Can Hillary Clinton Please Go Quietly into the Night?

Clinton, who has grown increasingly public and vocal in recent weeks,
appears ready to drive the bus again. But do we have to be the passengers?

 

by  T.A. Frank <http://www.vanityfair.com/contributor/ta-frank> 

 

June 9, 2017 2:30 pm

With Donald Trump
<http://www.vanityfair.com/people/donald-trump#intcid=dt-hot-link>  busy
spreading havoc around the world—most recently tweeting about James Comey’s
testimony, or feeding into the crisis over Qatar—it’s reasonable to ask who
can be bothered to gripe about Hillary Clinton
<http://www.vanityfair.com/people/hillary-clinton#intcid=dt-hot-link> . But
I can. One makes the time. Or maybe one doesn’t, but in a two-party system
there’s only one alternative to the party of Trump, and the role of Clinton
in that party is therefore important.

Lately, it has been increasing. Hillary has been making high-profile public
appearances
<http://www.npr.org/2017/05/26/530179298/hillary-clinton-to-deliver-commence
ment-speech-at-wellesley-college>  and started talking frankly
<https://www.recode.net/2017/5/31/15722218/hillary-clinton-code-conference-t
ranscript-donald-trump-2016-russia-walt-mossberg-kara-swisher>  about her
distaste for Trump and her dismay over the people and things that cost her
the election. She has even founded
<https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/15/us/politics/hillary-clinton-onward-toget
her.html?_r=1>  a PAC called Onward Together, a 501(c)(4) that will “advance
progressive values.” Whether we like it or not, the Clintons are back in the
game. It’s up to the rest of us to figure out if we approve.

Just about everything we do lends itself to a generous or hostile
interpretation. Our friends think we feed the poor because we have genuine
compassion, and our enemies think we do so because we want to look good. The
benign take on motives isn’t always closest to the truth, but it’s the
better bet. (On the occasions that I’ve had an inside view of something in
the glare of the press, those with the darkest take on it have usually been
wrong.) I’ve been tough on
<http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/04/please-god-stop-chelsea-clinton-from
-whatever-she-is-doing> Chelsea Clinton—hard not to be—but Hillary Clinton
has a much higher accomplishment-to-self-regard ratio. So why not start
generously?

Let’s posit that Hillary Clinton loves America and wants the best for it,
whatever the merits of her ideas. That comes out even in small ways. When
Sid Blumenthal sent Hillary a strategy e-mail
<http://graphics.wsj.com/hillary-clinton-email-documents/pdfs/C05792460.pdf>
headed “Because I like to waste my time,” she responded, “And because you
care about our country.” You may see sanctimony there, but I for one see
something heartfelt. When comedian Zach Galifianakis asked her
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrkPe-9rM1Q>  if she would flee to “one of
the arctics” if Trump won, she responded, “I would stay in the United
States. I would try to prevent him from destroying the United States.” As no
one doubted she would. The Clintons may be slippery, but they don’t flee.
They’re far likelier to go for a Yeltsin-on-the-tank moment if it’s offered.
(Of course, in keeping with the rule of generous and hostile
interpretations, some dismiss Boris Yeltsin’s heroism that day as
grandstanding
<https://books.google.com/books?id=oVm9my8F9doC&pg=PA158&lpg=PA158&dq=yeltsi
n+on+the+tank+grandstanding&source=bl&ots=-5BYw_SF4J&sig=SpBB37jXwSSadBDwGZ8
HkpXAJxA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj60rCeuazUAhVpj1QKHTjyDDAQ6AEIWzAL#v=onepage&
q=yeltsin%20on%20the%20tank%20grandstanding&f=false> .)

Like her husband, Hillary also has a resilience that is superhuman. Most of
us would find it impossible to live with special prosecutors and countless
enemies plotting our downfall, but Bill and Hillary just keep going. Al Gore
<http://www.vanityfair.com/people/al-gore#intcid=dt-hot-link>  never seemed
to recover from losing in 2000, and he went dark for a long time. But
Hillary Clinton is already back in the arena and swinging fists.

