Entries tagged as hillary clinton
Tuesday, August 26. 2008
Heh. This is a dream come true for Hillary, no? She gets her big moment tonight with two major national polls pointing squarely at the idea that she should have been named VP and that she, perhaps, alone can deliver the election to the Dems by rallying the PUMAs. Again, heh.
Saturday, August 23. 2008
Put Hillary's name up at the DNC for Vice President. Allah calls it "devilishly clever." I agree. How totally awesome would it be to watch Obama and his crew try to find a way to shut down that sort of grassroots revolt at the convention.
Credit for the idea goes to Bill Kristol: Will the Democratic party, which is committed (to say the least) to gender equity, and which in fact has a 50 percent quota for female delegates, accept Obama’s imposition of a glass ceiling at its convention?
A modest suggestion to my justifiably outraged Democratic friends: Hillary’s name should be placed in nomination not for the presidency (Obama won that more or less fair and square)--but for the vice presidency. It would be an interesting roll call vote. Awesome: I'm starting to think that McCain may just be able to pull this thing out if he keeps doing this sort of stuff...
Friday, May 9. 2008
Ace claims that this news clip is yet more confirmation that Obama's supporters are "cultish maniacs." I find it hard to disagree. If you "remember it for a fact" that two weeks after Bill Clinton was elected, Hillary stopped talking about health care, well... something's wrong with you.
Saturday, March 29. 2008
Steyn on the Democrat circular firing squad: Alas, Senator Sir Edmund Hillary Danger Rodham Clinton couldn’t have foreseen that the Democratic primary season would dwindle down to the Palm Beach recount replayed as a civil war... Best journalist in the world.
Monday, March 24. 2008
Meet the New New Deal, same as the Old New Deal: “We need a president who can restore our confidence,” Mrs. Clinton said. “We need a president who is ready on day one to be commander in chief of our economy.” That's exactly what we need - a leader that we can all look to to restore our pride in our nation, who can save us from the folly of the free market, who can fix from above the flaws of capitalists, who can make the trains run on time...
Friday, March 14. 2008
Krauthammer: The pillars of American liberalism — the Democratic party, the universities, and the mass media — are obsessed with biological markers, most particularly race and gender. They have insisted, moreover, that pedagogy and culture and politics be just as seized with the primacy of these distinctions and with the resulting “privileging” that allegedly haunts every aspect of our social relations.
They have gotten their wish. This primary campaign represents the full flowering of identity politics. It’s not a pretty picture. Geraldine Ferraro says Obama is only where he is because he’s black. Professor Orlando Patterson says the 3 A.M. phone call ad is not about a foreign policy crisis but a subliminal Klan-like appeal to the fear of “black men lurking in the bushes around white society.”
Good grief. The optimist will say that when this is over, we will look back on the Clinton-Obama contest, and its looming ugly endgame, as the low point of identity politics, and the beginning of a turning away. The pessimist will just vote Republican.
Wednesday, March 5. 2008
That quote is straight out of Team Clinton. Hugh Hewitt notes: What's "the community" going to think of this digit-by-digit deconstruction of the charismatic adopted son of the South Side? They were expecting it from the Republicans, but from establishment Democrats?
It is finally their turn, but they have to watch 50 days of attacks on Obama simply because the Clintons want another eight years of power?
The Democrats are now dancing on a cliff unlike any they have been on since 1968 when the demands for new voices and change ran straight into the entrenched interests of unions and special interest groups that have long made common cause with the D.C. Dems.
The Dems shattered 40 years ago. The sequel may be even more destructive of the left. We can only hope...
It looks as though we'll have a few more weeks of blue on blue infighting...
Tuesday, March 4. 2008
Oh lordy: To recap: Ron Paul might be re-elected to Congress because Republican voters are voting for Hillary Clinton to increase the chance of John McCain being elected president. Here, have some aspirin.
Monday, February 11. 2008
Wouldn't it be awesome if we could have a 2000-style election fiasco, except involving only the party that has been insisting that 2000 represented a stolen, illegitimate election in which all the votes weren't counted? Yes. Yes, it would be awesome. How ironic. For over seven years the Democratic Party has fulminated against the Electoral College system that gave George W. Bush the presidency over popular-vote winner Al Gore in 2000. But they have designed a Rube Goldberg nominating process that could easily produce a result much like the Electoral College result in 2000: a winner of the delegate count, and thus the nominee, over the candidate favored by a majority of the party's primary voters.
Imagine that as the convention approaches, Sen. Clinton is leading in the popular vote, but Sen. Obama has the delegate lead. Surely no one familiar with her history would doubt that her take-no-prisoners campaign team would do whatever it took to capture the nomination, including all manner of challenges to Obama delegates and tidal waves of litigation.
Indeed, it has already been reported that Sen. Clinton will demand that the convention seat delegates from Michigan and Florida, two states whose delegates have been disqualified by the party for holding January primaries in defiance of party rules. The candidates agreed not to campaign in those states. But Sen. Clinton opted to keep her name on the Michigan primary ballot, and staged a primary-day victory visit to Florida, winning both of those unsanctioned primaries. Her campaign is arguing that the delegates she won in each state be recognized despite party rules and notwithstanding her commitment not to compete in those primaries. Of course. "Count every vote."
As the convention nears, with Sen. Clinton trailing slightly in the delegate count, the next step might well be a suit in the Florida courts challenging her party's refusal to seat Florida's delegation at the convention. And the Florida courts, as they did twice in 2000, might find some ostensible legal basis for overturning the pre-election rules and order the party to recognize the Clinton Florida delegates. That might tip the balance to Sen. Clinton.
We all know full well what could happen next. The array of battle-tested Democratic lawyers who fought for recounts, changes in ballot counting procedures, and even re-votes in Florida courts and the U.S. Supreme Court in 2000 would separate into two camps. Half of them would be relying on the suddenly-respectable Supreme Court Bush v. Gore decision that overturned the Florida courts' post-hoc election rules changes. The other half would be preaching a new-found respect for "federalism" and demanding that the high court leave the Florida court decisions alone.
Would the U.S. Supreme Court even take the case after having been excoriated for years by liberals for daring to restore order in the Florida vote-counting in 2000? And, would Justices John Paul Stevens, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer, the dissenters in Bush v. Gore, feel as strongly about not intervening if Sen. Obama was fighting against an effort to change a presidential election by changing the rules after the fact? Will there be a brief filed by Floridians who didn't vote in their state's primary because the party had decided, and the candidates had agreed, that the results wouldn't count? Just laying out that scenario makes my mouth water. The fact that the scenario is even realistic should give some of the die-hard hyper-aggrieved dems cause to cut down on the complaining about 2000 though, right? One can hope...
Wednesday, February 6. 2008
This is going to be the worst presidential election ever.
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