Ryan Cooper writes:
Much of the argument in the Democratic Party primary has
hinged on who is more electable.
Hillary Clinton, as the more moderate
candidate, has a somewhat more plausible case on this score — though at the
moment she does a bit worse than her opponent Bernie Sanders in head-to-head
polling matchups.
But consider a separate question: Would Clinton actually
be a good president? No, argues Doug Henwood in his book My Turn: Hillary Clinton Targets the Presidency.
As Daniel Davies observes, it provides a brief,
reasonable survey of the case against returning Clinton to the presidency, free
of the right-wing dreck clogging up the internet.
The whole book is worth
reading, but the main argument can be grouped under three headings.
1. Clinton is far too aggressive with the use of military
force.
Because the American
president has a nearly free hand when it comes to foreign policy, this is the
most important part of the anti-Clinton brief.
Her history suggests she would
be more aggressive than President Obama (who hasn't been much of a dove
himself).
Most notoriously, she voted for the war in Iraq — even
endorsing the Bush administration's false accusation that Saddam Hussein had
given "aid, comfort, and sanctuary to terrorists, including al
Qaeda members" — but it's been a consistent theme even after
that gruesome catastrophe.
As secretary of state, she supported escalation in
Afghanistan, pushed hard for the Libyan intervention, and lobbied for a
continued military presence in Iraq.
She was on the hawkish edge of internal
Obama administration debates on Syria, plotting with then-CIA Director David
Petraeus to arm rebels there (though the plan was rejected by the president).
She also worked to prevent the return of leftist Manuel
Zelaya to the presidency of Honduras after a military coup in 2009, proposing to send longtime Clinton hack Lanny
Davis as a back channel to the new regime.
She also recently praised Plan Colombia, a drug war military
effort whose export around Latin America has been utterly disastrous.
Yet even though she lost the 2008
primary by a hair largely because of her vote for the Iraq war, Clinton has
continued to attack Sanders from the right on foreign policy.
A few days ago,
she tore into him for suggesting that the U.S. ought to
consider gradually normalizing relations with Iran, as it has with Cuba. It
suggests real ideological commitment — and in a bad way.
Finally, while Clinton touts her experience on foreign
policy, it doesn't seem to have produced many results when it counted.
While
Clinton's own list of accomplishments at the State Department is rather thin remember the "pivot to
Asia"?), her immediate successor John Kerry has hit a succession of
diplomatic home runs: helping get chemical weapons out of Syria, re-opening relations with Cuba after half a century of rupture,
pushing through a nuclear deal with Iran, in addition to a host of smaller victories.
2. The whole Clinton operation is
extremely shady.
Henwood's
book documents many instances of suspect conduct by the Clinton Foundation, but
perhaps the most spectacular example is the tangled story of how Bill Clinton reportedly helped
a Canadian mining magnate named Frank Giustra buy uranium mining operations
from the dictator of Kazakhstan, who then donated tens of millions to the
Clinton Foundation.
Giustra sold out in 2007, but the same firm was later
bought piecemeal by some Russians with government ties.
The sale needed
approval from a U.S. government body on which Hillary Clinton sat as secretary
of state, because it involved uranium assets in the U.S.
They got the approval, while the company
chairman routed $2.35 million in donations to the Clinton Foundation, and a
Russian investment bank with ties to the uranium company paid Bill $500,000 for
a speech.
Even that summary isn't doing the story justice. There's no evidence
of an explicit quid pro quo here, but suffice to say it looks bad.
Clinton has raised millions in campaign contributions
from all sorts of rich industries, particularly Wall Street. She's also profited
personally,collecting millions in speaking fees from several huge finance players.
One
wonders what that could possibly be for, if not political access.
The still ongoing email scandal is still another example of a classic
Clinton behavior: extreme secrecy and paranoia.
She despises the press (with some justification, to be fair), and
instinctively treads right up to the line of acceptable behavior for a public
official.
Though the story has not revealed any serious wrongdoing, it consumes
political attention.
One of the underrated benefits of the Obama presidency is
his squeaky-clean personal conduct.
While I find much of the press' behavior
towards the Clintons weirdly obsessive at best, they would not have so much
grist for the scandal mill if Clinton were more scrupulous about following the
rules.
A Clinton presidency is almost guaranteed to be a continual parade of
suspicious stories and scandals.
3. General Clinton ideology.
The Clintons were at the forefront of the turn towards neoliberalism in the Democratic Party, the most disastrous of which was the evisceration of traditional welfare in 1996, which increased extreme poverty in this country by 150 percent. Not so long ago she sounded like Rand Paul when speaking about poor people. She neither admits this was a mistake nor outlines a plan to reverse the damage.
Aside from the welfare debacle, Clinton has a long history of being pro-deregulation, anti-labor (she spent six years on the board of viciously anti-union Walmart, and did not defend worker organizing once), and advocating for draconian anti-crime policy.
Though she (like most other Democratic centrists) has come around on financial regulation and in other areas, the journey has been incomplete and halting at best. Instead of straightforward social insurance, the signature
Clinton policy remains fiddly little tax credits that accomplish little and add to the tax system's already mind-crushing complexity.
While her platform does have some good stuff in it, particularly on police reform and drug abuse, as Henwood writes, "Little that Hillary says about policy can be believed with any confidence."
Given her campaign's dishonest triangulation against single payer and taxation in general, it's hard to believe that Clinton would go to the mat for the working class, particularly when it means jacking up taxes on the rich.
The Clintons were at the forefront of the turn towards neoliberalism in the Democratic Party, the most disastrous of which was the evisceration of traditional welfare in 1996, which increased extreme poverty in this country by 150 percent. Not so long ago she sounded like Rand Paul when speaking about poor people. She neither admits this was a mistake nor outlines a plan to reverse the damage.
Aside from the welfare debacle, Clinton has a long history of being pro-deregulation, anti-labor (she spent six years on the board of viciously anti-union Walmart, and did not defend worker organizing once), and advocating for draconian anti-crime policy.
Though she (like most other Democratic centrists) has come around on financial regulation and in other areas, the journey has been incomplete and halting at best. Instead of straightforward social insurance, the signature
Clinton policy remains fiddly little tax credits that accomplish little and add to the tax system's already mind-crushing complexity.
While her platform does have some good stuff in it, particularly on police reform and drug abuse, as Henwood writes, "Little that Hillary says about policy can be believed with any confidence."
Given her campaign's dishonest triangulation against single payer and taxation in general, it's hard to believe that Clinton would go to the mat for the working class, particularly when it means jacking up taxes on the rich.
So while Clinton would surely be better than
whatever crawls out of the Republican primary swamp, her presidency would be a
step back for the nation as a whole.
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