally obtuse. I’d rather have San Francisco and New Orleans above water at the cost of some lies, than under water due to dedication to the Truth.
Hillary HAS 4 CORNER
SIMULTANEOUS 4-DAY
TIME CUBE
WITHIN SINGLE ROTATION.
4 CORNER DAYS PROVES 1
DAY 1 GOD IS TAUGHT EVIL.
Obama is far more EVIL than a False God, for Google
cut back my Site from 34,000,000 to 4,000,000 in 1 night
for the above Statement. 1 Day 1God exists only as Evil.
I thought Google was free of such evil bias, predjudice and shenanigans that block real truth from being known.
Once before, Google cut back my site from 89,000,000 to
34,000,000 in a single act for something I said, that/s Evil
Google is ONENESS EVIL as I
experienced and you can see.
now this is some bare-knuckle politics.
Aaaand… that’s where I officially get off the wagon. Distorting someone’s record is normal, albeit lousy, politics. Inflating trivia to major issues, ditto.
But “stealing” delegates, and breaking one’s word in order to do so, and effectively disenfranchising voters – who would have voted for Obama or Edwards or someone else if given the chance – is so low-down, scummy, bad faith-y, and just plain bad I’m really taken aback by it.
Oh, if only Clinton was devoting that much focused Machiavellianism to things like FISA, or net neutrality, or market reform, or *anything* other than her own candidacy.
KC, heh. it’s hard to keep up.
ken’s right about the TimeCube, though.
If that was really ken, it’s good to know he has a sense of humor. I’d guess it was someone else, though.
Joseph, I’ll let Hilzoy and Publius answer for themselves, but I don’t believe that trying to outlie and outslime the Republicans is going to win elections for us. It’s just going to make our political environment work better and better for Republicans. What works for them doesn’t necessarily work for us, and may even work against us.
So I reject that the means are necessary, I doubt that the means are effective in reaching the desired ends, and I know that the means are immoral.
There’s a very clear empirical case that torture does not in fact protect us from terrorism. There is no such empirical case that lying does not aid you in winning electoral and legislative battles. In fact, I am arguing that experience and history would argue that lies and distortions are key to political victory.
Actually, the knock on torture, is that despite it’s perceived short term gains, it is extremely damaging in the long term. And I would say the exact same of lies and distortions in pursuit of political and legislative ends. Such tactics in the long run will only destroy the support for the very principles you’d like to see pursued.
Here’s a simple parallel I’ve used as an example with my Iraq War-supporting friends, most of whom supported the war to depose a disgusting tyrant in Saddam, regardless of the reasons stated by the Bush Administration. These few friends of mine pretty much all despise Bush, but they still appreciate the fact that Bush at least pursued their preferred strategy. My comment to them is that Bush did more to destroy the credibility of their argument then any anti-war protester ever did. Getting rid of horrible cruel dictators like the Hussein family, is and should forever be a noble cause. But because of this administration’s bumbling effort and petty partisan tactics, that argument will be sullied for generations.
An old Buddhist saying goes:
Hillary is the wrong man.
If they really feel that she is the best qualified, with the best policy proposals, then why lie? Are they afraid that they may lose if they don’t?
Yes. The Clintons want to win whether their policy proposals become the most popular or not. Apparently, they also want to win badly enough to do so by finagling the rules about delegates. If I didn’t recall George McGovern and the fight over the winner-take-all California delegation in 1972, I might be outraged.
I think that it is for candidates to decide first what tactics will help them to win, and then whether those tactics are morally acceptable to them. Hopefully, not all are: killing off one’s opposition, for instance, ought to be beyond the pale.
It is for citizens like me to decide what to make of their choices. I have no problem at all with some forms of compromise. If Candidate X voted for the Bridge to Nowhere in exchange for a vote on, oh, universal health care or a really good bill to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and that vote was needed to get the good bill to pass, fine. I don’t grudgingly tolerate that; I’d make the same choice, and defend it.
I have a big problem with this, since I think it’s both odious and corrosive of democracy. I will, as I said, support HRC, if she is nominated. Until then, I will hope for something better. Because we. as citizens, do not have to just sit around bemoaning the state of politics today; we can do something about it.
And Ara: it’s a side of me that I hope I didn’t let out in class… 🙂
More on the beer/wine tracks.
Thanks KC. Here’s my favorite comment from the link:
Is there a magic box somewhere that just churns this tripe out?
