THE WEBLOG OF KEVIN C. MURPHY: CONJURING POLITICAL, CINEMATIC, AND CULTURAL ARCANA SINCE 1999

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Surveying the Wreckage.

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"Above all, this irony emerges: Clinton ran on the basis of managerial competence -- on her capacity, as she liked to put it, to 'do the job from Day One.' In fact, she never behaved like a chief executive, and her own staff proved to be her Achilles’ heel...Her hesitancy and habit of avoiding hard choices exacted a price that eventually sank her chances at the presidency." The Atlantic's Josh Green, who covered the dirt on the Patty Doyle firing earlier this year, tells the story of Sen. Clinton's primary bid from the inside (thanks mainly to being the beneficiary of vindictive document dumps from across the campaign hierarchy.)

Among the many interesting revelations, Mark Penn is apparently an even bigger asshole than he seemed during the primaries. Regarding Sen. Obama: "All of these articles about his boyhood in Indonesia and his life in Hawaii are geared towards showing his background is diverse, multicultural and putting that in a new light. Save it for 2050...his roots to basic American values and culture are at best limited. I cannot imagine America electing a president during a time of war who is not at his center fundamentally American in his thinking and in his values...Let’s use our logo to make some flags we can give out. Let’s add flag symbols to the backgrounds." Classy.

Update: Speak of the devil. While giving kudos to McCain for his Paris Hilton ad, Mark Penn emerges from his cave to extol the usefulness of negative advertising. "Picking a president is not just about the candidates’ strengths but also about how their weaknesses can manifest themselves. Imagine if, in 2000, Al Gore’s advertisements had hit George W. Bush hard over incompetence on foreign affairs and as a trigger-happy cowboy."

FMLA came first, redux.

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"'She never had anything to with it,' Clay said. 'I just don’t think you ought to play games with that kind of stuff.'" As a follow-up to Clinton's previous exaggerations on the matter, former Representative William Lacey Clay, who helped steer the Family and Medical Leave Act to passage in 1993, says Clinton had nothing to do with it. "All we needed was a president to sign it. The president signed it, and we’re grateful for that but there was no lobbying by him or her."

"'He would not have been my pastor,' Clinton said. 'You don't choose your family, but you choose what church you want to attend." With Snipergate currently gaining traction in the media and footage and transcripts now showing that Clinton had repeated this lie several times, the Senator herself (along with a member of her finance committee) tries to change the story back to Jeremiah Wright. A valiant attempt by Senator Clinton, I suppose, although as noted the other day, her choice in pastors is rather questionable too. His repellent views on AIDS aside, I'll take Jeremiah Wright's commitment to social justice any day of the week and twice on Sunday over the virulent right-wing nutjobs of Clinton's so-called "Family" (which, contrary to what she says above, she did in fact choose.)

But, anyway, back to the main story today: Clinton's first response to Snipergate: "I have written about it in my book and talked about it on many other occasions and last week, you know, for the first time in 12 or so years, I misspoke." After it came out this wasn't a one-time exaggeration, her response then became: ""So I made a mistake. That happens. It shows I'm human, which for some people is a revelation." (Note the use of that old standby, the victim card.) Either way, a mistake -- like a misstatement -- happens once, Senator. If it keeps happening, it's called a lie.

Update: Clinton brings up Wright again, this time reading from prepared remarks. I'm with TPM on this one: "You can always tell when a scandal story has peaked and is ebbing, almost down to the minute: when your political opponents start to raise it explicitly against you."



Hey all. Well, I'm sure many of you are as sick of reading about this lingering primary season as I'm getting to be about writing on it. At this point, my feelings about the Clinton campaign and the dwindling band of dead-enders lingering around her failed candidacy have gone from disbelief to disgust to a sort of exhausted aversion: It's unsightly and hard to watch, and not only because so many Clinton supporters online have been leaving the reality-based community in droves. Like a fatally wounded snake, the campaign is still writhing, hissing, and lashing out by reflex, seemingly unaware that its time came and went weeks ago.

But, the news is the news, and I did promise to keep following it. So, if you, like me, took a break over the Easter weekend, here is the most recent litany of outrages. (Of course, at this late date, you'll probably only find these outrageous if you haven't been following along for the past few months...)

