On that stage in Philadelphia, we saw six against one. Candidates who had pledged the politics of hope practiced the politics of pile on instead. Her opponents tried a whole host of attacks on Hillary.
She is one strong woman. She came through it well. But Hillary's going to need your help.
Note to Clinton: the issues are fair game. If you are running for president, the other candidates have a right to point out where they think you are wrong on the issues.
I like the response from Edwards campaign communications director Chris Kofinis to Clinton's complaints of being unfairly attacked.
In Salon's War Room, Tim Grieve points out that it does a disservice to the Democratic Party to stifle dissent.All the distractions in the world won't undo the fact that on Tuesday night millions of Americans saw John Edwards speak honestly and directly, while Senator Clinton once again took multiple positions on multiple issues. We understand that the Clinton campaign isn't happy about that, but instead of smoke and mirrors, how about some truth-telling? Forty-eight hours after the debate, we have lots of excuses, but we still don't have a yes or no answer to a yes or no question.
"That's not the 'politics of piling on,' it's the politics of parsing.
"After seven years of George Bush, the American people deserve better — they deserve the truth."
Taylor Marsh, in a piece titled "Russert Leads the Boys in All Out Clinton Assault" very nearly accused the other candidates and Tim Russert of attacking Clinton because she is a woman.The last thing the Democratic Party needs now is somebody else -- let alone one of its own -- suggesting that open debate is somehow wrong. Clinton seemed to understand that point perfectly well when she announced her candidacy back in January. "Let's talk, let's chat," she said then. "Let's start a dialogue about your ideas and mine, because the conversation in Washington has been just a little one-sided lately, don't you think?"
Yes, as a matter of fact, we do. But a one-sided conversation is a one-sided conversation, no matter who's doing the talking. Elections are necessarily choices among competing candidates and competing visions. If Clinton can run her campaign without ever mentioning why she thinks she's better than her opponents, more power to her. But mere mortals can't do that, and they shouldn't have to. If Clinton was serious about having a "dialogue" -- if part of her own hope for America is that we'll have a more open society than the one in which we've lived for the past six years -- then it's high time for her campaign to stop trying to shame its opponents into silence. Engage with the criticisms or ignore them; just don't argue that it's wrong to raise them in the first place.
Russert's goal was to provide the headlines the media was salivating to see. He intended to diminish and discredit Hillary Clinton, the Democratic frontrunner, using her former president husband Bill Clinton to help do the job, which included a document waving drama that was all for show. I'd say Russert has a problem with a woman being president, but that can't be the case. Nah, he was just doing his job.Clinton herself has even called presidential politics a boys club.
Clinton, at Wellesley, says, "This all-women's college prepared me to compete in the all-boy's club of presidential politics."Let me get this straight. The other candidates (and Tim Russert) are not allowed to criticize Hillary Clinton on issues because she is female? Is that truly what Taylor Marsh is saying? As a feminist, I agree with RJ Eskow over at Huffington Post.
When is a feminist not a feminist? Apparently, when the goal is defending Hillary Clinton. In the Senator's defense, she has never said that it's unfair or bullying for men to take aggressive stances against her. I suspect she has too much self-respect for that.* But if her defenders continue to play the gender card like Taylor Marsh does in this piece, they could set the feminist cause back by decades.
It really damages the cause of feminism if the first "viable" (according to the media) female candidate for president is going to complain that she's being unfairly attacked every time someone disagrees with her on an issue. Hillary is not being attacked by the other Democrats in an unfair way. She's being questioned because she is wrong or inconsistent on issues (in their view, anyway). There is a big difference, and if she wants to be taken seriously as a leader, she had better start acting like a leader and be willing to stand up for what she believes in (whatever that may be).
In fact, I will go so far as to say that as a woman who has sometimes faced real gender discrimination, I am very angered by the Clinton campaign's response that seeks to marginalize the real issue concerns of her opponents by complaining that she's being singled out and unfairly attacked. American voters deserve to know her positions on these issues. It is not fair to us, or to women in particular, if the response to questions on the issues is dismissive of dissent, and it's worse if the response even comes close to seeming to be "you're just mean boys beating up on a girl." If she is truly prepared to compete in what she calls the "boys club," then she had better be prepared for substantive debate on the issues.
As Joan Walsh at Salon points out, Hillary Clinton can take it, or at least, she certainly SHOULD be able to. Furthermore, if she can't take reasonable critiques on the issues from Democratic candidates, how is she going to be able to confront Republican attacks?
If Clinton continues to take multiple positions on an issue and try to silence dissent from her opponents, it won't be long before her candidacy becomes little more than a joke, as in this Jon Stewart clip.
Senator Clinton, with all due respect, please get serious about the issues. As Joe Trippi points out:
You don't need money to tell the truth, or to not double-talk.


Comments: 15
This seems to be a real turning point.
Please. It was the first real question she was ever asked and now members of her campaign claim Tim Russert is a bastard that "should be shot". The politics of personal destruction.
If Hillary wants to be the leader of this country she really has to accept that nobody in the media owes her anything, regardless of how much her husband pampered them when he was president. He pampered them for good coverage for HIM not her. If she wants the media to bend to her she has to win the presidency and anti up like slick willy. Until then like astro said.....fair game.
Blaming it the boys being bullies is insulting not only to the other candidates, but to all voters - and women voters in particular.
I want a president who is willing to answer hard questions. I don't want getting answers to be like pulling teeth. I've had enough of this nonsense. I want a mature leader in the White House (John Edwards) and not someone who is too thin skinned to allow for transparency.
Regardless of citizenship or immigration status, failure to pass the test for a driver's license is the only way a lot of people will acknowledge they do not have the skills and/or knowledge needed to drive a vehicle safely and being denied a license is the only thing that will keep them off the road. I went through this experience with an aging uncle. It didn't matter how many of his relatives expressed their opinion that he shouldn't be driving, it wasn't until the state of Connecticut refused to restore his license when he was retested that he acknowledged how badly his reflexes had slowed down and handed the keys to his car to a relative who was a capable driver.
Clinton's expecting a coronation rather than a contest. I hope Obama and Edwards hammer away at her nonstop from now until next spring. As a Republican it's really fun watching her fellow moonbats try to tear her down.
I just hope that there aren't that many stupid Americans out there that will buy into the whole "GOP is threaened by a woman" bullshit that I'm sure Billary and her ilk will try and play up.
I'm not a highly paid political consultant but if I were I would advise whomever the GOP nominee is to do three key things to win the election:
1. Remind everyone tha while you're a Republican you are not George Bush.
2. Attack Hillary unmercilessly for everything she has ever said or done, no matter how minute, that could hurt her campaign.
3. Tell the American people clearly and frequently why you're the best person for the job. Tell us your plans in no uncertain terms
Expecting a candidate to be prepared to answer any question that might come up is expecting our candidates to be superhuman. A candidate or public official offering a different opinion than one they have previously expressed is acceptable in my opinion as long as they explain the reason for the change. Habits are hard to break and if we consider changing an opinion or position a flaw in a candidates, if and when they get elected to office we end up with the likes of Bush: public officials who pursue flawed policies rather than admit they made a mistake.