I’m still trying to get my head around Dean and Tsongas as “wine-track”, though. Have any of these pundits ever been to Vermont or Lowell?
Thanks –
E. J. Dionne’s column today regarding Reagan and Clinton seemed sensible to me, and on topic.
hilzoy: No, you never did. Frankly, your patience both in class and on this blog amazes me.
There is just an avalanche of negative stories out there today about the Clinton campaign. Much of it from people taking the point of view of disenchanted sympathizers, and that is the *worst* kind of publicity to have. I wonder if this is going to move the polls any. Or maybe it moves the polls too late, and she squeaks by Feb 5th only to be walking wounded in the general by March.
It was claimed that the media was hostile towards Clinton for misting up in NH. And that the state’s women rushed to her side. Clinton cut a sympathetic figure. That was the story, at least. Who seems like the bully and who seems like the victim now, just a few weeks later?
and, let me retract my comment from the other day where i suggested that even though HRC might not be an angel, at least she’s a fighter – and that as long as she’s fighting ostensibly on the right side, she’s better than nothing. and, let me amend my comment from above, where i suggested that all politicians are liars and that shouldn’t be surprised at their lying. if this Michigan primary thing turns out to be as bald-faced as it looks right now, come Nov, i’ll be voting for … well, no not a Republican, but … nobody, i suppose.
right now, HRC looks nightmarish.
“Politicians lie because they want to win elections. Politicians historically and currently lie a lot because it helps them win elections.”
I’m not so sure they don’t also lie simply because an awful lot of them are sociopaths, and as such are simply indifferent to whether anything they say is true or not. Often leading them to lie in circumstances where the truth or simple silence might better serve them.
Like sincerity, morality is something your average politician strives to simulate, since they don’t have the real thing, only a desire to exercise power over others.
One more thing: this change from Clinton was entirely a reaction to Iowa (and, I think, a somewhat panicked reaction, because it will hurt her long term). A month ago, WJC was happier talking about his philanthropy than his wife’s candidacy. Now, not a day goes by without a new snarky comment from him about Obama. What changed? Iowa. The Clintons went into attack mode. No more serene frontrunner. What does it say about either their sense of entitlement (that they were willing to stoop this low) or their judgment (that they were willing to hit the panic button and hurt themselves long-term) that the campaign has made this about-face? And what would it say about an HRC presidency?
You know, I hate to say it, but its really up to Obama to respond to these attacks. I want a Democratic candidate who shows that they can respond to vigorous and even unfair attacks. Maybe we shouldn’t need for a candidate to be a street fighter but that’s the world we live in.
Hilzoy’s view of politics as a dignified tea party in which each party never ever says anything that isn’t 100 per cent fair and balanced is a wonderful vision, but US politics is simply not like that- and never was. check what the opposition said about Thomas Jefferson in his presidential campaigns, and you’ll understand that the Clinton’s attacks are fairly tame by comparison.
I especially don’t want a Democratic candidate like John Kerry, who looked pretty good and ran a clean, upstanding campaign- but collapsed in a heap when the Repubs hit him with one, solid punch- the Swift Boat stuff . OK, its true that the punch was below the belt, but that just proves my point- if you are going to fight with someone who fights dirty, you better be ready to defend and even respond in kind, if you have to.
In the long run, Obama and Hillary need to toughen up, so throwing a few elbows now is actually good for whoever will be the candidate in the long run.
stonetools: I do not believe that politics is a tea party. I have been observing politics since I was a wonky little kid back when Nixon was President, after all.
What I do believe is that lies of this kind are subversive of democracy, and that we should not accept them, any more than we just accept high murder rates (“hey, life can be rough”), or our spouse’s infidelity (“boys will be boys…”). They get away with this because we accept it. We don’t have to.
Stonetools, I think Hilzoy addressed your point in Fighting Fire With Fire”. It’s true that our candidates need to be able to withstand dirty fighting. That doesn’t mean that they themselves need to fight dirty.
I agree with you that Obama needs to be able to respond effectively to the Clintons’ attacks, but that doesn’t mean that the Clintons are any less slimy for making them.
You know, I hate to say it, but its really up to Obama to respond to these attacks. I want a Democratic candidate who shows that they can respond to vigorous and even unfair attacks. Maybe we shouldn’t need for a candidate to be a street fighter but that’s the world we live in.
