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Reproductive Justice and Gender

What Should Hillary's Role Be After the Convention?

By Marie Cocco, Washington Post Writers Group. Posted August 26, 2008.


It is usually the job of the party nominee to build unity once a vanquished rival has conceded. Unless the loser happens to be a woman.
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WASHINGTON -- If there is a political job more fraught with peril than running to become the next commander in chief, surely it is being cast as cheerleader in chief.

Hillary Clinton will be damned if she looks too methodically perfect, too much the purveyor of practiced routine and not enough the cheery personification of enthusiasm. She'll also be damned if she's too exuberant, too obviously raising her voice in unbridled exhortation for the team. She will either be deemed too cool or all-too-cagily warm.

Clinton can't win Tuesday evening. But then, she knows that.

She is set to address the Democratic National Convention in Denver to give the valedictory address of her 2008 campaign -- a race in which she went further than any woman in American history toward the elusive goal of electing a woman to the White House. But this is a speech that is also meant to soothe her bruised supporters and get them to support Barack Obama, a man who -- for not a few of them -- has brazenly overtaken the more-qualified woman to grab the prize and in so doing has writ large the story of their own lives.

Clinton is a woman who knows how to lose -- to lose any shred of privacy, to lose face, to lose any expectation of being treated with a modicum of respect by the talking heads in the media and now, to lose a bid for the Democratic presidential nomination that she expected to win. As if to heap insult upon injury, the Obama campaign let it be known that it did not for a minute seriously consider Clinton as a running mate, notwithstanding the 18 million votes she earned during the primaries and her demonstrated ability to win over white, working-class voters who remain cool to Obama and are necessary for victory in the fall. Those 18 million cracks in the glass ceiling that the Obama forces conceded could gain a reference in the party's platform are, apparently, just words.

In her 2003 memoir "Living History," this is how Clinton described her reaction to her earliest political loss, during her senior year in high school: "I ran for student government president against several boys and lost, which did not surprise me but still hurt, especially because one of my opponents told me I was 'really stupid if I thought a girl could be elected president.' As soon as the election was over, the winner asked me to head the Organizations Committee which, as far as I could tell was expected to do most of the work. I agreed."

The work of the next phase of Clinton's career has been going on doggedly, and often with little notice, since she suspended her campaign on June 7. She's been a campaign emissary for Obama to the Sheet Metal Workers union, to Hispanics and others in New Mexico and Nevada; to older women in South Florida who still haven't quite accepted the loss of what may be for some of them their last chance to see a woman elected president. The June speech Clinton made in departing from the race was, among Democratic activists, "probably the most seen, talked about, buzzed about speech of the campaign," says Mike Lux, a consultant for Democratic interest groups and an Obama supporter. It went over well, even among Obama loyalists. That tends to be how Clinton does things. The public Clinton doesn't usually show hints of the private pain that burns inside.

The same cannot be said of some of her supporters, who can be expected to stage at least a few demonstrations of their fury at the outcome of the race, and at what they perceive as repeated displays of disrespect Obama has shown their hero. It is not lost on them that in selecting Joe Biden to be the vice presidential nominee, Obama has chosen a Washington insider who voted in favor of the Iraq War -- two of the sustained attacks on Clinton that Obama used to devastating effect during the primaries.

The television cameras will linger on angry and tearful Clinton delegates in the convention crowd. The commentators will no doubt take this as a demonstration of disunity -- and not a few will, of course, blame Clinton.

But it is usually the job of the party nominee to build unity once a vanquished rival has conceded and made the right gestures. Unless the loser happens to be a woman. Then it's just like high school, and she must do the work.

(c) 2008, Washington Post Writers Group

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Marie Cocco is a prize-winning syndicated columnist on political and cultural topics for The Washington Post Writers Group. She is a frequent commentator on national TV and radio shows. Her e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com.

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How about 'Senator from New York'?
Posted by: warreno on Aug 26, 2008 1:00 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That is, after all, what her job is supposed to be.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

What should Hillary do after the convention?
Posted by: Mrs. Jefferson on Aug 26, 2008 1:07 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Demand the rules punishing the Florida and Michigan delegates be removed. She would have won since those states would have elected her as the Democratic candidate. Howard Dean and Obama knew that. It was fraud and undemocratic in my opinion. Shame on them all...the committees, the DLC, The DCCC, etc. The leaders of the Democratic (undemocratic) Party in 2008 failed their members. They almost act like we don't matter.

The primary was stolen before the election this time and no one noticed. The media never missed a beat. Shame on them since the are the fourth branch of democracy. Instead they are the "fourth front" against democracy.

Hillary should also fight to remove the back room politics of the Super Delegates (many out of power and not elected by the people to have any extra power) who can bribe to get what they want from the candidates. Their votes count more than the delegates (therefore the people). It is undemocratc also.

Computer voting machines all have to go. Voting is a farce today with manipulation and election head fraud. The punishment is not even thought of today. If we don't punish for voting fraud, we will have more of it and won't be a democracy.

If she can change all of that, democracy might survive. Right now that is questionable.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

One of the problems with prognostication...
Posted by: ohb0b on Aug 27, 2008 10:54 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is sometimes the future doesn't come out the way you predict:

"The television cameras will linger on angry and tearful Clinton delegates in the convention crowd. The commentators will no doubt take this as a demonstration of disunity -- and not a few will, of course, blame Clinton."

Both Hillary and Bill Clinton aquitted themselves admirably. To paraphrase Hillary, we need to remember who we are in it for. Let's take the fight to the Republicans!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]