Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Biden Wants to Bury the Clinton Era’s Neoliberalism – Foreign Policy

This spring, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden agreed with his former primary rival Sen. Bernie Sanders to form joint task forces on health care, criminal justice, climate change, the economy, education, and immigration. It is clear from the reports of those bodies, issued earlier this summer, that under a President Biden U.S. domestic policy would shift well to the left of where it would have been under a President Hillary Clinton in 2016.

But none of those committees covered foreign policy as traditionally defined. The ideological flames fanned by Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, and then brought to a white heat by the Black Lives Matter movement, have barely touched foreign affairs, which is often isolated from domestic politics. A Biden promise to return to the status quo ante would be a brain-dead response to a transformed world, but it would not be politically costly.

Yet the assumption that under a President Biden domestic policy would move left, but foreign policy would not, presupposes a distinction between the two that is itself an artifact of an earlier era. Some elements of a Biden foreign policy would almost certainly move left as a dependent variable of domestic policy. Biden uses the expression a foreign policy for the middle class to express the idea that trade and international economic policy must be guided by the benefits they will bring to average Americansrather than to American multinationals. For those of you keeping an ideological scorecard at home, that policy may be taken as the death knell of neoliberalism.

That term neoliberalism, which began as a neutral descriptor before turning pejorative in recent years, describes the faith that a lightly regulated global marketplace in which goods, services, capital, and firms moved across borders with minimal friction would unleash growth that would increase jobs and spread prosperity, especially in the United States, the engine room of globalization. That was the guiding doctrine of the administration of President Bill Clinton. Its high apostles, including Robert Rubin and Larry Summers, served as President Barack Obamas senior economic advisors.

Some of the most interesting thinking at the edges, if not always the center, of Bidens pool of advisors and influences has to do with the shortcomings of that doctrine. Jennifer Harris, an international economist who served in the State Department under Hillary Clinton, argues that from the time of its founding the United States, like all great powers, has used its economic power to advance its geopolitical standingpursuing what she and others call geoeconomics. To that end, U.S. policymakers have adopted a sequence of economic models tailored to the circumstances of their time. The neoliberal model suited an era when the U.S. economy reaped vast benefits from globalizationor at least seemed to. That is no longer seen to be the case: Globalization is now blamed for widening inequality and hollowing out the middle class. Whats more, at a time when China, an unabashed geoeconomics power, is wielding trade and economic relations as a diplomatic weapon, the United States cannot simply repeat shibboleths about the free movement of capital and goods. (Harris and Jake Sullivan, one of Bidens key advisors, laid out this argument earlier this year in an article in Foreign Policy.)

Harris asserts that the American trade officials who negotiated the Trans-Pacific Partnership had so thoroughly internalized neoliberal dogma that they simply took it for granted that increasing the pharmaceutical industrys access to Asian markets was good for the United Stateseven if doing so created neither jobs nor tax revenue in the United States. The war over just how free trade is, Harris said in an interview with Foreign Policy, has become sterile at a time when trade barriers are already at historic lowsor were until President Donald Trump began jacking them back up. So-called trade agreements are, in fact, the modern site of geoeconomic strugglebut arent being acknowledged as such. There is a desire, said Harris, for some kind of economic engagement that improves the lived experience of middle-class Americans.

That desire is now widespread. Mainstream economists having increasingly accepted the evidence that competition with China has led to a net loss of jobs at home, a cost that must be weighed in the balance against cheap televisions and smartphones. Tom Perriello, another progressive who served in the Obama administration, said in an interview that if you expressed doubts about the free market model among Obama economic officials, as he did, you were seen as having horns growing out of your head. Now, he added, if you repeated some of the old chestnuts, People would say, Are you cryogenically frozen?

Once you accept that what is good for overall global growth or even for the stock market is not necessarily good for the American worker, it becomes possible to envision a form of economic nationalism that guides U.S. behavior both at home and abroad. This seems to be what Biden has in mind with his plan for a Made in All of America agenda. The big investments he plans in infrastructure, education, health care, and research and development would be directed to U.S. firms to create jobs at home. A pro-American worker tax and trade strategy would take aggressive trade enforcement actions against China but also eliminate tax incentives for U.S. firms to move operations overseas.

