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Among my many guilty pleasures — bad reality television, solitary nose
excavation, the Fox News Channel — hating Hillary Clinton was once near the
top of the list. The senator from New York somehow managed to arouse every
one of my love-to-hate zones.
She was a self-righteous feminist (boo) who married her way to power
(double-plus-boo). She wanted to turn American medicine into the National
Health Service (grrr) and all her friends were wealthy lawyers (triple
eye-roll). She was Lady Macbeth when she wasn’t some goo-goo liberal
ideologue.
There were as many ways to despise her as she had hairstyles. Then we even got
to hate her hairstyles as well. One of my most treasured moments editing The
New Republic in the 1990s was publishing a cover story by Camille Paglia on
Hillary called “Ice Queen, Drag Queen”. Ah, those were the days.
She can still provoke something of the same response. A while back I was
musing with Pat Buchanan, the old Republican warhorse, about the parlous
state of his party. “Only one thing can save us now,” he grumbled. “And it’s
Hillary.”
Even her allies loathe her. Two years ago David Geffen, the billionaire
Democrat, told a New York crowd: “She can’t win and she’s an incredibly
polarising figure. Ambition is just not a good enough reason.” She is
currently fourth in those too-early-by-a-year polls in Iowa. And if you miss
seeing an unflattering photograph of her, just check the Drudge Report.
Before too long, one will probably pop up. And I’ll find myself in a wave of
nostalgia.
Why am I having a hard time keeping the wave afloat? The answer is relatively
simple. Clinton has been an almost painfully reasonable, centrist, sensible
senator. I’d like to hate her but she’s foiling me every time.
Take the Iraq war. She voted for it but with shrewd reservations. “If we were
to attack Iraq now, alone or with few allies, it would set a precedent that
could come back to haunt us,” she told the Senate before voting to give Bush
authorisation. “For all its appeal, a unilateral attack, while it cannot be
ruled out, on the present facts is not a good option.” In retrospect those
were wise words — but they are not helping her now with an increasingly
anti-war Democratic base, especially since she continues to refuse to disown
her vote.
Or take her recent manoeuvring over what the Pentagon had called a “surge” and
last week was calling “plus-up” in Iraq. She opposed the new plan but did so
in a written statement before jetting off to see the troops. She is close to
David Petraeus, the gifted general who has been tasked with calming the
non-Sadrite parts of Baghdad with a handful of troops.
Her critics call this calculation. Arianna Huffington says Clinton reeks of
the scent of fear. John Edwards’s campaign, which has staked out the
strongest anti-war stance, has already tried to reinforce this perception.
Edwards recently charged, in a veiled reference to Clinton: “If you’re in
Congress and you know that this war is going in the wrong direction, it is
no longer enough to study your options and keep your own counsel.”
Howard Wolfson, Clinton’s aide, responded a little touchily: “In 2004 John
Edwards used to constantly brag about running a positive campaign. Today he
has unfortunately chosen to open his campaign with political attacks on
Democrats who are fighting the Bush administration’s Iraq policy.”
Is Clinton “fighting” the Bush administration’s Iraq policy or trying to
ameliorate it? Both, I’d say. It’s a perfectly rational position for a
grown-up politician to take. When you consider her statements as a whole
throughout a confusing, dynamic, dangerous war, what comes across is
reasonableness and responsibility. “I am cursed with the responsibility
gene. I am. I admit to that,” she told The New York Times last week. “
You’ve got to be very careful in how you proceed with any combat situation in
which American lives are at stake.”
Quite so. But the line between prudence and calculation can be a thin one. And
at times the centrism seems almost pathological. Here she is explaining her
foreign policy philosophy to The New Yorker’s Jeffrey Goldberg: “We can
critique the idealists, who have an almost faith-based idealism without
adequate understanding or evidence-based decision making, and we can
critique the realists for rejecting the importance of aspiration and values
in foreign policy. You know, I find myself, as I often do, in the somewhat
lonely middle.”
There are two things to say about that. The first is that she shouldn’t use
“critique” as a verb. The second is that it’s very hard to disagree with
her. The question in American foreign policy should never be whether one is
a realist or an idealist. It should always be which blend of each is
appropriate in the face of any specific challenge. I have no doubt, for
example, that the first Bush administration in 1988-92 was too realist; and
that the second one, which we are currently enduring, is too idealist. But
who do we trust to get the balance right in the future? Hillary is
essentially saying that we should trust her. She is giving us a clear signal
of what a second Clinton administration would be like: all the centrism and
responsibility of her husband’s eight years but without any of the charm.
Is that what Americans want? It seems that what they want is a form of
escapism (in the form of Edwards), charisma (in the shape of Barack Obama),
or integrity (in the guise of John McCain). But when the decision nears and
the stakes, especially abroad, begin to seep in, might Hillary be right?
Might they actually be yearning for dullness, competence and responsibility?
Americans historically elect presidents who are an antidote to the flaws of
the previous one. Nixon begat Carter who begat Reagan. When you think of
George W Bush, the word “reckless” springs to mind. And what is the antidote
to reckless? “I am cursed with the responsibility gene,” said a candidate
last week. She may be revealing extremely good political instincts. Or she
may, of course, be calculating again.
Dammit. Hating her was much easier.
Andrew Sullivan is an author, academic and journalist. He holds a PhD from Harvard in political science, and is a former editor of The New Republic. His 1995 book, Virtually Normal: An Argument About Homosexuality, became one of the best-selling books on gay rights. He has been a regular columnist for The Sunday Times since the 1990s, and also writes for Time and other publications.
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