Posts Tagged ‘hillary clinton’

Hillary Clinton for Governor

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Where does Hillary go from here?

I don’t see Barry Obama giving her a meaningful post in his administration.

She can stay in the Senate. I expect, barring some oddity of politics, that she can be elected from New York State as long as she chooses to run. But that is not an administrative position.

Hillary wants to run something.

So, I’m going to suggest she consider running for governor of New York.

The current governor lucked out when Elliot “$3,000 whores” Spitzer was forced to abdicate, er… resign. Patterson has blemishes in his past and is not a statewide personality.

He is a product of the Adam Clayton Powell / Harlem machine. His purpose on the original ticket was to deliver the black votes that the Powell machine claims to be able to produce.

You don’t need Harlem to be governor.

Hillary Clinton would be an almost unbeatable candidate for governor. Patterson, umm…. not so much.

Hillary’s Options and Denver

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

This is the year America elects a female President. Well, if not this year, then when?

That is the problem that Hillary and her supporters have. In a year that was made to elect her, a black man is running against her and to her left.

Hillary has little to lose by taking this campaign to the convention. She retains her seat in the Senate and can probably be re-elected repeatedly from New York. If she stands firm until the convention, she places a great deal on the shoulders of the men and women in the committees who will be deciding on seating delegates.

There are always problems, and this year is no exception. Two large states have delegates that may not be seated, because those states chose to hold their primary at a different time than the Democratic National Committee wanted.

The decisions on seating delegates will be a way to tell which way that the wind is blowing. If Hillary succeeds in having her delegates seated from Florida and Michigan, the city of Denver will be alive with the sounds of coats turning.

The superdelegates will have to face two equally unpleasant choices, voting against the strongest woman candidate in history or voting against the strongest black candidate in history. I predict ulcers and small strokes.

Could either Obama or Hillary swallow their pride enough to take the VP slot on a unified ticket? If Hillary does, it almost certainly rules out any chance of her running in 2016, due to her age. Hey, I said almost.

Obama, on the other hand, would still be young enough to run in eight years, should he settle for VP. But, why should he? Vice-president is far less than it’s cracked up to be, and that’s not much.

The good thing about a serious convention fight is that the far left that has pushed Obama forward is weak at the convention. The elected delegates and the super delegates are, for the most part, party functionaries and loyalistas. The netroots will have less influence in the decision making, thus, oddly enough, making the final ticket much stronger.

The delegates are the people who go home and get out the vote. The netroots can brag all they like, but the last several elections demonstrate that young people do not turn out en masse to vote for the far left. Nationally, mind you, not in local or state elections. Nation-wide, young people vote in no greater numbers than they have for many years despite the puffery of the left on the Internet.

The best situation for Republicans, as I see it, is that Obama or Hillary become the presumptive nominee well before the convention. We need a fixed target in order to inspire our people and in order to begin to affect the undecided voters. We do not need a unified Democratic Party marching arm in arm out of the convention center in Denver.

Hillary All the Way to Denver

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

I was going to write a piece about Hillary, and why she has no reason not to take her campaign all the way to the convention. James S. Robbins at The Corner beat me to it.

It will only end if Hillary Clinton loses the will to keep fighting. It all comes down to her inner strength, her belief in herself and her destiny. Right now the only person who can prevent Hillary from taking this all the way is Hillary.