Group Urges Clinton to Embrace Liberal Agenda (The New York Times)
By Jonathan Martin
March 24, 2015
The New York Times
A liberal group is starting a campaign Tuesday aimed at pushing Hillary Rodham Clinton to adopt a full-throated liberal agenda in her all-but-certain presidential campaign, signaling that even some on the far left of the Democratic Party are now more focused on shaping Mrs. Clinton’s eventual platform than they are on finding an alternative to her.
Over 200 Iowa and New Hampshire Democrats signed a petition at ReadyForBoldness.com, a website that plays on the name of the pro-Clinton group “Ready for Hillary.”
The effort, sponsored by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, will push Mrs. Clinton and other Democratic presidential hopefuls toward embracing expanded Social Security benefits, curbs on Wall Street and an overhaul of the campaign finance system, among other liberal priorities.
The organization is seeking volunteers in early primary states to attend campaign events and ask candidates where they stand on the liberal agenda.
Among those signing the “Ready for Boldness” statement are former Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa, Representative Dave Loebsack of Iowa, and Paul Hodes and Carol Shea-Porter, each former members of Congress from New Hampshire.
“Our Democratic nominee will have the best chance to win New Hampshire and other swing states in the general election if they campaign on a bold economic agenda that impacts kitchen table issues like jobs, wages, college affordability and retirement security,” Ms. Shea Porter said.
Trusted Aide Declines Formal Role in a Clinton Campaign (The New York Times)
By Maggie Haberman
March 24, 2015
The New York Times
Cheryl D. Mills, an adviser to Hillary Rodham Clinton who has been closer to her than perhaps any other over the last six years, will not be playing a formal role in her soon-to-be-announced presidential bid, according to people in direct discussions with the campaign.
Ms. Mills, who had a senior role in Mrs. Clinton’s 2008 campaign and then served as an adviser and chief of staff at the State Department, has told friends that she knows first-hand how intense and trying a presidential race can be and that she values the work she is doing outside of political life. That includes working for a hedge fund she started that is focused on Africa.
There had been some discussion of Ms. Mills taking a campaign co-chair title along with John Podesta, who served in senior roles in the Clinton and Obama administrations. Mr. Podesta is not currently planning to relocate to New York City, where Mrs. Clinton’s campaign will be based, and advisers to Mrs. Clinton are still discussing who, if anyone, could play that role, according to people familiar with the discussions.
Ms. Mills has been singular among Mrs. Clinton’s circle of trusted advisers in stating plainly to people that she hoped the former secretary of state would forgo another national campaign. At the same time, she has devoted much of the last two years to helping Mrs. Clinton preserve the option of running and has been strongly supportive of Mrs. Clinton’s desire to delay declaring her candidacy as long as possible.
Nick Merrill, a spokesman for Mrs. Clinton, declined to comment.
Even without an actual title, there is little doubt that Mrs. Clinton will continue to consult frequently with Ms. Mills, which could pose a familiar challenge for Mrs. Clinton’s team of paid advisers, who will have to contend with a circle of counselors who aren’t in the campaign structure, but who have her ear nonetheless.
At the same time, the fact that the campaign is still assessing how to structure top tier of her political operation just weeks before an expected announcement highlights the late start Mrs. Clinton has had in building her team, despite considering her campaign for the last two years.
Paul slams Clinton on women’s rights (The Hill)
By Kevin Cirilli
March 24, 2015
The Hill
Likely presidential candidate Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said Monday that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is not a consistent defender of women’s rights.
Paul said on Fox News’s “The Kelly File” that Republicans need to “aggressively go after the Clintons,” since she is expected to announce her run for president.
“We need to go after their corruption. We need to call her out for not being a consistent defender of women’s rights,” Paul said. “There’s a lot of hypocrisy on the Clinton side. ... You can’t let that go.”
Paul said that Republicans will not win the White House in 2016 unless they attack her record.
“We won’t win unless we aggressively combat her and make sure that she has to explain her record as well,” Paul said.
What Scott Walker Can Teach Hillary Clinton (Slate)
By Jamelle Bouie
March 24, 2015
Slate
Hillary Clinton has been polarizing her entire political career. But now, ahead of a second presidential run, she wants to be a uniter, not a divider. People should “get out of the kind of very unproductive discussion that we’ve had for too long, where people are just in their ideological bunkers, having arguments instead of trying to reach across those divides and have some solutions,” she said, speaking to labor leaders and policy wonks during a Monday event at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank that doubles as the Clinton administration-in-waiting.
