By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
December 21, 2006 -- "We've never had a mother who
ever ran or was elected president..."
That was Hillary Clinton speaking earlier this
week, when she appeared on the television show The View. Don't think for a
minute that she was just making an interesting historical observation. No,
Hillary doesn't work that way. She never says or does anything that hasn't been
perfectly scripted and endlessly polled beforehand. She had a message, a new
strategy to try out. So look for the new "Mom Strategy" to be the anchor of her
presidential run.
Forget Soccer Moms and Security Moms; now it's
going to be all Moms all the time -- with Hillary as the biggest Mom of
all.
The "Mom Strategy" is key to presenting the latest
iteration of Hillary. She needs to move out of the center space that she
populated in her last reincarnation as a moderate. That's over. Because
democratic primary voters are squarely at odds with her positions on the war in
Iraq, she needs to move on. The "Mom Strategy" gives her a credible way to tack
to the left on the war. She's already begun. Last week, she told an NPR audience
that she would have voted against the war if only she had known then what she
knows now. Woulda, shoulda, coulda.
In furtherance of the new Mom strategy, she has
re-released her best-selling book It Takes A Village. This time, she is pictured
surrounded by adoring, well-groomed and respectful children on the cover. Just
like Mom. This is no coincidence; it's an element of the strategy. The
subliminal message: I'm a Mom and I'm running for president. Moms take care of
people, they're compassionate and don't want wars. The fact that the book isn't
selling well in its re-release -- Amazon ranks it at 5,000 -- doesn't matter. It's
the cover photo that resonates.
Hillary the Hawk may ultimately be the way to win
the centrists who dominate the general electorate. But Hillary, the Mom, another
Mother for Peace, is the way to capture the left that runs the Democratic
primaries. And that's exactly what she's doing.
Gender stereotypes are still alive and well in
America and cut across men and women in all ideologies. Survey research shows
that all voters believe that women are more compassionate, more focused on
children and education, and more pro-peace than men. By tapping into this
helpful stereotype, Hillary can flank her rivals on the left, even though her
record of support for the war and collusion with the right wing on flag burning
speaks loudly to the contrary.
Mom as a metaphor carries all the right messages:
empathy with other mothers (particularly the heavily Democratic single moms), a
commitment to education, and family values.
Now that Illinois Senator Barak Obama has
threatened to bring a newer "first" to presidential politics -- the first black
may trump the first woman -- Hillary answers by labeling herself as the first
mother to seek the presidency.
(Actually, she's not. While Elizabeth Dole -- who
ran in 2000 -- has no children, another woman, who had two children, ran for
president in 1872. Victoria Woodhull, an early suffragette -- and mistress of
Cornelius Vanderbilt -- ran as the candidate of the Equal Rights
Party).
Hillary's new strategy echoes the 1996 Bill Clinton
strategy in pushing a "fatherhood" agenda. Embracing the idea of taking
responsibility, enforcing child support, promoting school uniforms and curfews,
and fighting against teen smoking and sex and violence on TV, President Clinton
promoted the idea of his fatherhood in his bid for re-election. He began his
political career as Arkansas' boy Governor. When he ran for president, he was
everyone's buddy -- eating at McDonalds and jogging in baggy shorts -- but as
president he needed to grow up and project the subtle image of America's father.
In carefully choreographed photos, he was deliberately surrounded by adoring
children looking up at him as he pushed his new message.
Now Hillary is seeking to run for president as
America's Mom -- pro-peace, pro-family, pro-children. And it started last week on
The View. Stay tuned.
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***Copyright Eileen McGann and Dick Morris
2006***