Then, of course, there was Bill Clinton's double-dealing of the race card
during his impeachment struggle. As my National Review colleague Jay
Nordlinger noted at the time, "Whenever Clinton gets into trouble, he
reaches for black people, as if for a shield."
The first weekend of the Lewinsky scandal, Clinton suddenly invited his old
nemesis Jackson to become the family's spiritual adviser. He summoned black
pastors, radio personalities and a battalion of black lawyers. Slowly - but
oh so deliberately - the message went forth: Impeaching the first black
president was racist. Rep. Charlie Rangel compared him to Martin Luther
King. In response to the Starr report, Rep. Maxine Waters said that she was
"here in the name of my slave ancestors" to thwart the racist assault on
this honorary black man. When asked on BET whether Republicans wanted him
impeached because of his affinity for blacks, Clinton responded, "It may
be," wink wink, "that that's a source of anger and animosity toward me."
Newsweek's Eleanor Clift, the Clintons' reliable water-carrier, got the
memo, saying of the all-white Republican impeachment handlers, "I mean
frankly, all they were missing was white sheets. They're like night riders
going over. This is bigger than Bill Clinton."
Hillary Clinton played similar games, of course, insinuating sexism when
convenient. But even if she didn't, it's worth remembering that she wants
credit for being something akin to a co-president in the '90s. Fine, it's
her record, too.
It's no wonder the Clintons don't like it when Obama and his supporters
cynically complain that attacks on him are racially motivated; they're
dealing his own race card back at him. This surely stings as Bill no doubt
sees this as ingratitude from a constituency he has long taken for granted.
And we'd all be better off if this card were tossed from the deck. But make
no mistake: Nobody should shed any tears for the Clintons.
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