Finger-Pointin’ Time.

“Many answers fell into a handful of broad themes we’ve been hearing for months now. (She shouldn’t have run as an incumbent. She should have paid more attention to caucus states. She should have kept Bill chained in the basement at Whitehaven with a case of cheese curls and a stack of dirty movies.) Others had a distinct score-settling flavor…But whether personal or clinical, new or familiar, the critiques are all the more striking for having come directly from those neck-deep in the action. So, here it is, an elegy for Hillary ’08, written by some of those who have worked tirelessly to keep it alive.” Now that reality has finally set in, TNR’s Michelle Cottle gets residents of Hillaryland to ruminate on what went wrong. Among the more telling:

  • There was not any plan in place from beginning to end on how to win the nomination. It was, ‘Win Iowa.’ There was not the experience level, and, frankly, the management ability, to create a whole plan to get to the magical delegate number.

  • Hillary assembled a team thin on presidential campaign experience that confused discipline with insularity; they didn’t know what they didn’t know and were too arrogant to ask at a time early enough in the process when it could have made a difference

  • We would just cringe. Ugh. Such an out-of-touch corporate run kind of campaign–exactly what you’d expect from Mark Penn.

  • [Bill’s] behavior that started off in Iowa, carried on in New Hampshire, and culminated in South Carolina really was the beginning of the end. Unfortunately, for whatever reason, he just kind of imploded. I think, if I had to look back on it, it became more about him than about her. It really was destructive overall.

  • Mark Penn and Mandy Grunwald dismissed the possibility of youth turning out heavily in Iowa for Obama, saying on the record after the Jefferson-Jackson dinner ‘They don’t look like caucus-goers.’

    In related news, Sen. Obama picks up another super, Rep. Pete Stark of CA.

  • 3 thoughts on “Finger-Pointin’ Time.”

    1. “There was not any plan in place from beginning to end on how to win the nomination. It was, ‘Win Iowa.’

      You’d think if your whole plan, such as it was, was premised on winning Iowa, that you might put a little more thought and effort into actually, uh, winning Iowa. That they could only manage to finish third with all of the advantages and resources they had at their disposal at the time was a pretty good indication that they were doomed from the start.

      saying on the record after the Jefferson-Jackson dinner ‘They don’t look like caucus-goers.'”

      *guffaws*

      Because Mark Penn and Mandy Grunwald know from caucus-goers!

    2. At first, I was solidly behind John Edwards, but interested in Obama. I didn’t have any particular dislike for Clinton. After Edwards left the race, I started to really check out Obama. I decided to vote for him after hearing more of his platform. Late in the game, and after seeing firsthand some of the Clinton supporters at the Texas Senate District 16 convention, I began to actively dislike her.

      I went from wanting Obama to win to wanting Clinton to lose.

      Then she played the race card.

      Sad.

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