From where I’m sitting right now, Obama’s doing a great job responding. Not only has he clearly gotten inside the Clintons’ heads to the point where they’re overreaching like crazy, he’s had everything but the kitchen sink thrown at him in an effort to get him off message, and for the most part he’s parried every single attack and made it look effortless.
I mean — the primaries have been dirty so far; the fact that you perceive that Obama is still clean says something, because it’s not as if all attacks against him just fizzled out of their own accord; or, if that is what happened, that certainly doesn’t speak well of the Clinton campaign’s political skill, does it?
Although it’s clear he’s had to make a few adjustments to a truly national campaign, at some point the assessment of Obama as a neophyte has to be matched up with the results. From November onward, he’s more or less schooled Hillary, Bill, their advisors, and their “years of experience” at every turn.
— As I think I mentioned elsewhere, this move with the delegates is a gamebreaker for me (and many other people, I expect) if there’s not some serious backpedaling or explanation. It’s either an unbelievably inept political and PR miscalculation, an unacceptably unethical power grab, or both.
In either case, I’m no longer willing to accept the narrative that the Clinton campaign is more experienced and savvy — much smaller errors have been deadly to Democratic candidates in the last two elections, and pulling something like this in the general election would be suicidal. I’m beginning to worry more about Clinton being able to handle Obama than the other way around.
Great post, Hilzoy.
If politicians don’t tell the truth, there is another option besides ordinary citizens becoming political junkies: the media could do its job! There is an unfortunate and surprising reticence on the part of reporters to label politicians as liars. A few are pointing out some inconsistencies between what is and what Hillary says, and some managed to catch on after Rudy Giuliani’s claims became unbelievable even to the most blinkered partisan. But there is still this tendency for the media to present both sides of an issue in an ostensibly balanced way (Something like this: “Al Gore and the IPCC claim that there are dangerous levels of greenhouse gases. Rex Tillerson, CEO of ExxonMobil, claims otherwise). The problem rests not only with mendacious politicians but with the misguided and pussillanimous political press for not calling out lies when the pols utter them.
The more I think about the delegate-grab, the angrier it makes me.
Clinton’s excuse/justification is that she wants Michiganders and Floridians to be part of the process – OK, why wait until now to say so? It’s like when the Clinton campaign tried to game the system in Nevada, by suddenly discovering – only after a major union endorsed Obama – that letting casino workers caucus in the casinos was somehow unfair to non-casino workers.
I’m going to call her campaign HQ and let them know this is a deal breaker for me, not just in the primaries but maybe in the general. It stinks to high heaven, it treats voters like pawns whose Constitutional rights only get protected if it serves Clinton’s interests, which is pretty much the Bush-Cheney point of view…. I get more livid the more I think about it.
Dammit.
Clinton’s excuse/justification is that she wants Michiganders and Floridians to be part of the process – OK, why wait until now to say so?
I’m amazed at the people trying to spin this as some sort of savvy political move.
Point 1: The PR upside here is minimal at best. The only potential upsides are:
Upside 1:
(A) If the nomination is close enough that the Michigan and Florida delegates would be determinative; AND
(B) They actually get those delegates.
(C) The net gain out of the 4,025 total delegates (313 pledged delegates at most) isn’t offset by any potential backlash amongst the superdelegates (796), by voting in other states, or by (and this is big in my mind) by Edwards’ delegates — I have a feeling that he will not be happy about this.
Upside 2:
If the Clinton campaign gets some positive press out of making the Michigan and Florida votes count, either in the primary or the general. More on that in a moment.
The potential downsides here strike me as enormous.
Downside 1:
This has a very good chance to piss a lot of people off. Aside from that one Detroit News article and some buzz from one or two blogs that I’ve never seen utter a single negative word about Hillary, you can practically hear people’s jaws hitting the floor. Some big-name bloggers who’ve clearly been trying to stay neutral — e.g. Josh Marshall, emptywheel (!) — were clearly appalled by this. I’ve already seen a number of people who I argued with pretty vigorously about the Reagan issue say, “OK, nevermind.”
Downside 2:
In the event that the scenario in Upside 1 above comes about, the Party would be in chaos. Like, 1968 all over again. Even if the move won Clinton the nomination, there’s no way that it doesn’t end up losing her support from some very important segments of the base in the general.
Downside 3:
The delegates are a double-edged sword. Unless they get seated and they’ll make a difference, she’s courting votes that, as of now, don’t count for anything. If they do end up counting for anything, they end up pissing people off mightily. There’s no way to come out of it with a win.
