DENVER - Many of my press colleagues seem to believe that Hillary Clinton last night delivered a "full-throated endorsement" of Barack Obama (to quote one story), and that she did so "emotionally and definitively" (to quote another).
I strongly beg to differ.
It was little more than a generic party endorsement; in essence, she said merely that her followers should fall in line behind Obama because he is a Democrat, she is a Democrat, they are all Democrats, and the bad guys are Republicans. She had great things to say about the party, and she made it clear that Obama agrees with her about the mission of the party. But she had virtually nothing of a personal nature to say about Obama, other than a fleeting reference to his early stint as a community organizer.
And what Obama needed most was a ringing personal endorsement of his character - a few lines, perhaps, about his leadership potential, his power to inspire, and even his preparedness to command. Even if Clinton doesn't really believe he has those attributes (indeed, it appears she has doubts), that kind of public vetting would have been the strongest possible signal to her most diehard delegates that they should quit their whining, park their delusions about she was supposedly robbed of victory, and cancel any plans they might have to make mischief during the symbolic roll call vote this evening.
But she didn't do that. Instead, she pointedly praised Michelle Obama and predicted that "she will be a great first lady for America." Traditional convention hyperbole would at least require that she also view Barack Obama as a "great" future president, but nary a word about that. Then she pointedly lauded running mate Joe Bidn as "a strong leader, a good man...he's pragmatic, he's tough, and he's wise." Take a guess who was not described as strong or good or pragmatic or tough or wise.
At another point, she listed her issue aspirations - ending discrimination, promoting unionization, civil rights, women's rights, gay rights, and so much more, the generic Democratic list - and finished by saying that "those are the reasons I support Barack Obama for president." Then she went into a riff about how "we need leaders once again who can tap into that special blend of American confidence and optimism," yet she couldn't bring herself to declare that Obama was such a leader, or to even put "leader" and "Obama" in the same sentence."
Undecided voters have been hanging back on Obama not because they have doubts about the Democrats - quite the opposite, since polls show the Democrats hammering the Republicans in generic White House matchups - but because they have doubts about him. Clinton's generic praise for the Democrats did nothing to help Obama. Where she could have helped most, in the personal realm, she did virtually nothing.
Even John McCain rated a shout-out as her "friend and colleague" - whereas Obama is merely a Democrat who would govern as a Democrat, just like in the '90s, "with President Clinton and the Democrats." Apparently, her idea of praise was to suggest that Barack is in the grand tradition of Bill, a comparison that the '08 nominee might well consider dubious.
Granted, she did twice refer to the nominee as "President Obama," and she did suggest that her troops should get with the program ("none of us can afford to sit on the sidelines"). In other words, there was enough for her camp to spin the speech as a sufficient nod to Obama.
But she did nothing to dispel the notion (which she first introduced, and has since bequeathed to a grateful McCain) that Obama still lacks the personal attributes to handle a crisis at three in the morning. Her glaring omission speaks volumes about the grudging mood inside Clintonland, and matters far more than her generic call to arms.
And now comes Bill, tonight. The word is that Obama's people, as courtesy to a former president, will not be vetting the speech in advance. You never quite know what this guy is going to say, or how long it will take him to say it. (The person I feel sorry for is Beth Robinson, the "stay at home mom" who is scheduled to follow him.) Bill reminds me of the Grateful Dead; going in, you never knew how they'd do the songs or whether Jerry would have maximum use of his remaining brain cells. Bill will probably do the party generics, praise himself lavishly, rhetorically construct a whole new presidential library to himself, then give a nod to Obama while leaving a load of stuff between the lines. Or not.
And then he leaves. The Obama people are undoubtedly looking forward to the clock striking 10 p.m. in the east, because that's when they finally get their convention back.
Posted by Dick Polman @ 11:38 AM
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70 comments
I actually totally agree. Surprised the DN is posting this.
I refuse to watch any of the convention coverage on both sides. I don't want to hear Billary crying nor their supporters whining and I certainly couldn't stand to be preached at the way the R's tend to do. This 4 day political advertisement is a waste of time.
She can't give a personal endorsement because it would be a pile of BS. Plus, she will be running again in 4 years whether or not BO wins.
She gave a great speech. She did more for Obama than any other 2nd place finisher in Democratic history. But, like most of the MSM who is in the tank for Obama, you refuse to do your homework or point out those facts. Instead, you do the typical whining about how she didn't enthusiastically throw her support behind the chosen One. If she had done more, it wouldn't have been believable. He's a weak candidate. You know it. I know it. And she knows it. WORDS are not going to change that.
