Posted on 03/15/2008 8:47:48 AM PDT by doug from upland
The Hillary Chronicles: Worse Than You Thought
Two new biographies shed new light on Senator Clinton
By Byron York
Hillary Clinton wasnt looking forward to the publication of two new biographies, Her Way: The Hopes and Ambitions of Hillary Rodham Clinton, by former and present New York Timesmen Jeff Gerth and Don Van Natta Jr., and A Woman in Charge, by Carl Bernstein, the lesser half of the Watergate team of Woodward and Bernstein. Senator Clinton is, of course, famously secretive she probably wouldnt be happy with any biography unless it were written by, say, Sidney Blumenthal and she refused to cooperate with either Gerth/Van Natta or Bernstein. Even before publication, her spokesmen had their putdown lines ready. Is it possible to be quoted yawning? Clinton spokesman Philippe Reines said to the Washington Post.
Now we have the books in hand, and in one sense its hard to see why Clinton and her flacks were so worried. Neither volume contains the kind of bombshell revelation that dominates the news for days at a time, and neither could qualify as a hit job. Bernstein, in particular, seems well disposed toward his subject, whom he describes as an intelligent woman endowed with energy, enthusiasm, humor, tempestuousness, inner strength, [and] spontaneity in private. Even accounting for a few unappealing attributes, such as her talent for retribution and her occasionally salty tongue, Bernstein concludes that Hillary Clinton is filled with passion which, down deep, is perhaps her most enduring and even endearing trait. Not exactly the words of a hit man.
But theres another sense in which Clinton was right to be concerned. Though bereft of headline-making disclosures, each book contains page after page of new details, some of them so far ignored in the press, that reveal Hillary Rodham Clinton to be even more secretive, even more politically tin-eared, and even more combative than previously known.
For example, weve all heard about the famous War Room of the 1992 Clinton presidential campaign. But Gerth and Van Natta reveal that across the alley from the War Room was a more secretive effort, headed by Hillary and known as the Defense Team, that really got into the down-and-dirty stuff. The Defense Teams job was to knock down any allegation, no matter how well founded, about Bill Clintons girlfriends, his avoidance of the draft, Whitewater, Hillary Clintons legal work anything that might hurt the campaign. And to do it by any means necessary, legal or not: Gerth and Van Natta report that on one occasion Mrs. Clinton listened to a secretly recorded audiotape of Clinton adversaries talking on the phone about the next possible bimbo eruption. Bills supporters monitored frequencies used by cell phones, Gerth and Van Natta add, and the tape was made during one of those monitoring sessions. Who knew that Mrs. Clinton was an early advocate of warrantless wiretapping?
Fast forward several years, and Gerth and Van Natta tell us about an organization called CREW, which stands for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. Its a well-known group, a supposedly non-partisan watchdog organization that in fact spends most of its time attacking Republicans (just ask Tom DeLay). The news is that Hillarys fingerprints are all over it. As described by Gerth and Van Natta, a Hillary operative named Jodi Sakol played a key role in setting up CREW. Sakol told the authors that Hillary was proactive and wanted to beat the GOP at their own game by setting up a group modeled on Judicial Watch, which had filed lawsuits against the Clintons in the 1990s. (Hillary seems to have forgotten that Judicial Watch did a turnaround and began attacking the Bush administration after the 2000 election.) Hillary helped line up donors for CREW, volunteered ideas, okayed the involvement of her top pollster, Mark Penn, and looked on as her watchdogs went out after DeLay and other GOP leaders. Somehow she managed to keep her name out of all this.
Gerth and Van Natta also show Clinton employing secret staffers, in the process sneaking around Senate rules that dont suit her fancy. They show her threatening a staffer with Youll never work in Democratic politics again if the staffer failed to cover up tax returns showing Clintons commodities-trading profits. And they show her directing the operation to stonewall the independent-counsel investigations of her husband.