  • "I think it would be a great thing if we had an election year where you had two people who loved this country and were devoted to the interest of this country." Have you no sense of decency, Mr. President, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency? Back in action after his "mugging", Bill Clinton suggested that only a race between his wife and John McCain would include two patriots, and only by picking Clinton as the Democratic nominee can the country avoid "all this other stuff that always seems to intrude itself on our politics." [See it here.] (I presume he's talking about race, since I seem to remember President Clinton being personally responsible for "other stuff" intruding on politics back in the day, so much so that it ended up consuming a year of my life.)

    Obama supporter Gen. Tony McPeak has been taking some flak for likening this questioning of Obama's patriotism to the antics of Senator Joe McCarthy, but, let's be honest, what else would you call it? It's definitely in the same ballpark. Since time immemorial, arguing against one's opponent's patriotism has been the last refuge of a scoundrel, and as sure a sign as any that a political campaign is wheezing its last. And Clinton, of course, knows this firsthand, since he was on the receiving end of a similar smear in 1992. In short, the president has shamed himself and his legacy yet again.

  • "There was a saying around the White House that if a place was too small, too poor, or too dangerous, the president couldn't go, so send the First Lady...I remember landing under sniper fire. There was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at the airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the vehicles to get to our base." As she's been doing with SCHIP, NAFTA, FMLA, and Northern Ireland, we already know Sen. Clinton has been grotesquely exaggerating about her trip to Bosnia in 1996. Well, now she's been caught in an outright lie. (A four-Pinocchio whopper, no less.) Video has surfaced, and not only was there no sniper fire at the airport, there was a greeting ceremony for Sen. Clinton...and Chelsea, because if a place is really small, poor, or dangerous, apparently the First Daughter gets to come along. At this ceremony, then-First Lady Clinton not only waded through the usual throng of soldiers standing at attention and bored bureaucratic functionaries, but gamely faced down the threat of a little girl offering flowers. Grisly stuff, to be sure. Update: Howard "Ken Starr" Wolfson says Clinton "misspoke," while more Bosnia exaggerations emerge.

  • "Mr. Richardson’s endorsement came right around the anniversary of the day when Judas sold out for 30 pieces of silver, so I think the timing is appropriate, if ironic." This one hits a little closer to home, but anyway: Clinton supporter "till the last dog dies" and my former employer James Carville calls Bill Richardson's endorsement an "act of betrayal", and actually likens him to Judas Iscariot (making the Clintons...uh, Jesus? Perhaps Brutus, Benedict Arnold, or Lando Calrissian would've worked better.) In Carville's defense, I'll bet dollars to donuts he meant this mainly as a joke (and, as he recently editorialized in the FT, he's not one for the overparsing of political speech anyway.) That being said, since Carville's a big boy, I'm sure he can weather Richardson's pointed riposte just as well: "I'm not going to get in the gutter like that. And you know, that's typical of many of the people around Senator Clinton. They think they have a sense of entitlement to the presidency." That they do, Governor, that they do.

    I'm not at all surprised Carville is "Stickin'" with the Clinton campaign well past its expiration date -- It's his nature, and you can't teach an old Clinton yellow-dog new tricks. But he's dead wrong on this one, and given that he more than anyone else should be able to see the writing on the wall, politically speaking, he really should be working to bring the party back together, not continuing to poison the well with badly thought-out religious metaphors. (And if saying thus make me a "Judas" in his eyes, well, so be it...although I'd prefer to think of myself as a Jack Burden.)

    Update: "I think the statement had the desired effect. It was what I said." Carville talks Judas on CNN, and, as I suspected, he seemed to think it just all part of the game: "'I doubt if Governor Richardson and I will be terribly close in the future,' he said, but 'I've had my say...I got one in the wheelhouse and I tagged him.'" What Carville seems to be ignoring here is that, tag or not, the game is already over, and Obama is the one going to the Series. So it's a little late to be throwing the chin music.

  • Not SCHIP either.