I agree she gave a great speech, however, I'll firmly disagree he's a weak candidate. He wouldn't have beat her otherwise.
RG: He is a weaker candidate now then he was then. (Imagine if the Wright tapes had leaked before Iowa...) There was a time when all of us thought Obama was a stronger candidate than Hillary. That time has passed. ----- She gave a good speech and she endorsed the Democratic agenda. She said she would rather Obama win the presidency than McCain. Could she have done more? Sure. Would Obama have done more for her? Probably not.
I thought all of yesterday's speeches were pretty generic. Bill gave a good one in 2004. I'm sure he will be great again. My favorite line of his last year - re: the national debt/surplus issue: "Our way works, theirs doesn't." And if Obama were a weak candidate, he would not have survived Clinton in the primaries. McCain did not survive Bush - what does that say about him?
Maybe it's just the cynic in me but, I kept thinking that she was prepping for her next run. I expected a much more enthusiastic push for Obama. It's still 'all about the Clintons'
Oh, those guilt by association tapes? Obama MUST be a militant becuase his pastor said GD America.
Good analysis. The speech was fine, not great, and definitely NOT a ringing endorsement. I'll be interested to see what she does on the stump for him between now and November . . .
Obama needed Hillary to come out and enthusiastically support him for president. That did not happen. I agree with Polman (did I just type that????) 100%. He may be in the tank for Obama, but he gane an honest assessment of her speech. She could have done more, she should have done more. She could have expressed his leadership skills in the way he defeated her during the primaries. She could have said something about leadership he exhibited in the Senate, if he did exhibit any. Yet she simply gave a generic endorsement, similar to what Bill gave to Al Gore in 2000, so as to show support for the party nominee and keep her hopes alive for the future. On another note, Nancy Pelosi continues to hurt the party, standing by her statement on Meet the Press that the Catholic Church does not recognize life as beginning at conception, despite being upbraided by two Arch Bishops on the issue. She should just keep her mouth shut.
By trying to have it both ways, doesn't Hillary put ambition above principle? Not "Which Side Are You On, Boys?" but instead, "Both Sides Now." http://www.nowpublic.com/world/hillarys-choice-ambition-over-principle-get-political-w-vic-livingston
Lincoln said it so well, " a house divided can not stand". The side bar comments by "fustrated Hillary fund raisers", Gov Rendells, "he is not the easiest guy to relate to" and then there is James Carvel..............
Shesh!
Every great leader was inexperienced at some point. I really think Obama will make a good president. He will have seasoned advisors to aid him. This country needs a change of course. We cannot continue running up record defecits causing hardship to our children and grandchildren. This coupled with the republicans lying us into an unnecessary war (with unfortunate support from many democrats but not Obama) means that they don't deserve to be rewarded with 4 more years. Clinton not giving Obama enthusiastic support doesn't surprise me. She wants to be president and is still licking her wounds. I really believe most democrats will support Obama while a lot of republicans will simply stay home. McCain should have been the republican candidate in 2000. His time is past. It's time for a new leader, someone that will at least help turn this country around and back on course.
Those of you who disagree with me have every right to, however, I think you are totally wrong about Obama not being a weak candidate. If he weren't such a weak candidate, it wouldn't matter what the Clintons did or said about him...and he wouldn't be statistically tied against McCain. Most of the polls are showing that any generic Democrat would be doing better than Obama. He was a complete fool to not pick her as his VP. That lesson will be driven home hard in November.
RG: Don't go getting excited, now. All I said was Obama is a weaker candidate now then he was then. The release of his pastor's tapes is one very noteworthy negative that got hung around Obama's neck since he beat Hillary in Iowa. I venture to say that if those tapes were released before Iowa, the Democrats would have a different nominee today.
I am so sick of hearing the never ending whining about Hillary. I think if the woman dropped dead on the stage last night it wouldn't have been enough for these people. If she is so out of date, conservative and inconsequential then why worry what she says about him? If he is the second coming like Polman and the rest of the leg humpers think, why does Obama even need her? The woman is strong and fought hard. Give her a break. When Obama loses, she is to blame. When he wins he did it inspite of her. I am actually working with the Obama PA people. If his organization here is representative of the rest of his people, he is in REAL trouble. His people need to stop focusing on Hillary and focus on the real battles. And just so you know, I want Obama to win. Well actually...I want McCain to lose. ABM - anyone but McCain. (even if it happens to be a glass-jawed, out of touch, elitist, demagogue in an empty suit.)