Even if Mark Penn isn’t the complete putz he appears, I can’t see how any polling or predictive scenario could justify a move like this given the uncertain payoff.
Downside 4:
It was pretty clear already that the delegates were going to be seated at the convention and would support a delegate, and that this issue was going to be addressed again. Most of the damage from the debacle had already been done. As emptywheel points out, tossing gasoline on this fire actually makes the putative problem of the primaries being screwed up worse, not better.
Now, all that aside, there are a whole bunch of other reasons why this is just a dumb move on face:
Dumb Move 1: The timing is moronic.
(A) Doing this after the Michigan primary makes it look like she’s trying to steal votes. (Even if she’s not, this is what it looks like.)
(B) Doing this before the Florida primary telegraphs their intent to the Obama campaign. Clinton is also way ahead in Florida, and Obama and Edwards are still on the ballot there, so the potential benefit of this move seems marginal at best.
(C) Doing this after Super Tuesday would’ve at least made sense as far as having a better idea of whether the delegates would matter.
(D) Doing this before the Michigan primary, or even waaaay back when the delegate decision was first made, would have at least made the “making the votes count” line make a little sense.
(E) Seriously, why do this now? The day before the SC primary and before Super Tuesday? Why? What are they thinking?
Dumb Move 2: This is totally off-message.
(A) The Clinton campaign was already complaining about Obama’s national ad buy that happened to run in Florida before this. Not only does this moot that criticism, it makes them look like hypocrites. And again, this was in the last week — the timing is unbelievable.
(B) It reinforces the narrative of Clinton as unfair and underhanded, which is exactly the message the Obama campaign has been pushing in the last week.
Dumb Move 3: This is totally disingenuous. As of now, the only justification I’ve heard from the Clinton campaign and those who seem to support this move is that it can be construed as support for the Michigan and Florida voters. Problems with this response:
(A) Clinton, like all the other candidates, has ignored Michigan and Florida so far. If you’re not even going to the states, it’s hard to argue that you think the voters are being unfairly excluded. If this was really true, they should have at least campaigned in those states or raised more than a token word of protest about this issue earlier on, and they shouldn’t have been criticizing other campaigns for advertising in those states. (See Dumb Moves 1 and 2.) There was no setup for this spin — just a single press release. The way this was done potentially makes it look like completely insincere pandering to the Florida voters — even if it doesn’t end up being perceived that way, it could easily have been done in a way that at least appeared to be more genuine.
(B) The Clinton campaign’s entire justification for staying on the ballot in Michigan when pressed was that it didn’t matter one way or the other. Now, not only does that look like a trick, but it puts lie to the argument that they’re arguing for fair representation — if the Michigan delegates are counted, the Obama and Edwards supporters’ votes won’t be represented.
(C) The bottom line is that there were a million ways to handle this, and in the abstract the problems with counting the Michigan and Florida delegates are very real. But if that was the real concern, I honestly can’t think of a worse possible way to achieve the goal. If there had been any warning that the Clinton campaign was going to do this, I could maybe see this as an anti-disenfranchisement move. Just dropping a press release — particularly after that snafu in Nevada — is just… seriously, isn’t the Clinton campaign supposed to be savvy? Unless I’m missing some sort of reverse-double-headfake that Mark Penn came up with, I just don’t see any reason to do this, and even less reason to do this in the way that they did. It’s totally mind-boggling.
When Clinton says she wants Michigan voters’ votes to count, keep in mind that she was the only one on the ballot. She’d only be enfranchising her supporters in Michigan.
Oops, forgot to label the other two points. Maybe I should just stick to bulleted lists.
Oh, I also forgot: why release this on a Friday, at the end of the news cycle, before a primary you’re not expected to win? Clearly message control wasn’t part of the calculus here.
(I see Adam made the same point moments before I posted me comment.)
“me comment”? What am I, a chimney sweep?
“me comment”? What am I, a chimney sweep?
Or a pirate.
I vote chimney sweep. Better background music.
That was the worst English accent in the history of bad English accents.
I vote chimney sweep. Better background music.
OK, look. Let’s compare and contrast
Sorry Jes, but IMVHO there is just no contest here.
Plus, you know, sweeps get no rum.
Thanks –
cleek: i’ll be voting for … well, no not a Republican, but … nobody, i suppose
You know things are bad when cleek and I are basically aligned…
(BTW dude – you didn’t tell me how much damned spam the ACLU would send me!)