Bernsteins book doesnt dwell on that kind of detail. But with a lot of prime sources in the Clinton camp, Bernstein goes much deeper than Gerth and Van Natta, portraying a Hillary Clinton who was even more closely involved in the running of her husbands administration than we thought. And not only more closely involved she was also even less competent and more politically maladroit than we thought.
In a scene from the frenzied Clinton transition after the 1992 election, Bernstein portrays Mrs. Clinton sitting down with top political adviser Dick Morris, musing over what position to take in the new administration. Hillary thought she might make a fine attorney general until someone remembered the Bobby Kennedy law that forbade a president from making nepotism appointments to his cabinet. She thought about becoming White House chief of staff Bernstein reports that Morris was one of several people with whom Hillary discussed the question of being chief of staff. Or perhaps she might be the chief domestic-policy adviser.
She wasnt kidding. Bernstein also describes Mrs. Clintons putting dibs on the West Wing office space that had, in previous administrations, been occupied by the vice president. Roy Neel, Al Gores top aide, stood by astonished, finally complaining to Susan Thomases, one of Hillarys closest operatives. In the end, Mrs. Clinton didnt get the office, but she did take charge of her husbands top priority, health-care reform, and made a terrible mess of it.
Underneath her appointment to the health-care initiative was the suspicion, held both inside and outside the White House, that Bill Clinton had to give his wife something pretty big because he owed her so much for the work she did knocking down those bimbo eruptions. She put her own credibility on the line, and under her supervision the Defense Team had procured false affidavits, kept up with that anonymous domestic spying, and crafted denial after denial. Without her work, Bill Clinton might not have been president. Even if he felt his ambitious wife wasnt up to the health-care job, he couldnt just give her nothing.
What Bernstein reveals, better than anyone else has so far, is how much Hillary Clintons grab for power disturbed top White House and administration aides not Republicans in opposition, but the very Democrats who were trying to make the Clinton administration work. Lloyd Bentsen, Donna Shalala, Leon Panetta, Alice Rivlin all opposed the choice of Hillary to head the health-care task force. Mostly, [these] people thought the idea the whole system Hillary was setting up was crazy, Shalala told Bernstein.
Democrats outside the administration were unhappy, too. Bernstein describes a meeting in April 1993 at which Hillary briefed top party leaders on the health-care task forces progress. When then-senator Bill Bradley suggested that some changes might be required, she told him to forget it; if any lawmakers even tried, she said, the White House would demonize them. Bradley later unloaded on Bernstein. That was it for me in terms of Hillary Clinton, he said. You dont tell members of the Senate you are going to demonize them. It was obviously so basic to who she is. The arrogance. The assumption that people with questions are enemies. The disdain. The hypocrisy.
And then there was the rest of Washington. During Hillarys early days in the White House, Washington journalist and social fixture Sally Quinn wrote a much-noted column saying Hillary should remember that she wasnt elected president. Quinns impudence angered Bill Clinton, who raged against Quinn in a conversation with advisers James Carville and Rahm Emanuel. But years later Emanuel told Bernstein, James and I had the same take on it, which was, God bless Sally for being honest. She was f ing honest.
And those, as they say, were her friends.
Reading Bernsteins account, its hard to escape the conclusion that Mrs. Clinton benefited greatly, both in Arkansas and the White House, from the eagerness of her husbands supporters to overrate her. There was too much mythology about Hillary that stretched the facts, Donna Shalala told Bernstein. Shalala, Bernstein writes, had always been made uncomfortable by hyperbolic statements from friends and acolytes of Hillary who put forth the notion that had she pursued her own political career and not deferred to Bill Clintons she would have been a governor or a senator in her own right by 1992. Mrs. Clintons fans, Shalala continued, assume that [just] being smart is enough. And its not enough. Its judgment. Its experience. Its being strategic at the right points. Not Mrs. Clintons strong points.