This is a woman who repeatedly stood by her philadering husband over and over again. She was just fine staying in a marriage with a man that would lie to her face consistently and without waiver. Why ANYONE takes a word of advice or why any American should hold her opinion in any regard about the character of others is totally beyond me. To say she is a horrible judge of human character is perhaps one of the biggest understatements of the last 20 years.
I thought her speech was fine (i voted for her in the primary)...Her husband will nail home the message tonight (wish he could run again)...its all over for the GOP...They're reign of terror is nearly done. I do expect to see an awful lot of negative campaigning, mostly from the GOP...I cant wait till it's all over though. November cant come fast enough.
Everybody here is missing the point. This speech was aimed at HRC’s most ardent supporters. Hillary could have praised Obama effusively for the entire speech. She could have spoken gushingly about his leadership skills and his personal charm. It wouldn’t have mattered. The “Sisterhood of the Traveling Pantsuit” is never going to love Obama. No matter what he says or does now, he will always be the man who came out of nowhere to beat Clinton. The man who took what was “rightfully hers.” The good news for Obama, and the Democrats, is that Clinton’s supporters don’t have to love Obama. A vote is a vote regardless of the passion behind it (Isn’t this the theme of McCain’s candidacy). What Clinton did last night was clearly articulate that while she is no longer in the race; her followers still have an enormous amount at stake in this election. She made the most effective case for Obama by tying her supporter’s interests to his campaign. She did so while efficiently attacking McCain as a suitable alternative. It does not matter that her advocacy wasn’t expressed on a personal basis. She would have been wasting her breath if she tried.
Seasoned advisors? Like who? Madeline Albright? Give me a break. Obama has voted for Bush's spending....what was the Iraq war funding? What spending cuts has the Democrat Congress put forth? Congress writes the budget, so what have the Democrats in Congress done over their time in control to cut spending? Obama will raise taxes on the wealthy (and everyone else eventually), and he has no spending cuts in any of his proposals. In fact, his proposals are for increased spending, like Universal Health Care, increased education funding, increased social programs, etc. His tax increase on the top 1% of wage earners will not be enough for all of his programs, so he will have to tax more people. And nowhere in any of his proposals does he address anything close to reducing the deficit. He does support "pay as you go" spending, so for each spending proposal, expect a tax to go up.
I can't possibly imagine that Biden will get anything near the reception that Hillary got. Nor the coverage. That Obama didn't pick Hillary shows that he was scared he couldn't keep his VP and her husband in check. Maybe she and Bill would have been loose cannons, but you have to win first and worry about controlling your team second. His first big decision was done from a position of fear, rather than from a position of confidence that he could control his own staff and agenda. He failed his first big test of presidential political courage. Many in the voting public see that, and the current polls demonstrate that as there not only has been no Biden bounce but Obama's numbers have slipped since Biden was picked. Obama is behind where Kerry and Gore were at this time in their respective campaigns. And his rock star speech in the Greek temple set design on Thursday is going to seem strange to an inquisitive electorate. It has always been the case that the Republicans make up ground in the Fall as more and more people (as opposed to activists and political junkies) really start tuning in. This seems to portend bad news for Obama. And the Republican attacks haven't even really started. The next two months are going to be all Ayers, all Wright, all tax increases, all Biden and Hillary quotes about Obama's unfitness to be president. Not only could McCain win, but he may win handily. We shall see.
Hillary, you were wonderful! As your supporters, we know its time to do the right thing and vote as DEMOCRATS by voting for Obama. Only an immature, ignorant ingrate would vote for McSame out of spite for Obama, and that's not the American way. Obama/Biden '08
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Hillary wasn't picked as VP because she's OLD SCHOOL. This government needs an enema, and Barack is gonna give it one. Did you all forget the corrupt Clintons' and Whitewhater? Wow, you should all be so proud of yourselves!
I liked Hillary's speech. Someone is always going to question her sincerity, her perceived lack of enthusiasm for the Obama/Biden ticket, etc. Sure, she wanted to be the nominee, & I am sure that she is very disappointed that she will not be the nominee. The bottom line is, & she stated it, is that we need a Democrat, specifically Barack Obama, in the White House in January. Divisiveness in the Democratic Party is not helpful. It will help John McCain & hurt Barack Obama.
I voted for Hillary in the primary, but I am a pragmatist. Barack Obama represents my values much more closely than John McCain, & I will definitely vote for Obama in November. Obama may not have tons of experience, but he strikes me as a good & intelligent man who has the wisdom to carefully consider the challenges that present themselves, to carefully choose advisors who are experienced, & most importantly, to listen to those advisors.
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Hillary knows Obama's toast & she's gearing up for 2012.Not too hard to figure that she 's not going to go overboard for this loser.
