Tuesday, June 3, 2008

What is Hillary Thinking?

Hillary Clinton supporters flocked to the Democratic Rules and Credentials Committee meeting in Washington over the weekend, to protest pretty much whatever was bound to happen there. And, well, from what I can see on tv, they really acted kind of crazy.


Hillary Supporters Fly In

Why do they hate Obama so much? And why the bad manners? It looks to me like Obama has been going out of his way to be gracious all along, while Hillary and her gang just persist in being rude and obnoxious. Check out this angry gal:

She's really mad!

None of this makes sense. If Hillary is such a strong candidate, and Obama is so weak, then why can't she beat him? And why all the complaining about the rules? Hillary and Bill had all kinds of input on these rules. Obama had zero input on the rules. But he seems to have read them and figured out how to win. Isn't that a good thing? Does this remind anyone of Hillary's Iraq NIE misfeasance? Aside from being fair, I think it's a valid indicator of competence.

All of this Hillary Anger seems to be tied to a sense of feminist resentment that is peculiar to Hillary's supporters. I don't remember any such emotions playing out so vividly when Elizabeth Dole ran for President. Until now it seemed simply amusing that Hillary continues to campaign with a straight face. But something more is going on. The borderline fanaticism of Hillary and her supporters on insisting that she is "better," their fury over her losing, mixed in with negative references to racial and class differences, and the overarching belief that the nomination is somehow being taken from her because she's a woman, have all brewed into a bitter gestalt with a momentum all it's own. It's boiling over and I don't know if even Hillary can contain it and bring her supporters back to the party in time to win in November. If she even intends to.
Meanwhile, look at what has happened to John McCain in the past nine months. For all of the press apathy toward his campaign, he has maintained a steady upward momentum. If the Democrats screw this up enough, he'll be there to take it from them in November.
If Obama wants to be a uniter, then he has a good challenge right now with his own party. And it's the women he needs to placate. The older feminists seem the most upset. He's been playing it cool by not attacking Hillary or gloating over his lead in delegates, but that's not enough. He needs to start actively and publicly reaching out to other women in the party who are in elections this year. That way he is going direct, and not allowing Hillary to become a de facto intermediary between him and large blocks of women voters.

Here's a list of women in Congress he should be talking to:
House

Tammy Baldwin, (Democrat-Wisconsin)
Melissa Bean, (Democrat-Illinois)
Shelley Berkley, (Democrat-Nevada)
Madeleine Z. Bordallo, (Democrat-Guam)
Nancy Boyda, (Democrat-Kansas)
Corrine Brown, (Democrat-Florida)
Lois Capps, (Democrat-California)
Julia May Carson, (Democrat-Indiana)1
Kathy Castor, (Democrat-Florida)
Donna M. Christensen, (Democrat-Virgin Islands)
Yvette D. Clarke, (Democrat-New York)
Susan A. Davis, (Democrat-California)
Diana L. DeGette, (Democrat-Colorado)
Rosa DeLauro, (Democrat-Connecticut)
Anna Georges Eshoo, (Democrat-California)
Gabrielle Giffords, (Democrat-Arizona)
Kirsten Gillibrand, (Democrat-New York)
Jane F. Harman, (Democrat-California)
Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, (Democrat-South Dakota)
Mazie Hirono, (Democrat-Hawaii)
Darlene K. Hooley, (Democrat-Oregon)
Sheila Jackson-Lee, (Democrat-Texas)
Eddie Bernice Johnson, (Democrat-Texas)
Stephanie Tubbs Jones, (Democrat-Ohio)
Marcia C. (Marcy) Kaptur, (Democrat-Ohio)
Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, (Democrat-Michigan)
Barbara Lee, (Democrat-California)
Zoe Lofgren, (Democrat-California)
Nita M. Lowey, (Democrat-New York)
Carolyn B. Maloney, (Democrat-New York)
Doris Matsui, (Democrat-California)
Carolyn McCarthy, (Democrat-New York)
Betty McCollum, (Democrat-Minnesota)
Juanita Millender-McDonald, (Democrat-California)2
Gwen Moore, (Democrat-Wisconsin)
Grace Napolitano, (Democrat-California)
Eleanor Holmes Norton, (Democrat-The District Of Columbia)
Nancy Pelosi, (Democrat-California)
Laura Richardson, (Democrat-California)
Lucille Roybal-Allard, (Democrat-California)
Linda T. Sánchez, (Democrat-California)
Loretta Sanchez, (Democrat-California)
Janice Schakowsky, (Democrat-Illinois)
Debbie Wasserman Schultz, (Democrat-Florida)
Allyson Schwartz, (Democrat-Pennsylvania)
Carol Shea-Porter, (Democrat-New Hampshire)
Louise M. Slaughter, (Democrat-New York)
Hilda L. Solis, (Democrat-California)
Jackie Speier, (Democrat-California)
Betty Sutton, (Democrat-Ohio)
Ellen O’Kane Tauscher, (Democrat-California)
Nicola S. (Niki) Tsongas, (Democrat-Massachusetts)
Nydia M. Velázquez, (Democrat-New York)
Maxine Waters, (Democrat-California)
Diane Edith Watson, (Democrat-California)
Lynn C. Woolsey, (Democrat-California)

Senate
Barbara Boxer, (Democrat-California)
Maria E. Cantwell, (Democrat-Washington)
Hillary Rodham Clinton, (Democrat-New York)
Dianne Feinstein, (Democrat-California)
Amy Klobuchar, (Democrat-Minnesota)
Mary Landrieu, (Democrat-Louisiana)
Blanche Lambert Lincoln, (Democrat-Arkansas)
Claire McCaskill, (Democrat-Missouri)
Barbara Ann Mikulski, (Democrat-Maryland)
Patty Murray, (Democrat-Washington)
Deborah A. Stabenow, (Democrat-Michigan)

We will have a woman President. It's just a matter of when. And of course, who.
Lookee here, examples from other countries for a little inspiration:
German Chancellor Angela Merkel

Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko


Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner

Feminism has gone global. Let's not let Hillary burn down the house by confusing her personal political ambition with the progress of women in American politics. Our country has too many important things to do.

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