But the hype was at times nearly overwhelming. To take just one example, it was often said that Mrs. Clinton had been judged one of the top lawyers in America. But both books point out that she failed the District of Columbia bar exam when she took it fresh out of Yale Law School. (Bernsteins recounting of her years at Yale give the impression that she trained as much to be a social worker as a lawyer.) Of the 817 people who took the exam with Mrs. Clinton, Bernstein tells us, 551 thats 67 percent passed, most from law schools less prestigious than Yale. The fact that Mrs. Clinton failed is not a scoop after keeping it a secret for many years, she revealed it in a little-noticed passage of her memoir, Living History but it will receive new attention now. (She was also, by the way, unimpressive in the courtroom, and Bernstein reports that her worried Rose Law Firm partners began steering her practice toward nonjury work.)
In the end, the impression that both books leave is that Mrs. Clinton has had two crowning achievements in her career. One was in 1992, when she fought off allegations about her husbands womanizing and helped him win the presidency. The other was in 1998, when she fought off allegations about her husbands womanizing and helped him stay in office. The rest? Its a mixed bag at best.
Well, maybe not even that. With the notable exception of her husbands libidinous carelessness, Bernstein writes, the most egregious errors, strategic and tactical, of the Bill Clinton presidency, particularly in its infancy, were traceable to Hillary. The Hillary Clinton of A Woman in Charge and Her Way is a woman who would do almost anything to gain power but didnt know what to do with it once she got it, beyond battling her enemies and alienating her friends. Sometimes it seems theres not much more we can learn about Hillary. Bernstein, Gerth, and Van Natta have shown us thats not true.
Portions of this article appeared originally in the June 25, 2007, issue of National Review and also in the Wall Street Journal.
Yes, I always found it amusing that Hillary failed the DC Bar exam. She passed the Bar exam in Arkansas, btw. Apparently the exam in Arkansas was/is a heck of a lot easier. What a surprise./s
I was livid when my local rag used CREW as a source in an article a few months back.
and she managed to convince Americans Bill was not a womanizer?
Perhaps, being as how she REALLY was not named after Sir Edmund Hillary, for historical purposes she should be named STONEWALL CLINTON. It fits.
No, I don’t think she managed that one.
Bump
Bump.
From the NewsMax.com Staff
For the story behind the story...
Monday, Nov. 17, 2003 12:03 a.m. EST
Mary Matalin: The Other Pellicano Tapes
With Los Angeles private eye Anthony Pellicano beginning his jail sentence on Monday, Hollywood is on pins and needles wondering about the Pellicano tapes, illegal wiretap transcripts discovered on the celebrity gumshoe’s computer while he was under investigation for a witness intimidation rap.
But those aren’t the only recordings that document the work of the man known as the “investigator to the stars.”
In 1992, when “the Pelican” hired on to do damage control for Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign, Mary Matalin, then the political director for President Bush 41’s re-election campaign, found herself in the unenviable position of being sought out by women who were linked to Clinton - and threatened into silence by Mr. Pellicano.
Matalin, now a senior White House adviser, discussed the episode in 1997 during a stint as a talk radio host on CBS’s Washington, D.C., affiliate.
“I got the letters from Pellicano to these women intimidating them,” Matalin told her audience. “I had tapes of conversations from Pellicano to the women. I got handwritten letters from the women.”
As recounted in “Hillary’s Scheme,” by NewsMax.com’s Carl Limbacher, the Bush insider continued:
“I got one letter from one of the women’s dad’s saying, ‘This is so horrible. Here’s what they’re going to do to us,’ you know, essentially. It’s not like they said, ‘We’re going to go out there and bust your kneecaps. (It was more like) we’re going to say this, that and the other.’”
Matalin said she first noticed something was amiss when the Clinton campaign announced publicly that there were 19 women who would likely claim some sort of relationship with the Democratic candidate.
“I controlled the money in the [1992 Bush] campaign,” Matalin explained. “And [Clinton damage controller] Betsy Wright announced that she was putting $28,000 on the ‘bimbo’ patrol and on Jack Palladino and Pellicano, the other guy.
“And $28,000 to me, the political director, was four states in the Rocky Mountains. You had a limited budget. I said, how could they spend this much money? How could they basically give up four states to track down ‘bimbos’?
