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TOPIC: Would we be better off under a President Hillary Clinton? (WaPo 11/07/10)


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Would we be better off under a President Hillary Clinton? (WaPo 11/07/10)
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/05/AR2010110505214.html
Would unemployment have been lower under a President Hillary? Would the Democrats have lost fewer seats on Tuesday? It's impossible to know. But what can be said with confidence is that Clinton's toolkit is a better match for the current set of national woes than they were for 2008, when her support for the Iraq war dominated the campaign.

Back then, Clinton's populist appeal to low-income white voters, union members and workers of the Rust Belt was not enough to overcome Obama's energized youth vote. But Clinton's working-class whites were the very ones who switched to the Republicans on Tuesday.

Back in '08, Clinton's scars from HillaryCare were seen as a liability, proof that she was a product of the old ways of Washington. But now that Obama has himself succumbed to the partisanship, his talk of a "growth process" in office makes Clinton's experience in the trenches look like more of an asset.

Clinton campaign advisers I spoke with say she almost certainly would have pulled the plug on comprehensive health-care reform rather than allow it to monopolize the agenda for 15 months. She would have settled for a few popular items such as children's coverage and a ban on exclusions for pre-existing conditions. That would have left millions uninsured, but it also would have left Democrats in a stronger political position and given them more strength to focus on job creation and other matters, such as immigration and energy.

The Clinton campaign advisers acknowledge that she probably would have done the auto bailout and other things that got Obama labeled as a socialist. The difference is that she would have coupled that help for big business with more popular benefits for ordinary Americans.

Clinton, for example, first called for a 90-day foreclosure moratorium in December 2007, as part of a package to fight the early stages of the mortgage crisis with a five-year freeze on subprime rates and $30 billion to avoid foreclosures. But an Obama campaign adviser dismissed Clinton's moratorium, saying it would "reward people for bad behavior."

Calls for a moratorium returned a few weeks ago with news of lenders' foreclosure abuses. Polls indicate public support for a moratorium, but Obama ruled it out. It's a safe bet Clinton would have done otherwise.

Some differences would have been stylistic. As a senator from New York, Clinton had good relations with Wall Street. As the heir to her husband's donor base, she would have had more executives in government - envoys who would have been able to ease the uncertainty about tax and regulatory policy that has been crippling business.

Most important, there can be little doubt that, whatever policies emerged, she would have maintained a laser focus on the economy; after all, she did that during the 2008 campaign, when it wasn't as central an issue. She got little credit, for example, when she gave a speech in Iowa in November 2007 warning about the dangers of new financial instruments. Now, it seems prescient; then, it sounded boring.


Obama survived the challenge then. But times changed, and the president, feeling "removed" from the people, asked in the East Room how he can give Americans "confidence that I'm listening to them?"

The answer is simple: Do what Hillary would have done.


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What a great analysis/comparison - whatever it is, it's spot on. The policies and proposals Hillary put forth during the 08 Sh** Storm were always comprehensive, with measures to address the primary issue as well as each important component. She knew that superficial efforts, and speeches weren't going to get the job done. She understood how important it was to do the work, to deal with the hard problems, and to enlist the help of smart, capable people. Most importantly - Hillary actually cares about this country and wants to serve. She's not just on some ego trip like Barack.



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It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less.  ~Susan B. Anthony



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Oh what could have/should have been...if the DNC/RBC hadn't fu**ed over Hillary and the American people. I have NO doubt we would be better off today.

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Dana Milbank has written a very good reflective article here.

Hillary knew that the housing market problem demanded urgent problem-solving.  The 90-days moratorium on foreclosure that Hillary was the first to propose was absolutely needed - both to help the Americans and to help give a pause in which to get some things done.



Jim Cramer is not an eassy person to carry a conversation with - Hillary absolutely held his interest and totally impressed him.

Honestly, I think she would have tackled this very early on, put in curbs on derivative trading - as you can see, she was really onto the scams and the systemic impact of foreclosures on neighbors and neighborhood value.

Hillary would have been able to tackle both the housing market issue and the health care waste reduction [which is what was the focus of her work] through the highly throughout systemic health care reform policy she put out. 

Seemingly her policies were the same as candidate Obama's. The goals were the same, but their approaches were very different; Hillary had laid out detailed and markedly different approaches.

