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Election 2008

Could Hillary Bequeath Us Our Long-Awaited Third Party?

By David Michael Green, AlterNet. Posted March 7, 2008.


A twist of fate?
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Oh boy. Where have I seen this movie before?

I think it was four years, surprisingly enough. Hey, what a coincidence! Wasn't there a presidential election going on back then, too?

Remember how Howard Dean came out of near total obscurity, how he started walloping the presumptive front-runner, John "Fearless" Kerry, by taking bold positions (at least in the context of American politics) against the war, and against George W. Bush? Remember how Kerry changed his tune to ape Dean's message, and how nervous Democratic voters played it safe and came home to the guy with the experience and the name brand? Remember what an outstandingly effective candidate he then turned out to be? Remember the "real deal"? (Oh, and what a deal it was. I think experienced card players refer to that hand as a 'jack-shit straight, seven high', if I'm not mistaken.)

Is this ringing any bells for anyone?

Only Democrats could lose the White House in 2008. It's hard to imagine a more perfect storm favoring their decisive, landslide victory. This should be 1932 redux, and then some. There's a reviled incumbent from the opposite party, already past his expiration date four years ago when he stole a second election. There's a new nominee from that same party joined to him at the hip on the most important issues, and stupid enough to be seen as such publically. There's the economy heading into a recession after years of lethargy for the middle class. An extremely unpopular war based on lies. A massive national debt. A housing crisis. An environmental crisis. Gas at well over three bucks a gallon. Oil over $100 a barrel. The dollar at record lows and plummeting. Pension stocks falling and cities falling apart - when they're not literally drowning. Scandals everywhere in the Republican Party. Three-fourths of the country believing America to be on the wrong track. And more. Put it all together and it's an amazing scenario! It's like some poli sci professor somewhere was tinkering around with a real-life statistical model, setting all the variables at max to see how big a blow-out is theoretically possible. "Hey, I wonder what happens if…?"

It's a perfect, perfect storm. And then along came Hillary. Look, I certainly don't object to her running if she wants to. But I do object to how she's running, and I think Democratic voters are as dumb as a bag of hammers sitting out in the rain to pull the handle for her. In this year of the great political tsunami, Republicans have managed to - inadvertently, it would seem - choose their best hope to hold on to the presidency, even if they can't quite stand their own choice. Hillary would be the Democrats' worst hope.

She would go into the general election with all sorts of pre-existing baggage and negatives. She would get smashed to pieces by McCain on the very voter selection criteria she herself has articulated for use against Obama: experience and national security. McCain could virtually take her 3:00 a.m. ad, pull her out and drop himself in, and use it against her. And he will. Her candidacy is already ugly to contemplate, and she hasn't even released her tax filings yet. Aren't Democrats just brilliant? Hey, maybe she can get Kerry to be her running mate! Perhaps Bob Shrum is free these days, and can finally push himself into double digits on his personal best lifetime count of presidential races lost (with zero wins), by managing the campaign.

But it's not just Democrats going with the Clintons that alarms me, it's how they might win it. It is almost a mathematical certainty that neither candidate can win the nomination by means of gathering pledged delegates in the months ahead. Under the proportional allocation system Democratic primaries and caucuses tend to use, a candidate has to do exceedingly well in the popular vote to realize a significant shift in delegates. It would appear that Clinton's got some favorable states ahead, and that Obama has as many or perhaps more, unless momentum has really shifted now, after Tuesday. I tend to doubt that is the case, unless Obama goes all Massachusetts at this point, like Kerry and Dukakis, and stands by helplessly watching the steamroller as it relentlessly approaches. In which case, fine, anyhow - get the clown off the stage, he's not ready for prime-time. As a tired American progressive, worn down by disappointment across more decades of losing politics than I care to count, I can abide many things. But one of them is not another wimpy Democratic presidential nominee who gets out-slugged by the latest Karl Rove and manages yet again to seize defeat from the jaws of victory.