Elsewhere in Washington, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities—another left-leaning think tank—released its analysis of the new Republican budgets. “Each budget plan,” notes the CBPP, “derives more than two-thirds of its [approximately $5 trillion] budget cuts from programs for people with low or modest incomes even though these programs constitute less than one-quarter of federal program costs.” This includes billions in cuts to tax credits for working families as well as trillions in cuts to health care for low-income people. At the same time, House Republicans are mulling huge tax relief for the wealthiest Americans; later this week the House Ways and Means Committee will consider a bill to repeal the federal estate tax.
Clinton hasn’t announced a full agenda for 2016, much less a campaign for president. But when she does, it will stand on the opposite bank of anything offered by Republicans, with a vast distance between the two. She will give a plan for growing the welfare state. They will offer a plan for gutting it.
Put differently, she has to know that there’s no way to bring the two sides together. Democrats and Republicans aren’t just polarized; they’ve adopted distinct ideologies, and they’ve prioritized a maximalist approach to using power and influence. The first two years of the Obama administration weren’t modest. Part of this was a massive economic crisis that demanded a proportional response, but part of it was policy ambition. From the stimulus to the auto bailouts, Affordable Care Act, Dodd-Frank, and a host of other, smaller policies, Obama and the Democrats steered the country in a much more liberal direction than any president and Congress since Lyndon Johnson.
Likewise, if elected president in 2012, Mitt Romney had promised a full repudiation of the Obama administration. His White House would have slashed social spending, repealed the Affordable Care Act, and pushed a sweeping agenda of broad tax cuts and deregulation. It would have been a complete ideological victory, scored without any input from liberals.
It’s not that the “togetherness” talk is unreasonable. The public craves political comity and wants its leaders to affirm values like cooperation and bipartisanship. And even if they’ve built their appeal on the opposite, most politicians will oblige. “The answer will not come from Washington,” said Sen. Ted Cruz—of all people—in his presidential announcement speech. “It will only come as it has come at every other time of challenge in this country, when the American people stand together and say we will get back to the principles that have made this country great.”
But even if they try—and candidates tend to pursue their promises once in office—there’s no way anyone can keep this pledge. If elected president, Hillary Clinton won’t bring anyone together, just like Barack Obama didn’t overcome bitter partisanship and George W. Bush couldn’t sustain the national unity of his first two years in office (not that it was a huge priority). Not only are presidents pressured by party elites and activists with distinct visions, but the public is more polarized, and less willing to give approval or support to presidents from the other side. It’s why Clinton polarized more than Bush, why the second Bush polarized more than Clinton, and why Obama stands as the most polarizing president we have known—until we elect the next one.
Indeed, the only person in the present presidential field who seems to understand that political comity is a fool’s errand is Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, which, given his record for sowing ideological rancor, isn’t a surprise. In 2013—just after the government shutdown—he spoke at a breakfast for reporters in Washington, D.C. And when asked about polarization, he refused to say he could bridge the divide:
“For years, the conventional wisdom was that Americans want divided government,” he said. “I think they’ve seen in the last few years that that’s not necessarily a good thing. Instead of checks and balances you get a lot of gridlock.” …
“What we learned in Wisconsin and what many of the other battleground states, particularly in the Midwest, learned during the 2010 election, was that if you want to get big, bold reform done in your state you need a team to help you do that. So in our case everything switched from Democratic control to Republican control in 2010 and that empowered us to go out and make reforms that would’ve been much more difficult without those changes.”
It’s clear that Clinton wants to echo Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign of change and togetherness. But, as per her critique in the 2008 Democratic primaries, Obama’s message was a mistake. Outside of the most technical or non-salient issues, there’s no chance of bipartisan cooperation in the next presidential administration, and to promise otherwise is to set yourself up for failure. The only way a President Hillary Clinton will succeed in 2017 is if she has a Democratic Congress to pass her policies, confirm her judges, and staff her administration.
In other words, Clinton needs to listen to Walker. He gets it. Instead of a promise to work with Republicans, Clinton should promise to elect Democrats. It’s the only way she’ll get results, and ultimately, that’s what the public wants.
Share with your friends: |