Hilzoy, you and Publius are the 2 bloggers I most respect out there, but I disagree about voting for the Clintons in the GE. We’ve had 8 years of people who use the Constitution to line the bird cage when they run out of newspaper. I *won’t* vote for someone who thinks the rules are for suckers. I’d rather have an honest conservative with integrity than someone who will sell out everything I believe in when its to their short-term advantage.
Not saying I can find the above mentioned conservative, but then I’ll just stay home from the election and watch HBO for another 4 years.
Well. I called Hillary HQ in Virginia. I told them that after defending her for 15 years, and trying to defend her during this primary campaign, I no longer could defend her, would not vote for her in the primary, and would not vote for her in the general. I made it clear that the Michigan-Florida delegate bait-and-switch was the deal breaker for me.
The woman I spoke to made sure she knew what, exactly, I was upset about. It seems she was keeping track. But she didn’t ask me for my name or anything.
I think – think, mind you – the campaign is getting enough flack about this that they’re paying attention to it. I don’t know if that means they’re spooked by it yet.
At TPM, there’s a reasonable argument for how this helps Clinton. I hope that it’s turning people off, but it’s hard to tell how it’s playing with people outside the blogs.
Anyone have TPM’s email address? I can’t set up my Mac email account (it won’t connect to the mailserver for some reason), and I can’t get the form without the connection.
I want to let them know that, IMO, the “deep strategy” the TPM article references does not in any way make the delegate-grab tactic better or reasonable. It only emphasizes how Clinton regards the delegate, and the voters electing them, as pawns.
CaseyL, if you hover over the link and look down at the status line (or right-click and look at the properties), you can see that it’s “talk at talkingpointsmemo.com”.
Also, when I write “reasonable” above, I was referring to the argument for how this helps Clinton politically, certainly not to the disgusting tactic itself.
Thanks, KCinDC!
This is very clearly another attempt to do exactly what Hilzoy was writing about–blatantly cheat in a way that only people who are political junkies will understand.
The Clintons don’t care that it is going to piss off the political junkies, because they think that the little old white lady they are counting on most won’t notice. They are certain that the black people and political junkies will come back to them in the general election just like gay people did after the Defense of Marriage Act betrayal, so they feel that a scorched earth campaign against Obama can’t possibly hurt them–complete with attempts to implement mid-stream changes in the rules in Nevada, Michigan and Florida (so far).
This is exhibit #54,742 about how important it is that election rules be made BEFORE you know exactly who they will help. Clinton was fine with the Nevada, Michigan and Florida rules so long as she believed it would help her. It is only now that there is some risk that the rules won’t help her that she is willing to shred them. This is exactly the lack of respect for the rule of law which a certain current President has.
“I want to let them know that, IMO, the ‘deep strategy’ the TPM article references does not in any way make the delegate-grab tactic better or reasonable.”
It seems incredibly unlikely to me that that wouldn’t have already occurred to Marshall, and impossible that lots of people haven’t already made their opinion on that clear to him.
I’m a bit puzzled as to why anyone would think it was necessary to point the notion out to Josh Marshall, though. It wasn’t an editorial; it was a quote speculating on the reasoning behind the move. Condemnation isn’t mandatory in news reporting.
And Marshall has already made it pretty clear in earlier posts what he thinks of Clinton’s move.
I thought it was useful; it answered the question I had above as to what the possible strategic value of this move could be. I simply couldn’t see any rational reason to make it. I still think it was a stupid move — strategically and ethically — but the rationale Josh quoted is at least a plausible reason to make it.
I just wanted to say two things:
1) Firstly, I very much appreciate (and agree with) your thoughts regarding the dirty underbelly of snide political digs – “slipped in” – enough to tarnish someone’s credibility but not quite enough to be “too” damaging (widely, publicly) to the slinger.
2) Ironically, the mention you give in your footnote summing up why you wouldn’t cast a vote for McCain (while I’m sure there’s much more going into it for you than just this) is also a big of mud that’s been slung – out of context, and of course not by you. See this article pointing out how that statement was latched onto inappropriately by the Dems in order to discredit McCain: http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/01/11/democrats-mccain-and-the-iraq-war/?scp=1-b&sq=mccain+100+years+in+iraq&st=nyt
Lying and the Undermining of Democracy
The previous post commented on one of the absurd reactions to the Clinton vs. Obama campaign in the blogosphere. Fortunately there are also numerous excellent posts which show that some liberals really are in the reality based community. One which is w…