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    "In campaign speeches, Clinton describes the State Children's Health Insurance Program, or SCHIP, as an initiative 'I helped to start.'...But the Clinton White House, while supportive of the idea of expanding children's health, fought the first SCHIP effort, spearheaded by Senators Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts, and Orrin G. Hatch, Republican of Utah, because of fears that it would derail a bigger budget bill. And several current and former lawmakers and staff said Hillary Clinton had no role in helping to write the congressional legislation, which grew out of a similar program approved in Massachusetts in 1996."

    Here's one I missed from a few days ago. As she did with foreign policy and the FMLA, it seems, Sen. Clinton has apparently been widely exaggerating her role in the creation of SCHIP. "McDonough, a Democrat who has not endorsed a presidential candidate, also said it was Kennedy who developed the SCHIP idea after that meeting. 'I don't recall any signs of Mrs. Clinton's engagement,' McDonough said."

    "I think the only 'red-phone' moment was: 'Do we eat here or at the next place.'" As you may recall, Sen. Clinton's recent touting of her commanding foreign policy bona fides hit a snag when it turned out not only that she was lying about the particulars on several trips, but that her big Kosovo excursion was taken with those wily diplomatic veterans, Sheryl Crow and Sinbad. (If you frequent Talking Points Memo, one wag (no, not idiotic, although he's funny too) has been having a good deal of fun with this over the past week or so.)

    Well, now the real Sinbad has gotten involved, and his critique of Clinton's account of that trip is pretty devastating. ""I never felt that I was in a dangerous position. I never felt being in a sense of peril...In her Iowa stump speech, Clinton also said, 'We used to say in the White House that if a place is too dangerous, too small or too poor, send the First Lady.' Say what? As Sinbad put it: 'What kind of president would say, 'Hey, man, I can't go 'cause I might get shot so I'm going to send my wife...oh, and take a guitar player and a comedian with you."'"

    Update: If you don't want to take Sinbad's word for it, how about Greg Craig, the director of Policy Planning for the State Dept. during the Clinton years? He completely eviscerates Clinton's claims to foreign policy experience in a memo this morning: "There is no reason to believe...that [Sen. Clinton] was a key player in foreign policy at any time during the Clinton Administration. She did not sit in on National Security Council meetings. She did not have a security clearance. She did not attend meetings in the Situation Room. She did not manage any part of the national security bureaucracy, nor did she have her own national security staff. She did not do any heavy-lifting with foreign governments, whether they were friendly or not. She never managed a foreign policy crisis, and there is no evidence to suggest that she participated in the decision-making that occurred in connection with any such crisis. As far as the record shows, Senator Clinton never answered the phone either to make a decision on any pressing national security issue – not at 3 AM or at any other time of day." (He then goes on to refute her claims country by country. Pretty damning stuff.)

    FMLA came first.

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    "By now, we all know how over-hyped are Hillary claims about her foreign policy experience – including her claims that she negotiated peace treaties and opened borders. But there’s also hype in her claims about domestic policy." Some enterprising dKos'ers look at the timeline and find Sen. Clinton had basically nothing to do with passing the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). The bill, originally penned in 1986 by Sen. Chris Dodd, had already been passed and vetoed twice under Papa Bush. It was then set up to go by the Democratic Congress upon Clinton's entering office (it was HR.1 and S. 1 respectively), and was signed into law, as a fait accompli, only sixteen days after inauguration day.

    Update: Former House member William Lacey Clay notes: "'She never had anything to with it. I just don’t think you ought to play games with that kind of stuff.'"



    "It was her coming that helped. But she had absolutely no role in the dirty work of negotiations...This had nothing to do with her competence." The Chicago Tribune delves into Clinton's dubious claims of foreign policy experience and finds not only that she has little to none, but that she is basically lying about what she's accomplished. "Pressed in a CNN interview this week for specific examples of foreign policy experience that has prepared her for an international crisis, Clinton claimed that she 'helped to bring peace' to Northern Ireland and negotiated with Macedonia to open up its border to refugees from Kosovo."

    Let's take 'em one by one. Regarding Ireland, historian Tim Pat Coogan refers to Clinton's role as "part of the stage effects, the optics, and Nobel Peace Prize winner Lord Trimble today called Clinton's claims "silly": "I don’t want to rain on the thing for her but being a cheerleader for something is slightly different from being a principal player." The Telegraph digs up coverage of the one meeting Clinton attended in Belfast, and it wasn't exceptionally hard-hitting. In fact, it was a photo-op. "Conversation 'seemed a little bit stilted, a little prepared at times' and Mrs Clinton admired a stainless steel tea pot, which was duly given to her, for keeping the brew 'so nice and hot'." The Kitchen Debate, it wasn't.

