Why it went so wrong for Hillary Clinton
May 22, 2008
By Glenn Thrush
A year and a half ago, a senior Clinton ally, speaking privately to reporters, made the following prediction: "She's the favorite, but Obama's so good. Hillary only needs to make one or two mistakes and he'll be the the nominee."
To attribute the state of the race to Clinton's mistakes alone is to discount the quality of Obama's campaign and the depth of sentiment for change that exists in the Democratic party.
But Clinton insiders and analysts say the former first lady's missteps have contributed mightily to Obama's nearly insurmountable lead in overall delegates.
Here are 10 reasons the once-prohibitive frontrunner is finding herself on the verge of elimination:
1. MULTIPLE POLITICAL PERSONALITY DISORDER (MPPD). While Obama has stuck with an elegant hope-and-change message from start to finish, Clinton skittered from theme to theme before settling on a successful populist-with-a-punch formula.
One of Clinton's first hires was top strategist Mark Penn — a cautious pollster known for slicing and dicing the electorate into "soccer moms" and other demographic niches. Penn's approach, campaign insiders say, was a fragmented, a la carte campaign whose message varied widely from day to day, leaving voters with a blurry image of an already complicated candidate.
"I like Mark but to have the same guy collect the data and interpret it was a big mistake," a longtime friend of both Clintons told Newsday. "Penn was a good match with Bill in the White House because Bill could warm things up and humanize Penn's strategy. Hillary doesn't have those same skills. It was a bad fit."
Penn's insistence that Clinton emphasize her toughness caused an internal tug-of-war over her image, with communications chief Howard Wolfson urging Clinton to stress her softer side.
2. THE INEVITABILITY FALLACY Clinton and her inner circle, including then-campaign manager Patti Solis Doyle, simply believed there was virtually no way she could lose.
One longtime Clinton confidant said top staffers began to realize Obama was a "serious threat" by the early fall of 2007 but that "the candidate herself didn't really believe she could be beaten" until her third-place finish in Iowa.
"The original sin for Hillary was the sin of pride," said Ross Baker, a politics professor at Rutgers University.
3. NO GROUND GAME Overconfidence led to under-planning. After spending an estimated $25 million in Iowa, the Clinton campaign focused on big prizes on Super Tuesday — New York, California, New Jersey and Massachusetts.
But those impressive wins masked a cash shortage and a catastrophic failure to plan for caucuses and primaries in smaller states. Even a modest effort in February would have resulted in significant delegate pickups and stopped Obama from racking up 11 straight wins — which netted him 123 delegates, a healthy percentage of his current lead.
4. GOING OFFLINE When Clinton was assembling her campaign team in late 2006, strategist Joe Trippi sat down with Clinton advisers for a job interview. Trippi, who would later run John Edwards' campaign, suggested that Clinton center her campaign on a Web-based effort to collect $100 each from 1 million women around the country. Clinton's staff rejected the plan, opting to mix some online solicitations with a more traditional pitch to big donors.
Obama adopted his own version of the Trippi plan and changed the rules of the fundraising game. He's out-earned Clinton by $233.8 million to $172.8 million through April.
5. WHY WOULDN'T SHE BAN LOBBYIST DONATIONS? For more than a year, John Edwards and Barack Obama battered Clinton for not joining them in eschewing donations from federally registered lobbyists — even though such donors made up a relatively small percentage of her take.
People close to Clinton say she thought the idea was silly and cynical. Yet by refusing to symbolically reject the Washington establishment, Clinton allowed her foes to paint her as a creature of the beltway and missed a chance to side with the forces of change.
6. STICKING WITH SPITZER Clinton .reluctantly backed former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer's disastrous proposal for illegal immigrants driver's licenses.
Her inability to clearly articulate her opinion on the plan led to a game-changing meltdown at an Oct. 30, 2007, debate in Philadelphia, triggering her slide in the polls.
7. SINBAD, SNIPERS AND HILLARY'S TRUSTWORTHINESS No single event more compromised Clinton's legitimacy than her off-handed remark that she had braved sniper fire during a goodwill trip to Bosnia in the mid-1990s as first lady.
