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Web Exclusive | Joe Klein

Hillary in 2008? No Way!

Why the former First Lady should stay in the Senate



Posted Sunday, May. 08, 2005



I was having a fascinating conversation with a Middle East expert about the intricacies of Israel's disengagement

from Gaza when I noticed the fellow growing impatient. "Enough of this," he said. "What about Hillary?" Welcome

to my life. In airports, on checkout lines, at the doctor's office: "What about Hillary?" (Everywhere except in

Washington, where everyone "knows" she's running.) I shrug, I try to avoid the question, I say it's too early—and it

is. But you want to know too, right? So here it is. I like Senator Clinton. She has a wicked, ironic sense of humor

(in private) and a great raucous belly laugh. She is smart and solid; she inspires tremendous loyalty among those

who work for her. She is not quite as creative a policy thinker as her husband, but she easily masters difficult

issues—her newfound grasp of military matters has impressed colleagues of both parties on the Armed Services

Committee—and she is not even vaguely the left-wing harridan portrayed by the Precambrian right. I also think

that a Clinton presidential candidacy in 2008 would be a disaster on many levels.



It would doubtless be a circus, a revisitation of the carnival ugliness that infested public life in the 1990s. Already

there are blogs, websites and fund-raising campaigns dedicated to denigrating her. According to the New York

Observer last week, these sites aren't getting much traffic—yet. But they will. I remember several conversations

with Senator Clinton after her health-care plan was killed 10 years ago, and she was clearly pained—nonplussed

by the quality of anger, the sheer hatred, directed against her. That experience would be a walk in the park

compared to the vitriol if she ran for President. And while I'd love to see someone confront, and defeat, the free-

range haters on the right, the last thing we need is a campaign that would polarize the nation even more. Indeed,

we could use the exact opposite—a candidate who would inspire America's centrist majority to rise up against the

extreme special interests in both parties.



Senator Clinton's supporters will say she is that candidate. And it is true that Clinton has far more leeway to run

as a moderate than almost any other Democrat. Her repositioning on social issues has been overrated—she will

have to do more than merely "respect" those who oppose abortion; she will have to propose creative

compromises.



But Clinton is a judicious hawk on foreign policy and has learned her lessons on domestic-policy overreach. No

less an expert than Newt Gingrich says, "Hillary has become one of the very few people who know what to do

about health care." Still, she has some very real political limitations. She has a clenched, wary public presence,

which won't work well in an electorate that prizes aw-shucks informality; she isn't a particularly warm or eloquent

speaker, especially in front of large audiences. Any woman running for President will face a toughness

conundrum: she will constantly have to prove her strength and be careful about showing her emotions. She won't

have the luxury of, say, Bill Clinton's public sogginess. It will take a brilliant politician to create a credible feminine

presidential style. So far, Senator Clinton hasn't shown the ease or creativity necessary to break the ultimate

glass ceiling.



And then there is her husband, a one-man supermarket tabloid. A few weeks ago, the New York Post ran a photo

of Bill Clinton leaving a local restaurant with an attractive woman, and the political-elite gossip hounds went

berserk. Prominent Democrats—friends of the Clintons—were wringing their hands. "Do we really want to go

through all that again?" one asked me. I don't know—should the sins of the husband be visited upon the wife?

Absent any evidence, the former President should be considered guilty until proved really guilty. But there is

another problem: What role would the big guy play in a Hillary Clinton Administration? Would he reform health

care? Does anyone believe that a man with such a huge personality would have a less active role in her

Administration than she had in his?



"You mean she can't run just because her husband was President?" a Hillary supporter yelled at me. "That is the

most incredibly sexist thing I've ever heard." Yes and no. My guess is that Hillary Clinton would roll into Iowa with

an incredible, Howard Dean-like head of steam in January 2008, and then the folks—yes, even the Democratic

base—would give her a very close look and conclude that a Hillary presidency would be slightly dodgy. The

Clinton line in 1992 was, Buy one, get one free. We've already had that co-presidency—for its full, constitutional

eight years. What's more, I suspect there would be innate and appropriate populist resistance to this slouch

toward monarchial democracy. There is something fundamentally un-American—and very European—about the

Clintons and the Bushes trading the office every eight years, with stale, familiar corps of retainers, supporters and

enemies. Bill Clinton was a good President. Hillary Clinton is a good Senator. But enough already. (And that goes

for you too, Jeb.)



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