    Regarding Macedonia and Kosovo, that border was opened the day before Senator Clinton arrived. Update: The picture above is from Clinton's Kosovo trip. As you can see, part of her delicate negotiations to get this already-open border opened involved singing with Chelsea, Sheryl Crow, and some poor military officials forced to humor the wife of the Commander in Chief.

    As TPM's Josh Marshall aptly summed up, "Let's get real and admit that Hillary Clinton is getting the free ride of all free rides on her repeated invocations of foreign policy experience."

    Power Games.

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    Ugh. Another day of pettiness from Hillary Clinton and her crew -- we have to sit through seven more weeks of this, just because pundits are bad at math? Sigh...anyway, after referring to Hillary Clinton somewhat off-the-record as a "monster," (while promoting a book in England, and not speaking for the Obama campaign), author, journalist and genocide expert Samantha Power resigns as an Obama foreign policy advisor. This is mainly because the Clinton campaign called for her head (less than a day after Wolfson's Ken Starr analogy, mind you) and apparently deemed her original apology not sufficient.

    To put things into perspective, when SNL's Tina Fey called Clinton a "bitch" several times over two weeks ago on national television, Bill Clinton called to thank her. (And, when Hillary Clinton suggested somebody kill Ralph Nader back in 2000, everyone just shrugged it off. Somehow, that seems worse to me than calling someone a "monster"...I'll never understand why that didn't cause more of a stir.)

    In any case, Power is out (for now -- I expect she can come back once the Clinton people internalize the reality of their loss.) To be sure, her remark was unfortunate in public, but she did apologize. But I guess the Clinton campaign just has a problem with strong women speaking their mind, when that mind is directed against Her Eminence. And particularly when the strong woman in question just happens to have way more national security cred than Hillary Clinton, and thus puts the lie to her recent slobbering over John McCain: While Samantha Power was risking her life to research The Problem from Hell and get a handle on the world's most nightmarish dilemma, Hillary Clinton was toodling around Bosnia with a security detail, Sheryl Crow, and Sinbad. O, beware, my lady, of jealousy; It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock the meat it feeds on.

    Update: Clinton dispatches Wesley Clark and Jamie Rubin to pile on. Charming. Rubin's always been a stooge, but I thought Gen. Clark had more class than this. Guess I was wrong.

    "'I think it’s imperative that each of us be able to demonstrate we can cross the commander-in-chief threshold. I believe that I’ve done that. Certainly, Sen. McCain has done that and you’ll have to ask Sen. Obama with respect to his candidacy.'...Calling McCain, the presumptive GOP nominee a good friend and a 'distinguished man with a great history of service to our country,' Clinton said, 'Both of us will be on that stage having crossed that threshold.'" Say what? Still happily in denial about her recent loss of the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton spouts more GOP talking points on national security in an attempt to wound Obama after the fact. (In case you missed it, she did the same sort of thing the other day.) Now, I remain unclear as to what national security qualifications McCain and especially Clinton assume they enjoy. (Lest we forget, Clinton didn't even have a national security clearance during her tenure as First Lady.) That being said, this sordid wallowing in (and thus legitimizing of) right-wing agitprop is exactly why the party can't afford to let Hillary Clinton sustain the delusion she will be our nominee. It is time for her to go.



    It's Super Tuesday. Do you know where your voting station is?

    GitM's endorsement of Barack Obama | GitM's Obama archives

    Why Obama is progressive | Why Clinton is not | A Note for the Boomers

    Some great Obama speeches.

    List of over 100 Newspaper Endorsements.