Anyhow, let's say we end the primary season about where we are now, with Obama about 100 delegates up, and having won more votes and more states than Clinton, but with neither candidate over the magic nomination-clinching line. It would be fairly outrageous for the Clintons to seize the brass ring at that point, but they will not care in the slightest what the ramifications of their actions might be for the party or the country. The Clintons will do anything - and I mean anything - to get the presidency. This is a sickness that infects the hearts and minds of some people much more than others. Because of their own needs, most prominently a very deep-seated personal insecurity, they simply need the validation of being president, and they go after it like a heat-seeking missile headed toward a power plant.

You don't want to get in their way, man. Road kill is no mere metaphor when someone's intensely-held life aspiration is on the line and their moral bearings got tossed overboard sometime back in their twenties. You don't get that sense of desperate pathological need from, say, Jimmy Carter or George McGovern, while individuals like George H. W. Bush or Richard Nixon fairly reeked of it. In the case of Bush the Elder, clearly the whole point of being president was to be president. He didn't seem to have any ideas of what to do with the office once he got there. In the case of his son, the whole point was to do it better than Dad, and so he had lots of completely insane ideas of what he wanted to do once he got there, particularly in areas like taxes and Iraq, where Poppy had screwed-up on the way to losing a second term (amateur!).

The Clintons are very much cut from the same cloth as Old Man Bush. Actually doing something in office is incidental to the main project, which is the psychological satisfaction (and reassurance) that comes from all the attention, glory and power attached to the White House. Compared to that overwhelming goal, they no more care about national health care than does Sean Hannity. If they can win by going single-payer, so be it. If they could win by war, the death penalty and welfare slashing instead, they would. Indeed, they have. The point is that the Clintons will do anything to secure the presidency, even if that includes wrecking that part of the Democratic Party they didn't already wreck during the 1990s, and/or tossing a few body blows in the direction of American democracy. The definitive model here is the 2000 election, and the campaign I'm referring to wasn't Al Gore's, ladies and gentlemen. More like the other one in that race. Anyone with any doubt about what they're capable of needs to adjust the satellite dish on their igloo, and fast. (If she does leave the race, it's only because she absolutely cannot see any mathematical possibility of winning whatsoever, and she wants to preserve some shred of her reputation because - and only because - she'll be getting ready for 2012. Even if there's Democratic incumbent in the White House. Maybe especially if there is.)

Far more likely is that Clinton remains in the race, keeps it competitive by staying within range delegate-wise, and marches all the way to Denver fighting for the nomination. Then she plays some card, or combination of cards, in order to effectively steal it from Obama, despite his having won more states, more votes and more pledged delegates. Perhaps she does it using superdelegates. Perhaps she manages to get Florida and Michigan counted. Perhaps she sues to invalidate her loss in the Texas caucuses. Perhaps John Edwards (with anywhere from 12 to 61 delegates pledged to him, depending on whose count you believe) wants very badly to be Vice President or Secretary of State. Perhaps Bill cuts some sort of deal in a smoke-filled room somewhere. Maybe it goes to the Supreme Court for resolution (you know, those nice people in black robes who gave you the George W. Bush presidency), and they decide in her favor. Most likely she employs a combination of all these gambits, and collectively they could possibly give her enough delegates for a narrow technical (and very Pyrrhic) victory.

If any of these scenarios play out, Obama should leave the Democratic Party and run as a third-party candidate. Simple as that.

It would be the morally proper thing to do, and it just might even be successful, especially in the longer term.

If this seems an improbable quest, remember that Obama's support is quite passionate - he's not just your standard-issue marginal political preference for, say, Joe Biden over Chris Dodd. Nor would this be some personal (and absurd) vanity project, like Ross Perot's. His supporters would be outraged at the stealing of the nomination from its rightful owner, and they're a motivated bunch. Black voters would feel particularly slighted, and would be likely to follow Obama elsewhere. That alone would be enough to finish off the already badly-damaged Clinton candidacy in the general election. Given this moral high ground, too, I don't think Obama would be perceived as the Ralph Nader who gave the election to McCain. Perhaps, because of access restrictions, he wouldn't even be able to get on the ballot in many places, except as a write-in.