Clinton stuck with her story even when reporters pointed out 1) that comedian Sinbad and daughter Chelsea were on the trip and 2) videotape existed of her landing on the runway, greeting children and .walking cheerfully to her motorcade.
8. SENDING BILL TO SOUTH CAROLINA The former president's disastrous week in the Palmetto State began with him angrily defending his quip that Obama's anti-war record was a "fairy tale" — and ending with his suggestion that Obama's campaign would suffer the same fate as Jesse Jackson's quixotic efforts in the 1980s.
The result was a wholesale defection of black voters to Obama and the ravaging of the former president's reputation with a vital party constituency.
It's possible that Clinton's failure to retain even a fraction of African-American support could provide Obama with the final edge in the nationwide popular vote. Nearly 20 percent of South Carolina blacks voted for the former first lady on Jan. 26 — but fewer than 10 percent backed her in North Carolina three months later.
9. SETTING UP A "WAR ROOM" INSTEAD OF MAKING PEACE WITH THE PRESS Hillary Clinton's biggest contribution to national political tactics was her invention of the "War Room" — a rapid response team to deal with negative press stories during her husband's 1992 presidential campaign. But that approach, many in her camp now recognize, did little to warm her relationship with a skeptical, sometimes hostile press.
The campaign's early habit of denying reporters access to the candidate — and haranguing scribes who asked tough questions — added to an already tense atmosphere.
10. IT WAS ALL ABOUT IRAQ AFTER ALL Even though the economy has supplanted Iraq as the top issue, Clinton's support of the 2002 resolution authorizing the invasion created a hard-core constituency of anti-Clinton Democrats.
Without Clinton's longtime support of the war, Obama would have had a tougher time galvanizing his core supporters: online donors, students and anti-war groups like MoveOn.org, experts say.
"I think it's pretty clear his opposition to the war enabled him to stand apart from her," Baker of Rutgers said. "It was a major rationale for his candidacy in the first place."
Source: Newsday
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3 Responses to “Why it went so wrong for Hillary Clinton”
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Although I am a 65 year old Latino female, I can tell you when the tide really turned for me and that was when the clintons made certain that the media would publish the MUSLIM LIE about Obama. Instead of HRC stating to the press that this was SIMPLY UNTRUE, she stated “as far as I know”! Once I hear that, I KNEW IN MY HEART, this was going to be HRCs WAR and by god, she was going to WIN THIS WAR no matter what anyone thought or did! When she reached the depths of SLIME and MUD and started slinging it with both fists, I knew it was NOT going to END until she got her way! But Obama has the math (unlike her math) and THE OFFICIALS IN UNISON MUST TELL the clintons that this has gone on long enough, she is NOT our nominee and GO HOME NOW! She has POISONED our party and my husband and I continually ask, “HOW IN GOD’S NAME CAN SHE TELL HER SUPPORTERS THAT IT IS “OVER” AND WE MUST ALL SUPPORT OBAMA!!!! What is that going to look and sound like? We just cannoot envision this occurring! BUT IT MUST AND IT MUST BE NOW! We have ALL SUFFERED, WILL CONTINUE TO SUFFER, AND THIS IS ENOUGH! HRC makes me so ASHAMED to be FEMALE. She has set women back at least 40 years and as a result our granddaughters will NOT be able to run for POTUS!
By the time our grandmother’s have singly raised our nations son’s and daughters like in years gone by do you think that being a woman will have changed. The only difference is women are now as well educated and outspoken as men. Are you pleased with being the woman you are? How could you be so outspoken about a man in the white house. I have seen from the very beginning the strength, and intelligent of this woman running for office. Why would a woman give up her suffrage rights when this election is the first election that has tested the suffrage laws. What does an Obama mean for women and blacks of this country. What about the muslims. There is so much missing from the Obama truth that he is not trustworthy.
Compared to Obama, McCain is the better candidate. You need to rethink your strategy. There are sources that better tell what is going on with the HC campaign. I’ve always said I support Hillary. That hasn’t changed. No change here.
There are some really stupid women in this country, this women is an example, you are a racist against Obama, get used to a black man being elected instead of a woman who uses the soul of Bobbi Kennedy to act like a jerk. Women who support this idiot should leave the US and go fight in Iraq.