January 08, 2008
The Clintons in Crisis
By
Michelle Malkin
Don't let the
"Comeback Gal" spin fool you. Despite the
unexpectedly close finish in New Hampshire, Hillary
Clinton's campaign remains in a tailspin. And the
Clintons' pre-Granite State primary finger-pointing has
left an indelible mark. It's the media's fault. It's
sexism's fault. It's the
vast right-wing conspiracy's fault.
Oh, and it's all your
fault that you laugh out loud when she tries to steal
the mantle of "change" from Barack Obama by
surrounding herself on stage with moldy political fogies
like
Madeleine Albright,
Wesley Clark and
James Carville.
Watching the
Clinton "crack-up" fore the vote was less
like watching glass shatter upon sudden impact and more
like watching wax
melt under slow, steady heat.
It took a lifetime of
lies, deception, hypocrisy and hardball power grabs
before Hillary and Bill's political façades
disintegrated. But now, finally, the empty dummy molds
underneath have been laid bare completely.
Many will point to
Hillary's watery-eyed performance at a Portsmouth rally
on Monday as a watershed moment. Down in the polls and
facing imminent defeat, the
erstwhile anti-Tammy
Wynette turned on
the spigot and played damsel in distress: "It's
not easy, and I couldn't do it if I didn't passionately
believe it was the right thing to do. You know, I have
so many opportunities from this country. I just don't
want to see us fall backward, you know?" ['It's
Not Easy,' An Emotional Clinton Says, By Anne E.
Kornblut, Washington Post, January 8, 2008]
The steely voice —
infamous for uttering
profanities at
staffers,
state troopers and her
Secret Service detail, bellowing at the Bush
administration and Rush Limbaugh, and imitating a fiery
Southern drawl — turned drippy: "You know, this is
very personal for me. It's not just political; it's not
just public. I see what's happening, and we have to
reverse it." Insert heartfelt pauses and choke-ups
as directed.
So long, feminist
hero. Hello, weeping willow. Anyone who believes Hillary
spontaneously teared up and got emotional on the
campaign trail has been in a coma the last three
decades.
Bill Clinton's
diarrhea of the mouth didn't help. He flailed at
reporters for putting his poor, poor wife at a
"breathtaking disadvantage" (never mind the
countless regal magazine covers of his wife and
softball coverage over the
years); lamented that he can't turn her into
something "younger, taller, male," and whined
that "the wealthier have more right to free speech
than the rest of us" (never mind their $100 million
war chest).
In an odd bit of
damning with faint praise, Bill told
Dartmouth students that "I actually tried to
talk Hillary into leaving me when we were in law school,
that's the the
God's truth. I told her, 'You have more talent for
public service than anybody in my generation that I have
met. .¤.¤. I shouldn't stand in your way.' She looked at
me and said, 'Oh, Bill, I'll never run for office.'¤"
See, she's lied to
him all along.
A few weeks after
9/11, in another moment of crisis in the Clintons'
life, I noted Hillary's flabbergasting demeanor during
President Bush's address to Congress. Americans around
the country
also noted her cold behavior.
James Gale of Silver
Spring, Md., wrote to The Washington Post:
"She at times seemed bored and uninterested, clapping
perfunctorily, and at other times she was talking during
the speech. I thought her actions were unbecoming a
senator at this difficult time."
Teacher Kathie Larkin
of Atlanta wrote to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
"This is behavior I would not accept from my
sixth-graders listening to a speaker, and I expected
better of an adult from a state ripped apart by
terrorist violence. Hillary needs to grow up." [Frown
of a Senator in crisis, Washington Times,
September 27, 2001]
I noted at the time
that adversity magnifies deep character flaws. That
hasn't changed. And neither has Hillary.
You can't fake a
core. You can't fake charm. And you can't fake humility.
Mannequin Hillary tried during the ABC News debate in
New Hampshire over the weekend when questioned about her
likeability.
"Well, that hurts my feelings," she coyly purred
in attempted mock self-effacement.
One problem: The
Clintons are too steeped in the politics of
self-entitlement to pull off credible self-effacement.
Seated next to a rival who has stolen her liberal
thunder and who might make history as the nation's first
black president, Hillary couldn't help declaring: "I
am an agent of change, I embody change. I think having
the first woman president is a huge change."
She can't tolerate
someone else out-politically-correct-ing her. This was
supposed to be her year. Her triumph. Her
her-story.
Maybe a few of those
tears welling up in her eyes were real after all. Expect
more as this contested race—a race she thought would be
a cakewalk—continues.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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