“That’s why it was kind of shocking to me that it must have been a bigger priority than putting money into states for the purpose of winning and that’s why I flagged it at the time. I don’t even remember how many or what kind of women.”
However, even though Pellicano’s tapes and letters offered smoking-gun proof of the Clinton campaign’s heavy-handed attempts to silence the future president’s ex-girlfriends, then-President Bush refused to use the damaging info to save his re-election bid.
Matalin explained: “When I went to my boss in the campaign with this information and then they went to Bush, Bush himself called me up and said, ‘I don’t want to hear it. Don’t even tell me what you have. Throw it all out,’” she told her radio audience.
Luckily for Mr. Pellicano - not to mention Bill and Hillary Clinton - Mary Matalin did as she was told.
Wow! What a bombshell! That clearly explains the Florida couple John and Alice Martin who were just "driving around with a scanner and a tape recorder" and just "happened to hear Newt Gingrich" and recorded it for their grandchild because it was histroy.
ALICE MARTIN: We're going to have a grandson at the end of January, and we were thinking how neat it would be to play this tape for him and him hear the voices of people that we thought were important. That's really all it was going to be is a little tape we put aside and when he was old enough to hear it, he could hear it.
I certainly hope McCain does not make that same mistake. But he gives every indication of doing so.
The Clintons are truly evil.
Well, I hope Obama can take advantage of some of this.
It doesn’t matter. Thanks to Rush Limbaugh she will probably be our next president. God help us all.
Your so right. I’m so damn mad at him I’m spitting nails.
We've always known here on FR that Hillary was much more dangerously prone to this beyond unleashing a few ashtrays.
In a scene from the frenzied Clinton transition after the 1992 election, Bernstein portrays Mrs. Clinton sitting down with top political adviser Dick Morris, musing over what position to take in the new administration. Hillary thought she might make a fine attorney general until someone remembered the Bobby Kennedy law that forbade a president from making nepotism appointments to his cabinet. She thought about becoming White House chief of staff Bernstein reports that Morris was one of several people with whom Hillary discussed the question of being chief of staff. Or perhaps she might be the chief domestic-policy adviser.Anybody who knows their Seinfeld will recognize in this wacky Hillary/Dick Morris scene the echoes of a famous scene from Seinfeld Episode 12: The Revenge. After getting angry and quitting his real estate sales job, George, sitting on the floor in Jerry's apartment, discusses with Jerry some ideas for jobs he might like to have:
Hillary Rodham Clinton: the George Costanza of American politics.
GEORGE: I like sports. I could do something in sports. JERRY: Uh-huh. Uh-huh. In what capacity? GEORGE: You know, like the general manager of a baseball team or something. JERRY: Yeah. Well, that - that could be tough to get. GEORGE: Well, it doesn't even have to be the general manager. Maybe I could be like, an announcer. Like a color man. You know how I always make those interesting comments during the game. JERRY: Yeah. Yeah. You make good comments. GEORGE: What about that? JERRY: Well, they tend to give those jobs to ex-ballplayers and people that are, you know, in broadcasting. GEORGE: Well, that's really not fair. JERRY: I know. Well, okay. Okay. What else do ya like? GEORGE: Movies. I like to watch movies. JERRY: Yeah. Yeah. GEORGE: Do they pay people to watch movies? JERRY: Projectionists. GEORGE: That's true. JERRY: But you gotta know how to work the projector. GEORGE: Right. JERRY: And it's probably a union thing. GEORGE: (scoffs) Those unions. (sighs) Okay. Sports,...movies. What about a talk show host? JERRY: Talk show host. That's good. GEORGE: I think I'd be good at that. I talk to people all the time. Someone even told me once they thought I'd be a good talk show host. JERRY: Really? GEORGE: Yeah. A couple of people. I don't get that, though. Where do you start? JERRY: Well, that's where it gets tricky. GEORGE: You can't just walk into a building and say " I wanna be a talk show host." JERRY: I wouldn't think so. GEORGE: It's all politics.
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