By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
October 30, 2006 -- As she prepares for her
presidential race, confident that New Yorkers will re-elect her, Hillary Clinton
is working to position herself properly to win the Democratic nomination by
adjusting, tweaking and, where necessary, reversing her issue positions.
But last week's flip-flop on gay marriage, in which
she said she would approve of state action to legalize it, came with some
reconstructed history that tried to paper over her switch by obfuscating the
historical record.
Her statement dismissed her support of her
husband's Defense of Marriage Act as "a strategic decision to help derail a
constitutional amendment that would have banned gay marriage."
Nonsense. I was in the room at the White House
strategy meeting and was sitting next to the president when he decided to
promote and sign the bill. Nobody was even talking about a constitutional
amendment back then - 1995-96 - and no one in the meeting so much as mentioned
the possibility. His decision to sign the bill closely followed my announcement
of polling data that suggested overwhelming support for the legislation. His
announcement to his staff and advisers that he would sign the bill was, indeed,
a strategic decision, but one that related to his re-election prospects rather
than to any push for a constitutional amendment.
The bill was passed by Congress because of fears
that legislation in Vermont, signed by Gov. Howard Dean, allowing same-sex
"civil unions" might force other states to recognize unions formed under Vermont
law. The worry was that same sex couples could force the other 49 states to
recognize a marital relationship allowed under Vermont law by invoking the U.S.
Constitution's full-faith-and-credit clause, which requires that states
recognize the actions of their fellow states. To forestall this possibility, the
Defense of Marriage Act tried to prohibit courts from making states recognize
gay marriages or civil unions allowed by another state.
Hillary supported her husband's decision to sign
the bill and has often reiterated her position. Her recent announcement that she
would now approve of state action to allow gay marriage is a flip-flop, pure and
simple.
During the discussion at the White House strategy
meeting at which the president told us he would sign the bill, adviser George
Stephanopoulos cautioned President Clinton to "give us several days" to break
the decision to White House staffers who might object. "Tell them we've created
4 million new jobs," the president said sharply, "and that they ought to go out
and take a few of them."
Whenever Hillary tries to slip and slide her way
through her myriad issue contradictions, amendments, qualifications and
reversals, one wonders if she really thinks we believe her or not.
Eileen McGann co-authored this column.