In the end, I don't think it much matters. If he can't win in 2008, the country will be ripe for the taking after four years of John McSame. And Obama has shown us nothing this last year if not excellence in organizing skills. There's plenty of time by 2012 to give birth to a real progressive party that has been aching to calve off from the Democrats for three decades now. If the Clintons and the Liebermans of this world want to hang tight with their DLC party of Diet Pepsi Wall Street, let them. If they feel a burning compulsion to become the Whigs of the 21st century, I for one won't stand in the way.

The idea of a third party alternative has long been a dream of progressives in America. It has also too often been a fantasy and a distracting albatross. Particularly since the Bill Clinton era of centrist sell-out - but really going back to the Reagan period of Democratic cowardice, the McGovern campaign of entrenched Party power acting shamelessly toward their nominee, and certainly the Johnson debacle in Vietnam - progressives have been looking to ditch the shell of the former New Deal now doing business as the corroded (and corrosive) Democratic Party.

Unfortunately - really, very unfortunately - it's an almost impossible trick to pull off given the structure of the American political system, and I have joined lots of other smarter people counseling against the effort, suggesting an attempt at hijacking the Democratic Party instead. Not for nothing was the last new major party born in America 150 years ago. It's not an accident that for about three-fourths of the country's history it's been Republicans or Democrats. Period.

Oddly enough, however, this is probably the year when the country could come closest in a long time to seeing the birth of a genuine third party. Theoretically, at least - if the right sequence of events transpired. It's probably a long-shot, and not my personal preference for the short-term, but it is feasible, it's probably the only way to imagine overcoming the considerable institutional barriers to creating a third party in America, and doing so would be just the shot of adrenalin this decrepit old political system needs. Moreover, there are - believe it or not - still some folks out there who don't yet get the damage done by conservatism in America. Another four years of the same may be just the tonic to finally seal that deal forever.

So, let me see here. We'd have a destroyed Republican Party, a destroyed Democratic Party, and a new progressive, "Fired-Up!" party rising out of their ashes. We could do a lot worse than that. And we could thank Hillary Clinton for it all, if it happens.

Sometimes a silver-lining can turn into a whole pot of gold.

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David Michael Green is a professor of political science at Hofstra University. He is delighted to receive readers' reactions to his articles (dmg@regressiveantidote.net), but regrets that time constraints do not always allow him to respond. More of his work can be found at www.regressiveantidote.net.

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If the Democrats lose this presidental election,
Posted by: Rod on Mar 7, 2008 1:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
every single member of the DNC should resign. Every single one, and we need new leaders. Or just disband the party and let a new one form, hopefully something progressive, maybe with John Edwards or someone like that as leader.

I quit contributing to the DNC, sending my modest amounts of money directly to canidates I like, something I started when Hillary started running. She might be OK, she might even do a good job, but I do not trust her. I am sure she will be better than what we have now, but she will be so much less than what we need.

John Edwards was our best hope, sob. Too bad the corprate masters do not like him.

Rod

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I thought it was just me
Posted by: soldier of fortune on Mar 7, 2008 1:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have meditated on this same idea. I had no problem with voting Clinton if she won fairly but after this crap she is trying to pull, I am done with her. I wouldn't even back a Hillary-Barack ticket. Short of her being Obama's VP or somehow winning more delegates (fairly) before the convention, I will vote third party or not at all. (There is no way in five kinds of hell I would ever vote Republican.) Clinton truly has the power of an evil Helen of Troy, "The woman who destroyed an entire democratic party" (though the party helped out a lot). I would be all over an Obama-Kucinich or Obama-Edwards ticket for 2008.

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I'm Ready
Posted by: OldRedleg on Mar 7, 2008 1:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Clinton steals the nomination through the so-called Superdelegate process, or any other underhanded means that goes against the will of the majority voters, I will finally write off the Democratic Party. I don't know yet who I will vote for but I am certain of the ones I will not vote for.

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WHICH wrong track...?
Posted by: Crazy H on Mar 7, 2008 1:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Three-fourths of the country believing America to be on the wrong track.

I always love this factoid, no matter what proportion is stated. The pollsters never ask the obvious followup question, "...and which way is that track going?"

