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Sunday, March 16, 2008
Richard H. Collins :: Townhall.com Columnist
Truly a Scorched Earth
by Richard H. Collins
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Democrats have to be asking themselves how they got to this point. Hopes of a quick and definitive primary have disappeared and they find themselves embroiled in a bitter stalemate punctuated with accusations of racism and sexism while the GOP nominee uses the time to raise money and mend fences.

The irony of course is that Hillary Clinton has gone from being the inevitable and early nominee to waging a desperate battle until the convention; from planning an above the fray campaign with feints to the center to throwing everything she can think of at her opponent no matter the ideological coherence or potential damage to the party.

And with the awkward question of what to do with the delegates from Michigan and Florida still left unresolved, Democrats have to be wondering how far and how ugly this can go.

A few things are clear: Hillary won’t give up as long as there is a slim chance for victory and she will use all available weapons. If there is a remotely plausible scenario where she wins, she will hang on. If a tactic has a chance of giving her an advantage, no matter how temporary, she will use it.

What sometimes gets lost in the mythology and nostalgia surrounding the Clintons, particularly among hardcore Democrats, is that their primary mode of politics is to attack in order to survive.

The pattern plays itself out with regularity: they overreach politically or refuse to come clean about ethical lapses; their response is to attack the press and their critics; and the goal quickly switches from accomplishment to survival.

The problem is that they have pulled this off so often that they believe they are invincible; that they really are martyrs to a vast conspiracy. Hillary in particular has never been known to reflect on her actions and there inevitable repercussions. Her first response is always: attack!

What did Hillary do when confronted with questions about land deals and investments in Arkansas? She stonewalled, lied, and attacked the press and her critics all the while pretending that she was completely innocent.

When confronted with the Paula Jones lawsuit what was her reaction? Adamantly refuse to compromise and instead attack and demean Jones in the press until she refused to settle. This fateful choice nearly destroyed her husband’s presidency.

This character attack tactic continued with Kathleen Wiley and others. And yet, when her husband finally admitted lying about Monica Lewinsky to not only the entire country, and his close friends and associates, but to Hillary herself what was her reaction? Immediately organize the political defense of her husband.

In the Senate when she faced what she described as “the hardest decision she has ever had to make” – the decision whether to go to war in Iraq – she cast her vote for war. This could have been a courageous chance to defend the vote as correct despite the subsequent repercussions or to admit she was wrong. Instead, she tied herself in knots trying to rationalize her vote and her subsequent strident anti-war rhetoric and went on to attack Obama’s stand against the war as “mere words.”

Despite her policy wonk persona, and her claims of being qualified to be commander-in-chief, Hillary’s real experience lies not in real life leadership or war and diplomacy but in the political war room. She is an expert not in accomplishment but in the never ending campaign. This is exactly what she is waging today.

In the past when an opponent criticized her or her husband the plan was always to attack their credibility by whatever means necessary and marginalize them whenever possible. She has employed this same tactic against Barack Obama.

But Obama is not Ken Star, or Newt Gingrich, or Rick Lazio. Obama is the first credible African American presidential candidate and even now the likely Democratic nominee. Hillary’s scorched earth style may give her hope of victory but the longer it plays out and the uglier it gets the stronger the likelihood it leaves bitter feelings behind. In the identity politics of the Democratic Party attempts to marginalize Obama are going to be seen as marginalizing his community and raising racial tensions.

Hillary has never shown willingness to compromise and her entire career is based on refusing to face reality and instead fight tooth and nail for survival. Why would she suddenly decide to rise above it all and put her party first?

Deep down this has to worry Democrats.

The Republican response: Pass the popcorn.

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About The Author

Richard H. Collins is the founder of StopHerNow.com, a website dedicated to educating the public about Hillary Clinton’s liberal record.

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The average American voter...
...has known who Hillary is for many years now.If she is elected president the blame goes to the average American voter,not Hillary.

Hillary is who she is,and the average American voters are who they are,so,yes,pass the popcorn.

credible?
I don't think so I agree with Ferraro

Pass no popcorn
Today is the 16th!

Has anyone seen the promised tax returns?

Your article is very old news. Don't ya think?

To Win at All Costs
I truly believe Hillary wants to win at any cost to herself, her family, her party and the country. While not a Democrat, I don't blame the party leaders for being worried. If this scorched earth strategy(good choice of words Mr. Collins) continues to the convention the Democratic Party may be damaged beyond repair. Good luck to all. We will need it before this is over.

Is It Any Wonder
Given the way campaigns are conducted, the media presents the issues and the level of understanding of the typical voter is it any wonder we end up with these types of politicians?

early declaration
The "scorched earth" is the result of declaring for Presidency a year ago. The candidates have long since shown their differences on the issues. Now it is all non-issues. And of course the 24-hour media has to buy into it, or they fall off the radar. So one non-issue after another comes up and the media goes into full-frenzy mode. And the candidates must find more ways to differentiate themselves. The only thing left is - sleaze.

