THE POLITICAL A TEAM FALTERS
By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
Published
on FoxNews.com on March 22,
2007.
They were supposed to be the A Team in American
politics. The Clinton Machine that inspired fear and admiration throughout the
political world.
They had guided Hillary through two successful
Senate races in a state where she had never lived and helped her recover from
scandals that nearly crippled her -- the pardons, the White House gifts, the
Peter Paul fundraiser.
They seemed invincible.
But ever since the presidential campaign started,
the Clinton operation has looked amateurish, flat-footed, defensive, and
tactically clumsy.
They don't seem to be at all ready for the big
time.
Obama has repeatedly outmaneuvered Hillary's
campaign, and he's gaining on her every minute. This week's Rasmussen Poll has
narrowed the race between them to a five-point lead by Hillary. It's obvious
that Obama is getting under the Clintons' skin, and they're responding in the
only way they know: attack!
But, it's not working.
This week they blundered once more when campaign
strategist Mark Penn criticized Obama on the Iraq war issue at a Harvard
seminar. In a transparently choreographed tirade, Penn echoed the same false
charges about Obama that Bill Clinton had dropped at a private fundraiser days
earlier. Taking a partial quote, Penn -- and Bill Clinton -- claimed that Obama
had said that he was "unsure" of how he would have voted on the Iraq War
Authorization Bill, if he had been in the Senate in 2002.
Penn and Clinton were wrong -- and, of course, they
knew that they were wrong, but they wanted to get some doubt about Obama out
there to deflect criticism against Hillary. But mischaracterizing Obama's
positions was a dumb move.
Obama has been consistently against the war and
there is a record to prove it. Obama instantly shot back with a video montage of
all of his anti-Iraq war statements since 2002. And major news organizations,
including The New York Times and ABC News carefully detailed Obama's statements,
and discredited Penn and the Clintons.
This comes on the heels of their previous idiotic
attack on Obama for the unflattering remarks of Hollywood's David
Geffen.
And then there was the phony Southern accent in
Selma.
What are they thinking?
The net effect of their amateur tactics has been a
steady closure of the gap between Hillary and Obama to single digits in most
surveys.
What's wrong with the Clinton team?
Let's remember that they really have not been
tested for a long time. The last tough race the Clintons faced was in the
presidential race in 1996. When Rudy Giuliani dropped out of the 2000 Senate
contest in New York, Hillary's election was virtually assured. She faced even
weaker opposition in her bid for a second term last year. So this Clinton crew
is not the battle-tested group that ran Bill Clinton's presidential campaign
campaigns in 1992 and 1996. It's a bunch of relative newcomers without
experience in a hotly contested national presidential primary.
And they're not used to standing up to Bill and
Hillary when they want to do foolish things. They really don't know how to say
no. Bill's temper appears to have dictated the decision to attack Geffen and
Obama for his criticism of the presidential pardons at the end of the Clinton
term. One can imagine the former president ranting and raving about the attacks
and can see his staff meekly following his instructions to go out and avenge his
honor.
For Hillary's part, her intrinsic stubbornness --
and slavish adherence to the gurus of the Senate Armed Services Committee who
back the war -- probably accounted for her recent ill-tied announcement of
support for maintaining a large troop commitment in Iraq, even after she assumes
she becomes president. It is seriously doubtful that the men and women around
Hillary know how to stand up for what is sound political judgment in the face of
her obstinacy.
The operatives that surround the Clintons these
days are also used to general elections, not to primaries. Bill and Hillary have
not faced a Democratic Primary of any consequence since 1992. (Clinton faced no
primary in 1996 and Hillary had none in 2000. Her primary opposition in 2006 was
minor and totally without funding). But in the fifteen years since a Clinton
faced a real primary contest, the Democratic Party has changed.
Mark Penn, the chief strategist of the Hillary
campaign, is a man of the middle, schooled in moving candidates to the center to
win general elections. The left in general -- and Democratic primaries in
particular -- are foreign territory to him. He's not used to their strange
dynamics. And the anti-war left, with its ferocity, arrogance, and insistence on
making candidates toe the line, is particularly foreign to his political
experience.
Penn is also highly skilled at thematic politics.
He brought to the 1996 Clinton campaign such insights as the importance of
speaking optimistically about the economy and of focusing on values issues. But
Mark Penn is "no issue" person. He doesn't understand how to use substantive
differences and new proposals to win elections. If he worked on a newspaper,
he'd be the features editor, leaving the hard news to others. As a result,
Hillary has no issues beyond being the first woman to run for president. And
biography, no matter how compelling, is no substitute for issues.
For her part, Hillary is a very rigid candidate.
She has set ideas of what she should be doing and doesn't take kindly to
criticism. She is inclined to bite off the head of anyone who crosses her or
gives her advice that is at variance with wants to do. Between her staff's
sycophancy and Hillary's self-conceit, theirs is not the ideal relationship to
have atop a presidential campaign.
Hillary's other man of the moment is Howard
Wolfson, her untelegenic spokesman. He lacks Penn's experience, but makes up for
it in his aggression. An attack dog, he reinforces the worst in Hillary Clinton.
As a politician, Hillary has always confused toughness with effectiveness. She
values warriors who will slay dragons on her behalf but doesn't really grasp the
limitations of slash and burn politics.
Both Hillary and Wolfson came up the hard way --
battling to keep Bill in office through impeachment and scandal, fighting
against the media when her integrity was questioned during the pardon scandal,
and surviving the slings and arrows of New York politics. But now they must
operate in a much more subtle arena.
Barack Obama is not just an opponent. He is a role
model for tens of millions of African-Americans. Whether or not they vote for
him, at some level all Americans -- except for a racist few -- are rooting that it
will be possible for a presidential candidate to cross the color barrier. The
straight ahead, attack at all costs and all times strategy that dominates the
Wolfson/Hillary playbook is counterproductive. But neither candidate nor
spokesman seem to know what else to do.
With a team like this, and a candidate like
Hillary, it is no wonder that Obama is surging while she is stalling.
But where is Bill Clinton? Why has he not brought
his political skills to bear?
Bill Clinton is obviously used to campaigns in
which he is the candidate. His effortless attractiveness and charisma have
always lain at the center of his political strategy. Even in failure, he has
been able to charm voters and show his empathy with their pain. Nobody who has
run a campaign for Bill Clinton has ever had to worry about his candidate's
performance. It was always superb.
Hillary is no Bill Clinton. Her awkward starchiness
and strident monotones contrast with his warmth and effusion. She can't charm.
She can only confront and debate. She lacks all of his many political skills.
Bill Clinton is just not used to winning elections with a mediocre
candidate.
Can Hillary and her politically challenged staff
overcome the obstacles that lay before her? Probably, despite Obama's gains, she
has lost few of her own voters and her base of feminist women is holding pretty
strong amid her campaign's goofs and failures. As her candidacy generates
increasing turnout among single women, she will probably still be able to eke
out a victory -- unless she stays on the same strategic track that she's on
now.
But her own rigidity, arrogance, and refusal to
listen to criticism and her staff's sycophancy and fear of the candidate sure
aren't helping any.
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***Copyright Eileen McGann and Dick Morris
2007***