The Limpbone & Coltface crowd will inevitably tell you we're heading too far left. Those of us who get consistent results when adding two and two believe something different...

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Inexcusable conduct
Posted by: LeeAnnG on Mar 7, 2008 1:29 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hillary Clinton's favorable comparison between herself and McCain against Obama was one of the worst political bits of nastiness I've witnessed since Karl Rove was master of the innuendo and smear. She has given the Republicans something to really latch onto, whether she or Obama gets the nomination.

Until I heard her comments after the Tuesday election in which she stated that she has the experience and McCain has the experience, but Obama has nothing but one speech he made in 2002, I thought I'd vote for her if she were the final candidate. Not any more. It might even be different if she had said it once and realized what she'd done. Instead, I heard her give three different versions of the same horrid statements.

If I ever thought Clinton had any strength of character, she has completely removed that notion from my mind. It may take experience to be president, it may take judgement, or - more likely - it may take a combination. But for me to vote for anyone, it takes at least a minimal amount of integrity. Clinton has shown that she has little or none. She's lost my vote for sure.

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Over the Hillary
Posted by: Crazy H on Mar 7, 2008 1:34 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
eh, can you really blame her for playing dirty? Given the overwhelming success of VRWC against her husband, she's probably convinced that it's he only way to play.

Both Bushes got into office primarily with a campaign strategy of, "Vote for me because the other guy's a bum."

Not that I like her little slimefest. While she doesn't have my respect, she'll get my vote if she's nominated. I always vote a strict pary line: ANTI-REPUBLICAN.

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» Yes, I blame her Posted by: foreverhope
It would be nice to have a real progressive lead a new party
Posted by: RyanR on Mar 7, 2008 1:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama has change as his mantra, but I don't see him representing a real seachange like we need to make the kind of reforms our country needs to champion the "people." Just a little more modern flavor of the same.
We need the likes of (or even, better, exactly) Edwards and Kucinich and the "new" Gore. Now any of those could lead a real "change" party, one the country could get behind. If only the media wouldn't get in the way. But with enough of us disenchanted, the media (and their corporations) would get trampled.

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Where Nader went terribly wrong ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Mar 7, 2008 8:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not establishing a third party whereby a new agenda could be launched ...

Now after all these runs for president instead of having a tried and true third choice all we have is another impromptu Nader run.

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Hillary's Big Lie
Posted by: John Edward on Mar 7, 2008 10:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
According to the Toronto Newspaper yesterday it was a Clinton aide that assured the Canadians that she was not really against NAFTA. It was wrongly leaked and reported that it was an Obama aide. I get the headlines from Canada daily so I got this early. I have only heard about this here on Countdown on MSNBC. Yet today I heard Hillary still claim Obama did it. She is truly shameless. She acts like she wants to be McBushes VP and she certainly doesn't act like she wants the Democrats to win in November.

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» RE: Hillary's Big Lie Posted by: rinpochet
3rd Party YES!!!
Posted by: John Edward on Mar 8, 2008 9:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I totally agree. With McBush and Hillary running as a Joe Lieberman clone as the two choices of corporate Amerika, Obama could take it as a 3rd party candidate. As the only anti war candidate agreeing with 70% if the population. Hillary is running with the same advisors that gave us the Dukacas, Kerry and Mondale campaigns. Is is any wonder she can't legitimately win the nomination. Indeed it would be a much more thorough house cleaning than if he ran as a Democrat. The Internet may return us to Jeffersonian Democracy, who would have thought?

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Clinton Transparency & Presidential Pardons
Posted by: foreverhope on Mar 8, 2008 11:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ms. Burlingame, a former attorney and a director of the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation, is the sister of Charles F. "Chic" Burlingame III, the pilot of American Airlines flight 77, which was crashed into the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001.