In an ideal world, former candidates and presidents would maintain a
dignified silence about their rivals or successors, as most past ones have
done, but Donald Trump has changed cultural expectations. He observes few
niceties, and he lacks restraint or dignity. Expectations of “worthy”
behavior from Clinton under the circumstances amount to expectations of
unilateral disarmament. What’s more, Clinton talks to countless people who
are looking to her for resolve and encouragement and leadership. How can she
let them down and go silent?

Or so one could argue.

But we can’t stay friendly to Hillary forever. There’s a fine line—or maybe
not even so fine a line—between boosting morale and monopolizing the
spotlight. One reason Bill Clinton
<http://www.vanityfair.com/people/bill-clinton#intcid=dt-hot-link>  was able
to make a name for himself decades ago was that previous candidates had the
grace to get out of the way. Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale and Michael
Dukakis weren’t trying to place themselves at center stage during the
campaign of 1992. The Clintons, by contrast, kept sticking around. When it
comes to power, and a few other things, they can’t control their urges. As a
friend of mine recently wrote to me in an e-mail, “They both had to be
president?”

Even the name of Clinton’s PAC has a presumptuous ring to it. When someone
has driven a bus off the road and hurled passengers out of their seats, it’s
a bad time for the driver to stagger back to the wheel and call out “Onward
together!” Onward, fine. Together, maybe not.

All of this would be easier to take if Hillary were on a crusade for a
distinctive cause, in the manner of Bernie Sanders
<http://www.vanityfair.com/people/bernie-sanders#intcid=dt-hot-link>  or Pat
Buchanan or Jesse Jackson or Ross Perot. But when she offers her take on the
world, she speaks in clichés and vague generalities like “progress” versus
“turning back the clock.” Such teleological smugness (to which Barack Obama
was likewise prone) doesn’t just attract the ire of conservatives; liberals
can get miffed, too. Is “progress” on the side of expanding NATO or the
opposite? Is it on the side of greater National Security Agency surveillance
or of less? Is it in favor of immigration amnesty or high-tech border
security? We all want to move forward, but maybe we’re not all facing
Hillary’s way.

Even without a clear cause to illuminate them, Hillary’s beliefs could have
been sharpened a lot just by explaining what, in hindsight, she felt Bill
got right or wrong in his presidency. But she never offered up such a
critique, nor, oddly, did anyone really press her to do so. Throwing open
our markets to China as much as we did—that looked wiser back then. So did
deregulating the financial industry. So did pushing for three-strikes laws.
So did the bailout of Mexico. So did focusing on deficit reduction. So did
high levels of immigration. So did humanitarian interventions in the former
Yugoslavia. So did welfare reform. Bill’s calls, like all big calls, were
controversial, but they were far more justifiable in light of the data we
had at the time. But what about with the data we have now?

Negotiating a different landscape requires the Democratic Party to return to
some basic questions. Times have changed. America is no longer a lone
hyperpower triumphing amid squabbles about same-sex marriage. We’re an
overstretched empire fighting about fundamental questions of economy and
national identity. The Clintons see that, sort of, but they’re stuck in
time. Worse, their network, which is vast and powerful and heavily dependent
on them, is stuck in time, too. Precisely when those on the left ought to be
negotiating today’s fault lines and creating new coalitions, Democrats are
getting dragged back into last year’s fights and letting personal loyalties
drown out thoughts about core principles. The indefatigability of the
Clintons isn’t just a nuisance but a hindrance.

We can’t expect them to accept this, of course. Psychologist Martin
Seligman, author of Learned Optimism, has famously observed that optimists
tend to do better in life but exhibit more delusion. They tend to attribute
failure to changing external factors rather than enduring internal
qualities, blaming outside causes, not themselves. Hillary—who has been
pinning her defeat on Comey and Vladimir Putin and the Democratic National
Committee and Wikileaks and
<http://www.vanityfair.com/2017/05/31/clinton-fake-news/> “a thousand
Russian agents” and high expectations and the press and sexism and voter
suppression and, for all I know, static cling—is a major optimist. That’s
great for persistence and mental well-being. She’s ready to keep driving the
bus. But it’s not so great for knowing when to quit. That’s where the
passengers come in.

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

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