I agree that candidates can declare anytime they want, but they surely can see the devastation that early declaration causes.

Rules are rules
...unless your name is Bush or Clinton.

At first I
thought this extra long campaign period was horrible. Now, I think it's great. Now, the real Hillary, the real Obama and the real McCain will have a chance to be seen up close and personal. Still have a good SEVEN months to go. Hillary.....an attack dog in a skirt. (oops pant suit)

She Might Win
All of a sudden, at the same moment, every talk-radio host and Matt Drudge turn up with the Rev Wright on tape. Is anybody dumb enough to think that that was a coincidence and that it came from anywhere but Clinton Central command? They couldnt push it in the liberal press because liberals dont think what Rev Wright had to say is at all shocking, in fact they agree with him. But Rush and the gang, looking at the lame old dottard who carries the Republican standard in his wrinkled old hand, are more than happy to attack Obama for signing on to a philosophy they dont have to pretend to find offensive.Attacking Wright serves the purpose of crippling a candidate that it would be hard for the aged McLame to beat and helps goad Obama into a similar kamikaze attack on Mrs Bimbo Eruption. I have to go...the popcorn's ready.

wildwest
Of course, those who resort to name calling (oblahma) immediately discredit themselves. So your arguments are hollow.

So are you saying that Obama is racist? For which race? He is half white and half black.

Wilson54
Re "scorched earth" being Collins' words, they're not. "Retreat and scorched earth" is a traditional military strategy and the phrase is often used by historians. It means that those who lose the battle are saying "we are defeated and so we must retreat, but before we go we are going to burn up the farms and everything else, all the food sources, and set the fields afire so the earth, scorched, will be unsuitable for agriculture. These folks may have beaten us, but we will do all possible to make sure they are given a very hard time in their survival".

Dreamer
Those who speak out when they know not of what they speak discredit themselves. You apparently are not familiar with Wildwest. The posts I have seen from that handle are thoughtful and intelligent.

If his only counter to Obama was to call him Oblahma, I would be inclined to agree with you; however, that is not the case. Maybe if you would read more of Wildwest's posts, you would understand that your post was a bit off base.

wildwest
When did I say I was left? Actually, I am center-right. I think that anyone who "holds comtempt" for anyone is a radical, who has no capability to analyze. They use name-calling, black-or-white invectives (liar, stupid, phony, enemy of America, etc) and try to show that everything on "their" side is bad and everything on "our" side is good.

I think that people like you do a great disservice to rank-and-file conservatives. While John McCain tries to build bridges to all Americans, you and your ilk are tearing them down.

What's the difference?
Hussein or hillary?
One will stab America in the back--once.

The other will stab America twice.
We'll dead either way!

McCain is building bridges...
but, not to all Americans, and certainly not to conservatives. His favorite bridge is one to Mexico...a bridge that we should tear down.

What I haven't seen
I've seen barakHUSSEINobama's preacher talk. I've seen the congregation erupt in wild cheering and applause.
I've seen his sister in Kenya. I've seen his father.

I haven't seen his mother.

It's telling. Bill Cosby had a routine where he talked like a dad; teaching his son to run, catch, throw, block tackle... then the boy plays football, gets a scholarship, televised game. He looks at the camera and goes "Hi, Mom!".

Unless he's barakHUSSEINobama.

Arrogance
She will go down bitterly fighting, and, will find everyone to blame but herself. She has no possible means of winning unless she steals it. Every scenerio shows the same thing. The politics of personality and power has damaged both parties. The GOP has had to live with the Bush's, and the Democrats with the Clintons. Neither have shown any great interest in their base, save as to how that base can service their own agenda's for power. The GOP elite foisted Bush, the compassionate (read liberal) conservative on their base because he had the name to make him electable, not because of any evident conservative convictions nor great experience, and the Democratic elite that lined up behind Hillary picked her for precisely the same reasons. Clinton is perfectly willing to throw the democrats under the bus, just as Bush, on issues such as small government, spending, entitlements, and border security threw his own base under the bus. Arrogance marks them both. They have this idea that they owe the base nothing, and that it should do what it's told. How dare it have it's own opinions.

wildwest
I am sorry but it is difficult for me to intelligently converse with someone who uses cheap name-calling. You are using Michael Savage and Ann Coulter talking points. What you don't seem to realize is that Americans are tired of far-right and far-left bickering. For you to criticize McCain shows that you are far-right.

Greg B is partially correct. McCain is certainly not building bridges to all Americans. But he is building them to mainstream conservatives and liberals, just not to far-right conservatives like yourself.