    More: Rafael Anchia | Joan Baez | Xavier Becerra | Bill Bradley | Michael Chabon| George Clooney | Kent Conrad | Clive Crook | Larry David | Rosa DeLauro | Robert De Niro | Todd Gitlin | The Grateful Dead | Kevin Drum | Maria Elena Durazo | Susan Eisenhower | Charlie Gonzalez | Tom Hayden | Christopher Hayes | Hendrik Hertzberg | Hulk Hogan | Robert Kagan | Gary Kamiya | Garrison Keilor | Caroline Kennedy | Ethel Kennedy | Ted Kennedy | John Kerry | Stephen King | Harry Knowles | George Lakoff | Patrick Leahy | Dave Matthews | Claire McCaskill | Kate Michelman | Liam Moore | Toni Morrison | Janet Napolitano | Ben Nelson | Move On | Alma Rangel | Frank Rich | Linda Sanchez | Kathleen Sebelius | Maria Shriver | Ted Sorenson | Stella | Andrew Sullivan | Cass Sunstein | Paul Volcker | Oprah Winfrey

    Looking for more reasons (other than those in the GitM endorsement) to vote against Clinton? How about: trying to cheat in Florida and Michigan | "choose your own scandal" | corporate donors | dabbling in drug hysteria | dabbling in fear-mongering | dabbling in Reagan hysteria | dismissive of campaign finance reform | dubious claims to superior experience | the dynasty issue | false abortion mailer | "false hope"-mongering | false tax mailer | the gender card | "imaginary hip black friend" | kindergarten oppo research | lying about Obama's Iraq stance | playing the race card | Rovian tactics | shady donors | union-busting rhetoric | voter suppression in NV | Wild Bill

    Yes, we can.

    "The point is not that experience is pointless but that it needn’t be in politics to be useful. John McCain’s years as a P.O.W. gave him an understanding of torture and a moral authority to discuss it that no amount of Senate hearings ever could have conferred. In the same way, Mr. Obama’s years as an antipoverty organizer give him insights into one of our greatest challenges: how to end cycles of poverty." LIke Tim Noah, the NYT's Nicholas Kristof argues Clinton's claims of superior "experience" don't hold up. "[T]he presidential candidate left standing with the greatest experience by far is Mr. McCain; if Mrs. Clinton believes that’s the criterion for selecting the next president, she might consider backing him.To put it another way, think which politician is most experienced today in the classic sense, and thus -- according to the 'experience' camp -- best qualified to become the next president. That’s Dick Cheney. And I rest my case."

    Kerry Returns Fire.

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    "[B]eing an ex-president does not give you license to abuse the truth, and I think that over the last days it's been over the top. Things have been said about Barack Obama's positions that are just plain untrue. It was said in Nevada, it's been said about Social Security, it's been said about Yucca Mountain, and it's been said in South Carolina. I think it's very unfortunate, but I think the voters can see through that."

    John Kerry calls out Bill Clinton to the National Journal, and lays into the experience canard. "We made some tough decisions [in the '90's] and we ought to be proud of them, about the budget and the deficit. But the fact is, that was not Hillary Clinton making those decisions. It was a different team, at a different time. In fact, Barack Obama has more legislative experience than either of his two opponents."

    Are you experienced? Uh...

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    "Clinton's claim to superior experience isn't merely dishonest. It's also potentially dangerous should she become the nominee. If Clinton continues to build her campaign on the dubious foundation of government experience, it shouldn't be very difficult for her GOP opponent to pull that edifice down. That's especially true if a certain white-haired senator now serving his 25th year in Congress (four in the House and 21 in the Senate) wins the nomination. McCain could easily make Hillary look like an absolute fraud who is no more truthful about her depth of government experience than she is about why her mother named her "Hillary." Dennis Kucinich has more government experience than Clinton. (He also has a better health-care plan, but we'll save that for another day.)"

    So...now that we've (hopefully) stepped back from the abyss of identity politics, where does that leave us? Ah, yes, hope vs. experience. Well, drawing on this NYT story of several weeks ago, Slate's Tim Noah argues that Clinton's claims of superior experience just don't hold up, and particularly once you factor in John McCain. "Oh, please. Thirty-five years takes you back to 1973, half of which Hillary spent in law school, for crying out loud. I don't mean to denigrate her professional experience...But in government, Clinton's chief role over the years has been that of kibitzer." Update: Speaking of Dennis Kucinich, he's back in tomorrow's Nevada debate. Update 2: Nope, he's out again, by decision of the Nevada Supreme Court.

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