September 14, 2007
View From Lodi, CA: Hillary Clinton and Immigrant
Norman Hsu—A Marriage Made In Heaven?
By Joe Guzzardi
New York
Senator and leading Democratic presidential
candidate
Hillary Clinton caught a big break two weeks ago.
The
Larry Craig incident in the men’s room at the
Minneapolis-St. Paul airport overshadowed the news of
Clinton’s connections to fugitive
Norman Hsu and his $850,000 donation to her
campaign.
Whether or not
Craig tapped his foot while sitting in a
stall in a
public rest room is much less important to America
than the pervasive use of
dirty money in politics.
Unfortunately for Clinton, her good luck good luck
has run out. The Clinton-Hsu soiled laundry is
front-page news across America. Even though $850,000 has
been returned to 260 donors,
Clinton is inexorably tied to a common crook whose
shady reputation threatens to undermine her
presidential aspirations.
At first, Clinton dismissed the allegations of Hsu’s
contributions when her west coast fund raising manager
called his donations
“completely legit!” and refused to return any
money.
According to the New York Times, Hsu emerged
from his 1992 status as “a bankrupt swindler” to
become a major money raising force for Clinton. Hsu is
what is referred to as a “bundler”---an
individual who acts as a conduit for donations from
other individuals to send to Democratic candidates.
The vehicle Hsu used for his illegal transactions is
his company, Components Ltd., which exists only on paper
and has no business purpose whatsoever as far as anyone
can determine. [A
Fugitive Political Fund Raiser Leaves A Shadowy Money
Trail, By Mike McIntire, New York Times,
September 9, 2007]
Clinton’s two main challengers would love to make
political hay out of her with a hand in the cookie jar
but are they are hardly in a position to do so.
Barack Obama is rumored have benefited from his
association with indicted Chicago real estate mogul Tony
Rezko. [Obama
Says He Regrets Deal With Fundraiser, by Peter
Slevin, Washington Post, December 17, 2006].
And
John Edwards, whose net worth estimated as high as
$60 million, isn’t anxious to draw attention to his
questionable finances either.
The unwritten rule among the three is the less said
about money the better.
Whoever emerges with the Republican nomination to
challenge the Democratic nominee certainly isn’t
excluded from attacking. The problem is that they’re
tainted too and would be unlikely to withstand an
extensive audit into how they made their fortunes.
The three leading Republicans,
Rudy Giuliani,
John McCain and
Mitt Romney have a
net worth respectively of $30 million, $38 million
and $250 million.
Among them all, Clinton’s scandal is most hurtful to
her chances. Her husband and Bill, after all, invented
the
shameless idea of renting out the White House
Lincoln Bedroom. And the image of greedy,
stop-at-nothing politics follows her every step.
With nationwide unrest about
the war in Iraq and broad-based dissatisfaction with
President Bush, Democrats may feel that the 2008
election is in the bag. And, by all rights, it should
be.
But Fairleigh Dickinson University professor of
political science Peter Woolley sees it otherwise. He
projects that by the time the lengthy nomination process
is over, the winner will be: “bruised and vulnerable
and the once-enthusiastic supporters of the losers will
be disappointed and disenchanted.” [Dissatisfaction
Fuels Presidential Race, By Peter J. Woolley,
Providence Journal, August 21, 2007]
My own take is the same. As simplistic as this
sounds, to win the Democrats must put forward a
candidate who can be elected. And right now, they don’t
have one. The Congressional approval rate is 18 percent.
Clinton and Obama are members of that not-too-august
body. By extension, they are losers.
Obama is inexperienced, Edwards lacks traction and
Clinton has the highest negatives of the three.
Observing Clinton during last week’s
Univision debate
conducted in Spanish, she looked tired and older than
her 60 years. The fallout from the Hsu affair has taken
its toll.
What it boils down to is if the Democratic nominee
doesn’t stir the public and if another Republican
presidency is deemed out of the question because of
Bush’s legacy, a third choice might surface.
New York Mayor
Michael Bloomberg, the Democrat turned Republican
turned Independent, is
waiting in the wings with his $1 billion campaign
war chest.
Former
Vice President Al Gore, his protestations aside,
could make a late entry. A
Quinnipiac Poll shows that he rates highly.
If the presidential vote is split among three
candidates as it was in 1992 when
H. Ross Perot won 20 percent of the popular vote,
then absolutely anything is possible.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.