Redlac
IMHO, the conservative "base" is not what it used to be. If evangelicals, war-hawks, corporatists, ear-markers, and immigrant-phobics don't get with the program, then John McCain will lose the election.

The far-righties better get started now, or face irrelevance in the next election.

wildwest
So cheap name-calling is intelligent conversation? I rest my case.

dreamer:
If the right slips into irrelevance, it will be
because we allow moderate-to-left Republicans to
name candidates, and then docilely fall in line
to vote for them anyway... because "at least
he's better than the Democrat!"

Voting for McCain will insure that conservatives
have no voice or party for years to come.

dreamer
what the hell is mainstream conservatism?
your usage certainly is telling- about you that is
the system of belief you call maistream conservatism is accomodation with socialists- at best- you're needed on the huff post - hurry over

the devil we know
You spent an entire article about Hillary's shortcomings and there have been books written about her shennanigans; that is a good thing. At least she is the devil we know.

Obama's nasty list is getting longer, but his true beliefs, strategies, and intentions have not been fully vetted. He's the devil we don't know and that's what has me worried.

I'm not wild about McCain or Hillary, but at least people are voting for them with their eyes wide open as opposed to Obama's crowd who is marching blindly along singing "Kum Ba Yah" and saying "pass the peacepipe."

bullgod / phil
Quote:
"what the hell is mainstream conservatism?"

That pretty much makes my case. The far-righties don't even have a clue what real conservatism is.

Quote:
"Voting for McCain will insure that conservatives
have no voice or party for years to come."

One small correction. It should say far-right conservatives. And deservedly so.

Democrats can solve problem at will
Super Delegates just line up behind one or the other.

As for 'Scorched Earth', it seems to me we have at least a well burned USA courtesy of the most recent and current conservative president.

Quart of milk and a loaf of bread...$5.00. We won't get into the other taxes like super high oil prices. Please do tell me this has nothing to do with the multi-trillion Iraq war.

The world population will be equal soon... at the bottom.

Your vote does not matter.

Hustler
Quote:
"Your vote does not matter".

Sadly so.

dreamer:
If I understand you correctly, you're saying
that conservatives like me deserve no voice
or party.

What, then, defines the GOP for you, if it's
not the party of conservatism? Does it stand
for anything besides "hey, at least we're not
those awful Democrats!"?

That's a poor battle-cry, sir; and a recipe for
a defensive posture in legislative battles and
defeat in elections.

If you're really a center-right Republican as
you claim, you should be doing what you can to
keep conservatives under the so-called "big
tent".

If the GOP can't or won't do that, it may have
outlived its usefulness.

bullgod
Thanks for the insightful reply. Mostly what I get in here is mudslinging.

I guess I was a little aggressive with the 'deservedly so'. However, the far-righties did discuss breaking off and forming another party, and that would have been fine with me. It may take a Democratic term to get the GOP back on its feet, but it's looking like the Dems will win this time anyway, mainly because of the fractures in the Republican party.

I would really like to get the GOP 'under the big tent'. But isn't the far-right agenda a pretty small tent? They refuse to accept McCain under their tent. Perhaps they should get under the bigger tent with the rest of us. It's pretty obvious to me that if Republican-Americans wanted far-right representation, they would have selected Brownback or Thompson. It just seems like most GOP'ers are getting tired of the divisiveness of the radical right wing of the party.

Note to self:
...Go to the polls Nov 4th.

...Write in Mitt Romney for president.

...Vote straight Republican for everyone else in the lessor offices.

bullgod ...
Do Limbaugh, Hannity, Ingraham, Coulter, Levin, et al, speak for you? They don't want McCain and apparently neither do you. These are the pox that are destroying the party. And they are all pundits (ie, their paycheck is more important than substance - controversy stirs up conversation, so to hell with substance).

Now for reality. What choice do we have? At this point "hey, at least we're not
those awful Democrats!" seems like the only choice.

Why do so many Republicans invoke "Reagan Democrats"? I have always assumed that's because Reagan appealed to liberals who were close to center, yet maintained his conservative credentials. Carter and Mondale had no appeal to conservatives who were close to center.

Nam65-66
Why don't you write in Sam Brownback? He is further to the right, and the results will be the same.

The Left of Proportion

"Democrats have to be asking themselves how they got to this point." The dumbocrats are not asking themselves that question, as it is a point of reality they cannot admit. When, for over 40 years, a party has placed all of its hopes in securing, and maintaining power, on individual need, you become subjects of the individuals. The now empowered, and predominant liberal left voice, of their party are not united, but seperate. While each, individual group, faction, of the left wants, and needs a democrat in power, their passions are of seperate segments within our society. The democrats constituency is of proportion, and a result of their actions in placing a trust in the whims of individuals. Over the years they have placed all their hopes in the wants, the needs, and desires, of segments within our population. The passions of individuals hoping for more, and opportunity to gain more. A gift fulfilled buy our republic, and Americans acting to recognize, and correct disparities that limited opportunity. The problem is the left has taken every opportunity of that gift to set up the situation they now face. Plain, and simple, governing according to proportion, and need of individual proportions, only creates a democracy of that proportion.


dreamer
I don't understand your views at all.