POLMAN - Why the cheap shot at Jerry Garcia?
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Usual Hillary Speech " me,me,me, Bill, Me,me,me, Chelsea, me,me,me, Democrat, me,me,me, Obama- Biden, me, me,me, No McCain, me,me,me, Yeah Me!
No other candidates running could ever deliver such a moving speech. It was truly a memorable moment for me to watch her. It's a shame another great woman past over the top job! Obama has made a huge mistake - he has let his personal feelings get away by not picking the best person for the job.
He'll find out later on- this Biden person - seems like a big zero next to Hillary Clinton.
Hillary’s speech has left me as pessimistic about Obama’s chances as I’ve been since he became presumptive. Mr. Polman nailed it (perhaps because that was my reaction too after listening to Hillary ). But I will add that the Clinton’s are much sicker people than I had realized. Well, Obama has got the message: It’s all up to him; he won’t get much help from Billary and the weirdest among her supporters. So, we’ll see if he’s got it or not. Go, Obama!
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Did you all notice Bill mouthing "I love you" when the camera was on him (most of the time) as the woman he cheated on spoke. The guy is one sick sucker.
...and you Cons wonder why Obama didn't pick Hillary (like you really care)? No Drama Obama probably can't deal with their nonsense on a personal level --- & that's a bad thing? Heck, I liked them & I can't deal with it anymore. On the other hand, Hillary did what she needed to do in a professional manner & did it in a way her supporters needed it said for them to hear it. I think if she was too effusive with her personal praise of Obama, she would have lost them. Secondly, if Hillary started the primaries as the candidate she is now, she'd be the nominee. She started off as the "presumptive nominee" & blew it by poor tactics & mismanging her campaign. The info that's come out regarding some Clinton campaign eMails show a leader who wouldn't make decisions until the last minute & then raise all kinds of holy heck when she did. Good luck to the State of NY if she ever becomes Governor, if that's accurate.
Common sense suggests that Clinton should be the VP-- 18 million voters see her as the first pick. Common sense suggests BO made a mistake. Obama's pride kept him from selecting her. For such a smart guy, it is incredible that he chooses to ignore common sense.
Typical of some intellectuals, for all their brains, they cannot see the forest for the trees.
He is a weak,inexperienced, ambitious community organizer (read: rabble-rouser) from Chicago who has no political record of changing anything. A totally empty suit is Barak Obama.
I love it! she was strong and to the point. She spoke of Harriet Tubman, that did it for me.
Look, let's be honest. It was a great speech, it adopted exactly the right tone, it got the job done. It did not need to be a lovefest; the Republicans would only have seized on that as more contradictions of statements she made in the primary. I voted for her but am moving forward to support Obama, who is smart and has and will surround himself with other smart and capable people, like Joe Biden. And every Democrat needs to stop the whining and pull that lever so we don't get 4 more LOOOOOONG years of sending every cent we make to the Saudis, Chinese, Exxon, and Halliburton. How about we spend some money on something other than guns and oil--like, for instance, books and medicine.
Djoko Pritza: Notice when Hillary described all the things she was, she never mentioned "loving wife"? Bill's still in the doo doo! LOL!
Jwad How can Hillary run in 4 years if Obama win??? Please if you do not know how our elections work don't comment on them
I agree that the Harriet Tubman reference was inspired.
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Republican crossovers are a key factor in record-level voter registrations for the Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary, officials say.
Democratic party officials touted a record-level four million registered Democratic voters in anticipation of the upcoming primary on April 22. The Philadelphia suburbs and the state's central region, including counties where Republicans still outnumber Democrats, had some of the highest proportions of party-switchers.
Cry me a river Karl Rove !
This election was the democrats to win, by nominating Barrack Obama, they will nominate the only one that has a very good chance to lose.
Here is what I do not understand, and perhaps some of you Barry supporters can enlighten me. You complain about the mess that Bush has gotten us in, and you mention the runaway spending and high deficit. Yet, you support a candidate who has not talked about reducing spending, but expanding it. You support a candidate who has not once, to my recollection, mentioned reducing the deficit. You support a candidate who wants the "pay/go" method for spending on new programs, yet talk about how he will not raise taxes except on the top 1% of wage earners. So, how is anything he proposes going to get this country out of the "mess Bush got us into"?
