Well, the most disgusting, craven, shameless political ad of the election
season has just come out in time for Christmas - and, no, it's not from Mike
Huckabee. It's from Hillary Clinton.
Huckabee's ad has gotten all of the attention because of its alleged
"floating cross" masquerading as a bookshelf (or vice versa) and its overall
700 Club Christmas Special feel. But you know what? There's no public policy
involved in his ad. Sure, there's a dose of Christian identity politics -
more than a dose according to some - but no one following the race is
particularly stunned to find out that Mike Huckabee is a committed
Christian. His ads say he's a "Christian leader" and that his faith
"defines" him.
I'm not thrilled by the explosion of Christian piety in Republican politics,
particularly with Huckabee's version of it, but nobody's fooled by it
either.
Now look at Clinton's ad. Gussied up a bit like Martha Stewart, a chipper
Hillary sits on her couch, arranging all of her Christmas presents to put
under the tree. "Carol of the Bells" is playing on a harpsichord in the
background. She's trying to find the right cards to put on the right
packages. One is labeled "Universal Health Care," another is "Alternative
Energy," another is "Middle Class Tax Breaks." And then the supposedly
hilarious kicker. Wringing her hands and furrowing her brow with maternal
angst, she exclaims, "Where did I put universal pre-K?"
And then, scanning the giant pile of presents - all for you, the voter, of
course - a warm smile comes over her face and she says, "Ah, there it is!"
She tucks the card under the ribbon, the music fades away, and the screen
turns oddly black with a ghostly and gothic "Happy Holidays" message. (In
fact, there's something about the harpsichord music that gives the whole
thing a Vincent Price spookiness.)
Of course, pandering is nothing new in American politics. "If there had been
any formidable body of cannibals in the country," H.L. Mencken complained of
Harry Truman's 1948 presidential campaign, "he would have promised to
provide them with free missionaries fattened at the taxpayers' expense."
But if you take Hillary's ad remotely as seriously as many are taking
Huckabee's, you're left with a disturbing glimpse of not just Hillary's
politics but her vision of government. Her programs, which would cost
billions and billions of dollars by even the most generous accounting, are
simply "gifts" for the American people. No sacrifice, no cost, no strings
attached at all - save the price of your vote.
The implication is that the only thing standing between you and Hillary's
trinkets is a president who doesn't want you to have 'em. This is
monarchical thinking; good ruler throws loaves of bread to the peons and
asks for nothing but love in return.
The truth, as Clinton knows very well, is that it's not so easy. To govern
is to choose. "Give" the people X and it will come at the expense of Y.
Indeed, until recently, Clinton's whole schtick has been to emphasize that
change is hard work, requiring sacrifice and compromise. She'd lecture Iowa
audiences that real change comes from fighting for it. Now that she's on the
ropes, it's all yours for the asking.
It's a profound commentary on the state of our political culture that
Huckabee's ad is the controversial one. Huckabee promises nothing, Hillary
everything.
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