True conservatives are the bedrock of the party, and those are the people who do all the grassroots work - manning telephone banks, going door to door, yard signs, etc.... Those are the very people that you are calling "far-right". They aren't far right at all - they are just mainstream conservatives. And the reason why most mainstream conservatives mistrust and dislike McCain should be obvious to you - it's because he has made a career of poking his finger in our eyes, by crossing over to join hands with the enemy on issue after issue.

If you think of the political landscape as having a 'middle', and then year after year the liberal left continues to move the line more and more leftward, over time even mainstream conservatives begin to appear on the far right. But they haven't moved. They are still prolife, profamily, pro-military, pro tax cuts, etc.... But the line has moved so far to the left that people who have always been genuine mainstream conservatives appear, by comparison, to be far right.

And so you are falling into the trap of seeing it from this warped perspective. McCain is not a mainstream conservative. He's a RINO, except on a couple issues. And those issues will hopefully help to distinguish him from the two radical lefties running on the Democrat side. The danger is that because McCain is not really a true conservative, he is likely to be weak in trying to expose the liberalism of his opponent, whoever that may be.


dreamer
Continuing my previous comments:

Regarding a post you made about candidates declaring too early, the thing about Barack and Hillary is that their views are virtually the same on every subject. Both of them are far left. Obama is even further left than Hillary on a couple things, and that's saying something. When they declared isn't relevant on the left side of the aisle, at least it relates to policy differences. Because they are virtually indistinguishable.

Which is why the Republicans could've really benefitted from nominating a genuine conservative, one who could've shown in very stark terms the differences between left and right. McCain's views on some issues don't differ that greatly from a lot of Democrats, making it difficult for him to be able to contrast himself with the Democrat candidate.

annfan
Regarding the declaring too early, you made my point. The issues are completely decided. Now it is just one non-issue after another. It is sickening to watch.

Regarding the far-right. I guess we'll have to disagree. I can't add anything else, my position is as stated. Whatever you call them, the Limbaughs, Hannitys, et al, they are tearing the party apart. The Dems will win easily, and these self-serving pundits will be partly to blame.

Hustler
"...Quart of milk and a loaf of bread...$5.00"

Actually I read an article recently that attributed these outrageous food prices to the depletion of the nation's corn crops so that ethanol can be manufactured. The article said that consumers could expect the cost of food to continue to increase. Maybe the nation's food supply should be left alone.

Behavior and Tongues
Mrs. Bill Clinton scorches the earth with her behavior. B. Hussein scorches with earth with his minister-'mentor's' tongue. It kind of looks like we are all fried! RIP.

KATZ
B. Hussein?

Are you relating Obama to Saddam? That kind of irresponsible behavior is another classic example of what is discrediting and undermining Conservatives. No wonder we are losing respect.

annfan
Maybe we can agree if I change my definitions. Instead of calling them "far-right", I could call them wackos. My response to KATZ above is what I am talking about. Name-calling, unfounded accusations, flaming, etc. are the problems that are causing divisions in the party. The wackos undermine the cause and send our party into shame and disgrace. We need to unite the party, not flame the other party. The issues are all that is needed to defeat the Dems. Let's get behind McCain and defeat the Dems, not sit here and cry about it. After all, he is all we have right now.

dreamer
I have lost no respect and neither has any other conservative. The man's name is B. Hussein; he was given that name, presumably, by his parents. I don't know about any connection with Saddam. Do you? This is not name-calling and it is not irresponsible behavior, it is the truth.

"...he is all we have right now."
Please allow me to correct you: McCain is all YOU have right now.

Some of us want no part of him, just as we want no part of Obama or Clinton.

KATZ
Quote:
"I don't know about any connection with Saddam. Do you?"

DUH.

It is people like you that drag this party through the mud.

Greg B
It is people like you and "B. Hussein" KATZ who are going to get the Dems elected. So go ahead and stay away from the polls. Better yet, write in Sam Brownback.

Go figure.

cut off your nose
Every non-vote for McCain is a vote for the Democratic nominee.

True conservative, far-right conservative, wacko, flamer, RINO, whatever you call yourself, you are voting for a Democrat if you do not vote for McCain.

Go ahead and cut off your nose to spite your face. Just remember when your taxes go sky high and you are getting your "free" health care, who it was that warned you.

The name is dreamer because I dream of a better way. And believe me, voting for Democrats is not a better way.


You are a dreamer...
if you think McCain isn't a Democrat.

OK
That being the case, then there are varying levels of Democrats.

A name is just a name.
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