by grannyhelen
Talking Points Memo has an article up describing Obama's latest mailer attacking the Clinton Presidency:
In what may be Obama's most direct and aggressive criticism of Bill Clinton's presidency yet, the Obama campaign dropped a new mailer just before Super Tuesday that blasts "the Clintons" for wreaking massive losses on the Democratic party throughout the 1990s.
"8 years of the Clintons, major losses for Democrats across the nation," reads the mailer, which goes on to list the post-1992 losses suffered by Dems among governors, Senators and members of the House of Representatives. The mailer was forwarded to us by a political operative who told us it was sent to Alaska, though it was probably sent elsewhere, too.
link: http://tpmelectioncentral.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/02/obama_directly_attacks_bills_p.php
So, being the curious blogger I am I was wondering what the DNC's official take on the Clinton years was. Below is their take on Bill Clinton's legacy, taken from their website (my emphasis added):
In 1992, Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton was elected the 42nd President of the United States. President Clinton ran on the promise of a New Covenant for America's forgotten working families. After twelve years of Republican presidents, America faced record budget deficits, high unemployment, and increasing crime. President Clinton's policies put people first and resulted in the longest period of economic expansion in peacetime history. The Deficit Reduction Act of 1993 — passed by both the House and Senate without a single Republican vote — put America on the road to fiscal responsibility and led to the end of perennial budget deficits. Having inherited a $290 billion deficit in 1992, President Clinton's last budget was over $200 billion in surplus. The Clinton/Gore Administration was responsible for reducing unemployment to its lowest level in decades and reducing crime to its lowest levels in a generation. In 1996, President Clinton became the first Democratic president reelected since Roosevelt in 1936. In 1998, Democrats became the first party controlling the White House to gain seats in Congress during the sixth year of a president's term since 1822.
In the 2000 elections, Democrats netted 4 additional Senate seats, one additional House seat, and one additional gubernatorial seat. Vice President Al Gore won the popular vote for President by more than 500,000 votes. In 2001, Democrats regained control of the Senate under Majority Leader Tom Daschle, while Democrats swept to victory in races all across the country, including races for Virginia Governor and Lt. Governor, New Jersey Governor, and 39 out of 42 major mayoral races including Los Angeles and Houston.
link: http://www.democrats.org/a/party/history.html
So, Obama's message on the Clinton years: we didn't get enough done because the Democrats lost seats due to how divisive the Clintons were. The DNC's message on the Clinton years: we got a lot of things done, including ripping the mantle of "fiscal responsibility" away from the GOP, and we didn't need Republican support to get there. Heck, we even ended up with more elected Democrats at the end of it all.
While both versions of history have some validity, the overall problem with Obama's recent mailer is this: it is at odds with how the Democratic National Committee wants to view itself during the Clinton years. That's a bad thing.
Being officially agnostic on Hillary versus Obama, I'm not going to claim the Clinton years weren't divisive. They were (now, whether or not that was actually the fault of the Clintons is a matter that could be up for discussion). And if Barack Obama wants to hit Hillary hard on being a divisive figure, I say have at it. Not only is this a valid line of attack but there's more than enough polling data to actually, factually back that one up.
However, when Obama's messaging on the Clinton years starts to directly conflict with the DNC's, it's time to throw in the penalty flag. The Democratic Party, as an entity, has a vested interest in pointing out that Bill Clinton (and by association the DNC) left the country better than they found it, because they can make that same pledge to voters this year in the general election. "It takes a Democrat to clean up after a Bush" should be the rallying cry come November.
But it can't be if Obama takes away that rhetorical goose that could lay all of those golden soundbite eggs.
If Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama want to destroy each other in the primaries, fair enough. That's not something I'd prefer but with stakes this high I can see how that one can happen. *But when they start to go after the effectiveness of the Democratic Party and its messaging, it's time to reign in that line of attack.*
We all want to elect more Democrats this year. Let's not lose sight of that goal.
2 comments:
I agree that before the end of the year we all want to be on the same page as Democrats. However, there is a problem when we can't talk openly about the damage Hillary and Bill are doing right now to not just the Democratic PARTY, but the people we traditionally represent.
The injection of race by identifying Obama as a black candidate was done willfully and knowingly not by the Republicans or the right-wing "pundits" a la Hannity, Limbaugh, et al., but by Hillary Clinton's proxy, Bill Clinton.
Why are so many US Democratic senators, governors, etc., still on the fence? I believe it's as much out of fear of the Clinton's willingness to commit to slash-and-burn tactics as it is their real desire to keep the party together.
When examining the means versus the ends, I come down on the side of Obama as having the demonstrably, qualitatively more ethical MEANS of putting forth a political rhetoric at this point.
Until we can call Hillary Clinton on this matter I fear we will end up with a version of George W. Bush's tactics which are more palatable, rather than different at their base.
Please read my blog entry on why I voted for Obama in MN's Democratic caucus.
Thank you.
I'm throwing the flag on you, granny. The DNC, after all, is an organ of the Clinton campaign - hardly an impartial arbiter. I'm not buying that dissention in the party is suddenly a problem. Hell, you and I and John Edwards have spent a lot of time dissenting.
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