The Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy Hugs Hillary Clinton
March 31st, 2008 by MICHAEL STICKINGS
Last week, it was the reverse: “Hillary Clinton hugs the vast right-wing conspiracy” — Hillary conducted an interview with the editorial board of right-wing media baron Richard Mellon Scaife’s Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, with Dick Scaife himself sitting right next to her, and she used the occasion to bring up the Obama-Wright controversy and otherwise to cozy up to a man, as I put it last week, who took it upon himself to spend much of the ’90s trying to destroy the Clintons and who has spent the past several decades trying to destroy liberalism and the Democratic Party.
(”Anything to win.” — The motto of the 2008
Well, it looks like the feelings are mutual, or, rather, that Clinton and Scaife have established a mutual admiration society ahead of the April 22
Such as:
– “The very morning that she came to the Trib, our editorial page raised questions about her campaign and criticized her on several other scores. Reading that, a lesser politician — one less self-assured, less informed on domestic and foreign issues, less confident of her positions — might well have canceled the interview right then and there.”
– “Her meeting and her remarks during it changed my mind about her.”
– “Sen. Clinton also exhibited an impressive command of many of today’s most pressing domestic and international issues. Her answers were thoughtful, well-stated, and often dead-on.”
And so on and so on. To be fair, Scaife isn’t your mainstream conservative on, say,
In the end, Scaife does not endorse Hillary — “not yet, anyway,” and he wants to hear from Obama — but notes that he left the meeting with “a very favorable” (and “counterintuitive”) impression of her.
Which is pretty much an endorsement. It seems unlikely to me that Obama will prove to be more to Scaife’s liking than Hillary, the new Hillary, the desperate Hillary who needs to win the Pennsylvania primary and who will do anything to win it, including selling her soul to a devil who has long tormented her.
Hillary will likely win
And yet a Scaife endorsement would be telling — which is to say, it would say a lot about Hillary, about what she has become. Based on this column, after all, an endorsement would be a genuinely positive call, not a hesitant, reluctant pick of the lesser of two evils. Put another way, it would be pro-Clinton, which is what Scaife now seems to be. Should not Democrats be concerned that a leading right-wing media baron is firmly in Hillary’s camp?
Now, a cynic might suggest that Scaife, ever the partisan, wants Hillary to win because she is the weaker candidate and that he is saying such nice things about her only to undermine the Democratic Party. In this sense, the cynic might suggests that he is just doing what, say, Rush Limbaugh, has been doing. To which I say: yes, it’s possible. Come November, after all, it Scaife will no doubt support
Either way, though, Hillary is cozying up to the vast right-wing conspiracy of which she herself has been a target. Indeed, either way, are we not right to question Hillary’s judgment? Either she now appeals to Scaife, in which case there is cause for concern, or she is allowing herself to be played by Scaife, in which case there is cause for concern of a different kind.
Either way, she has lost perspective. Either way, it is all about herself. Either way, there is no way she should be the Democratic nominee for president.
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