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Wow! All you people missed a great baseball game last night. I enjoyed watching our Phillies stick it to those New Yorkers.
cusoraider as much as I would like to point out what a genius you are, I just can't unless it sounds as insincere as Clinton's speech last night. Why do you think Ted Kennedy and Jimmy Carter hate each other? Learn your history. Ted tried to take the nomination from a sitting president. A sitting president still has to be nominated. You are the one who doesn't know how our elections work. Please stop commenting.
tom in wilmington, first he is going to take the tax cuts back for the super rich, then hes going to take the corporate welfare from the oil companies then we will stop spending 10 billion in Iraq every month. Or we could just vgote McCain and let our Chinesse overlords continue to own more and more of our country. The whole tax BS from republicans is so old, I pay taxes on everything I pay for, do you think what you pay for at the store in Delaware is tax free? The tax is built into the price of everything, taxation without representation is the Republican way!
dhallenbeck... The reason for Obama being in a dead heat with McCain has a whole different reasoning as far as I'm concerned. Obama is not weak, he is black.. Bottom line. Most of the middle class white working americans won't support Obama because he is black. the truth of the matter is if he was white the race would already be over. Everyone knows that McCain would be bad for the country and for the world, but he is getting chance after chance by the media and from a select group of people because they want a reason to vote for him. All you hear is Obama doesnt connect with me... yeah I wonder why. I'm not saying all white americans are this way because I work with some who voted for Obama, but I also work with some who said they just couldnt bring themselves to vote for a black president. Not because they are racist, but because of how they were raised to think.
Jwad, how can Hillary run in 4 years if Obama wins?
It'll be Obama vs a Republican.
Tom, you’re wrong. Obama has talked about debt-reduction, and it’s a main part of his policy positions. You’re also wrong about your other points. That info is readily available, so I’m assuming you’re playing the role of the willfully ignorant. The better question is why you would support McCain, since he would continue the Bush policies that have this country deep in debt? If you truly cared about our economic future you’d not support someone who voted for Bush policies over 90 percent of the time, including the incredibly costly Iraq war, corporate welfare, and a tax policy based on the childish Laffer curve.
Personally I think she gave the best speech possible for a runner up. I think it is up to Bill, Biden, and himself to speak on his leadership skills. If I was Obama i would not have picked Hillary either but I would have gave her the due diligence of interviewing her for the job, but I seriously doubt she would want to be the VP that would be like I ran for a backup position. I'm for Obama because if all that so called experience that's in Washington should have our country in a better position!!!!!!!!!! Time for a Change!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You were right on - as you frequently are. Hillary's speech was "generic". It could have been given by any Democrat. It seemed intended to solidify and enhance Hillary's personal political position and certainly did not appear to be designed in any way to promote Obama as a candidate. Many of the pundits, including you, have pointed out the need for better and broader public awareness of who the "real" Obama is. Hillary had an opportunity to make a positive contribution (even a small one) to meet this need and failed to do so.
I fear that the McCain cause, not Obama's, will be the prime beneficiary of her speech
In order to appease the halfwits among us, Hillary should go to a bar and do shots with Obama. Maybe that will reassure them that they're best buddies.
I think when Jerry Garcia was dead for a full day, he had more functioning brain cells than Polman when he wrote this article. Lame attempt at humor. The Fat Man rocked!
They don't have to personally like each other. Let's not make this into an episode of Saved By The Bell. She threw her support behind Obama, the Democratic nominee, and urged her supporters to do the same. What more do you want? Does she have to say that she and Obama are friends? Who cares!
Oh God, a Grateful Dead reference. The baby-boomer sell outs need to go to Florida and sleep.
Tom, maybe you should have sent money to Ron Paul instead of Obama.
Nice to see that the Hillary dupes...er, supporters still have their rose-colored glasses on. What else explains that they are the ONLY ones who recall last night's speech the way they do?
Hey, tdoc, Polman was a big fan of the Dead and Garcia. Relax, he ain't dissing the man.
Hillary released her delegates today. I understand that the personal grudge match storyline makes for juicy columns, and gives Republicans grist for a divide-and-conquer strategy, but there's nothing to this anymore. Hillary and Obama don't like each other personally. Big deal. Hillary doesn't like Obama because he beat her, plain and simple. And Obama doesn't like her campaign tactics. But policy-wise, they're very close, and that's what matters. Grow up.
So let me get this right, the same Barack Obama that voted for the Bush energy plan, which contained $15 Billion in tax breaks for the oil companies, is now pledging to end tax breaks for the oil companies...is that right?
Correct Tom. If he comes out into that Greek temple on Thursday in a toga though that will win my vote.
tom: So you believe that John McCain will manage the deficit more efficiently than Obama? Is that due to his allowing his own campaign coffers to hit rock bottom before acting, or the fact that, being a Hawk, military options (the most expensive options) are ALWAYS on the table? Honestly, I get the sense he can't even manage his own checkbook.
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