"the pardon scandals that marked Bill and Hillary Clinton's final days in office are remembered as transactions involving cronies, criminals and campaign contributors, the FALN clemencies of 1999 should be remembered in the context of the increasing threat of domestic and transnational terrorism that was ramping up during the Clinton years of alleged peace and prosperity. To wit, the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, the 1995 Tokyo subway Sarin attack, the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, the 1995 "Bojinka" conspiracy to hijack airplanes and crash them into buildings, the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing, the 1996 Summer Olympics bombing, Osama bin Laden's 1996 and 1998 "Declarations of War" on America, the 1998 East African embassy bombings, the 2000 USS Sullivans bombing attempt, the 2000 USS Cole bombing, and the 2000 Millennium bombing plot.

It was within that context that the FBI gave its position on the FALN clemencies -- which the White House succeeded in keeping out of news coverage but ultimately failed to suppress -- stating that "the release of these individuals will psychologically and operationally enhance the ongoing violent and criminal activities of terrorist groups, not only in Puerto Rico, but throughout the world." The White House spun the clemencies as a sign of the president's universal commitment to "peace and reconciliation" just one year after Osama bin Laden told his followers that the United States is a "paper tiger" that can be attacked with impunity.

It would be a mistake to dismiss as "old news" the story of how and why these terrorists were released in light of the fact that it took place during the precise period when Bill Clinton now claims he was avidly engaged, even "obsessed," with efforts to protect the public from clandestine terrorist attacks. If Bill and Hillary Clinton were willing to pander to the demands of local Hispanic politicians and leftist human-rights activists defending bomb-makers convicted of seditious conspiracy, how might they stand up to pressure from other interest groups working in less obvious ways against U.S. interests in a post-9/11 world?

Radical Islamists are a sophisticated and determined enemy who understand that violence alone will not achieve their goals. Islamist front groups, representing themselves as rights organizations, are attempting to get a foothold here as they have already in parts of Western Europe by deftly exploiting ethnic and racial politics, agitating under the banner of civil liberties even as they are clamoring for the imposition of special Shariah law privileges in the public domain. They believe that the road to America's ultimate defeat is through the back door of policy and law and they are aggressively using money, influence and retail politics to achieve their goal.

On the campaign trail, the Clintons like to say that Bill is merely supportive and enthusiastic, "just like all the other candidates' spouses." Nothing could be further from the truth. Returning Bill and Hillary Clinton to the White House would present the country with the unprecedented situation of a former and current president simultaneously occupying the White House, the practical implications of which have yet to be fully explored.

The FALN clemencies provide a disturbing example of how the abuse or misuse of presidential prerogative, under the guise of policy, can be put in service of the personal and private activities of the president's spouse -- and beyond the reach of meaningful congressional oversight."

linked text

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» This pretty much say it all... Posted by: herronsmith
you are correct about hillary, but
Posted by: undrgrndgirl on Mar 9, 2008 11:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
unfortunately obama isn't the best person for the job, either...his stand on issues is not that much different than hers so for me it doesn't matter if hillary or obama is annointed by the democratic party. i agree that hillary is without any sense of fair play but again, obama isn't that much different...they both proved their mutual lack of decency when they did not come to the aid of fellow democratic candidate (the dis-invited dennis kucinich) by not insisting he be included in the msnbc "debate" prior to stuper-tuesday. obama and hillary are just status quo candidates wearing the dnc label...

i had hoped - by the title of your article - that you were going to unveil a REAL 3rd party candidate, alas it was just more of the same.

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How can someone "steal the superdelegate vote"?
Posted by: Sojourner on Mar 10, 2008 7:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The fact that estimates are both candidates are courting the superdelegates and have about a 50/50 split makes such accusations look sick.

I do not object to Obama supporters telling us why their candidate is better. I do object to Obama supporters telling us why they hate Hillary. Yes, we know the Clinton-haters are legion. We don't need you to stand up and wave your ugly flag of hate.

I hate ambition--everywhere except in politics. If you have a problem with an ambitious woman politician, that's your problem, not ours. I have had my fill of "don't care if I do" losers. This nation has no *give* left for the miss manners approach to campaigning: don't put your elbows on the table, dear.

No one knows the office of president better than Hillary. No one knows how to use it better than she does. No one is more committed to the welfare of working Americans. So go spread your venom somewhere else.

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