The one place she had clear thumb on the issue was repealing the Pres.W. Bush tax cut for those with income of $250k and above - she spoke of that in the video above.  She was going to monetize her Universal Health Care approach with the added income.  It was a clear plan.

Yes, Candidate Hillary Clinton's approach to health care was a tad more expensive than of Candidate Obama, but Hillary's approach was assessed by a Harvard expert (published in NY Times) as the better approach that would give more benefits to more people and make more lasting changes structurally to the way health care would be delivered.  The approach was fundamentally different.  And, she had very in-depth understanding of the issues in health care; it would not have taken a dragged out year with woeful "communication void from WH" when the Congress twiddled thumb on the how question.

Yes, Dana Milbank. The answer is very simple.
The answer is simple: Do what Hillary would have done.


typos corrected


-- Edited by Sanders on Sunday 7th of November 2010 06:41:03 PM

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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010
Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010

Madam Secretary Blog at ForeignPolicy.com
Project Vote Smart - Stay informed and engaged!


Diamond

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I just read this article being discussed in The Moderate Voice by Joe Gandelman.

I thought you'd want to read one of the comments on his post.

gcotharn

12:41 pm November 7, 2010

posts 321

You mention the "bottom line".  The bottom line is that this planted article in WaPo amounts to Hillary's announcement that she will challenge Barack for the 2012 Dem Nomination.

That's fine with me.  By Jan of 2008, I understood that Barack would be a disaster as POTUS.  I understood it so strongly that I caucused for Hillary in the Texas Dem Primary: http://theendzone.blogspot.com/2008/03/i-caucus-for-hillary.html . It might have been the best vote I ever cast.

I remember Jan – April of 2008. Only political junkies had taken a true look at Barack's lack of successful ventures in his life, at Barack's "blank slate" strategy of obscuring his true self, at Barack's strong left side roots and voting pattern.  If I mentioned any of this out loud, however gently and innocuously, I was a heretic, a blasphemer, a hater.  If I said "Dem voters ought look again at what they are doing:  Hillary has far more life accomplishment and is far more prepared to be POTUS", then I was looked at as if I were from another planet. I can think of three long time acquaintances who looked at me in exactly that fashion … in wonder that I could say such a thing.  Two of them laughed in my face. Dem voters were infatuated — were walking endorphin clouds.

In 2012, Hillary will win the nomination. In summer of 2012, pundits will say "I always said Hillary was going to win."  Except, they didn't say it.  I'm saying it.  To me, its obvious.


Hats off to gcothran!

This post is worth reading: "I caucus for Hillary" (The End Zone). It brought back so many memories.  [As does the Book "Big Girls Dont Cry" that I am reading now]


-- Edited by Sanders on Sunday 7th of November 2010 01:48:58 PM

__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010
Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010

Madam Secretary Blog at ForeignPolicy.com
Project Vote Smart - Stay informed and engaged!


Diamond

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I found this video clip from February 2008. Enjoy!



__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010
Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010

Madam Secretary Blog at ForeignPolicy.com
Project Vote Smart - Stay informed and engaged!


Diamond

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Dana Milbank interviewed on this on CNN.

Ever wonder if Hillary were in the White House? (amfix.blogs.cnn.com)


See the video there.  Starts at 0:50 seconds mark.

__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010
Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010

Madam Secretary Blog at ForeignPolicy.com
Project Vote Smart - Stay informed and engaged!


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i emailed this to Dana
Dana
I could not agree more with your comments in your article about a Hillary Clinton presidency.
 
As somebody losing her job, I was/am a livid democrat after reading Jonathon Alter's Newsweek interview with Bill Clinton in October.  

"Starting late in 09, Bill Clinton began lobbying privately for an energy-efficiency loan guarantee program. He prepared a detailed memo for the White House laying out a plan that would use $9 billion from Treasury to leverage $67 billion in financing to retrofit offices and residential buildings. This would create hundreds of thousands of new green jobs that cannot be exported. Clinton waited for much of this year for a perfunctory meeting with Obama in July 2010, however that was actually more of a photo op with business leaders".

Too bad the Dem party establishment selected Obama over experience. We could have had the Clintons in the WH. The economy stupid as a focus and a rapid response to the oil spill is what we could have had in addition to all of the great points you listed!!!!

 

Amy Dugan, PhD



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