Biden has proposed an ambitious federal effort to bring back global supply chains in sensitive areas including medical supplies and pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, energy grid resilience, and the like. This would entail rebuilding domestic manufacturing capacity in those areas, including through use of the Defense Production Act; making changes in the tax code to encourage domestic production of pharmaceuticals; increasing federal stockpiles of sensitive products; and establishing a new program to fund worker retraining in critical manufacturing fields. Economic nationalism is thus both a response to the rise of China and a means of equipping the United States to win the economic struggle with China.

The new nationalism has a political as well as an economic dimension. Foreign policy has traditionally been the province of experts who tell Americans where national interests lie rather than ask them where they think their own interests lie. This has become increasingly unsustainable, both because deference to expertise is a thing of the past and because the United States no longer seems to be winning the global struggle for supremacy. In 2018 the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace set out to rectify this problem by sending scholars to three places very far from WashingtonOhio, Nebraska, and Coloradoto ask citizens how foreign policy affected their lives. The study, titled U.S. Foreign Policy for the Middle Class, was directed by Salman Ahmed, former head of strategic planning at the Obama National Security Council; among the authors were Jennifer Harris and Jake Sullivan. The project was authorized by Carnegies director, William Burns, a leading candidate for secretary of state in a Biden administration.

Very few of the hundreds of people interviewed had anything to say about the liberal international order or Russias encroachments on Ukraine. On such remote questions most offered stock responses that appeared to depend on what news channel they watched. But they had a great deal to say about China, trade, jobs, and foreign investment. The answers varied greatly both across and within states, but few of them sounded like Washingtons nightmare of a nationalistic heartland. Even in hard-pressed Ohio manufacturing towns, the authors note, people express strong support for free trade and accept that technological advances and other market forces will continue to transform employment in their area. However, they insist on fair trade and additional measures that would give them a fighting chance.

The answers were mildly encouraging, if not terribly surprising; the most important aspect of the project may have been the decision to ask the question. A sustainable foreign policy must be rooted in the real interests of the great mass of Americans. When those interests change, so must the policy.

Yet the very different currents of opinion within the Democratic Party mean that one can hardly expect a consensus to form around the question of what foreign policy best advances the interests of average Americans. Biden is a foreign-policy traditionalist to whom the language of geoeconomics is alien; the same is true of almost all the people around him. Progressives hope theyll move beyond those instincts. Perriello, who like Harris has many ties to Bidens team, would like to see global agreements on antitrust laws, corporate taxation, and even minimum wages in order to prevent a race to the bottom. An international embrace of Americas Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, prohibiting the weaponized corruption practiced by nations like Russia, which uses its vast oil and gas wealth to pay off friends and blackmail enemies, would, he says, do a helluva lot more for free trade than current trade agreements would.

Any president who adopted so ambitious an agenda would face enormous resistance from Americas own allies. Low-tax havens such as Ireland will not easily agree to a program of corporate-tax equalization; export powers such as Germany will bridle at a confrontational policy towards China. A program of global regulation might, in any case, prove too outr for Biden and his senior team. Perriello, like Harris, places a great deal of hope in Sullivan, a liaison between the two camps who has, he says, taken the three years out of power to grapple authentically and deeply with the things they got wrong during the Clinton campaign. Sullivan officially shed his neoliberal skin in a 2019 essay in Democracy in which he called for a new old Democratic platform focusedyou will not be surprised to hearon rescuing and rebuilding the American middle class.

New old Democrat sounds like just the right hat for Joe Bidens silver head. Should he win in November, we will see if he is prepared to wear it.

This is the second of a weekly series reporting on Joe Bidens foreign-policy vision. Ready the first installment here.

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Biden Wants to Bury the Clinton Era's Neoliberalism - Foreign Policy

Trump Jr jokes Hillary Clinton poisoned Jeffrey Epstein after her jibe at his dad for disinfectants suggestion – POP TIMES UK

Donald Trump Jr. threw some shade at Hillary Clinton on Saturday, April 25.

He joked to his Twitter followers that she had been behind the death of the disgraced financier and pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The comment was in response to Clintons jab at his father POTUS Donald Trump for his sarcastic suggestion that coronavirus could be treated with disinfectant.

Clinton had shared, Please dont poison yourself because Donald Trump thinks it could be a good idea. In response to this, Donald Trump Jr. shared, We know, we know poison is reserved for a long list of people like Jeffrey Epstein and servers. Am I right? along with a wink emoji.

Epstein was mysteriously found dead in his cell at the Manhattan Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) on August 10 last year.Epstein, 66, had escaped significant jail time following his initial conviction in 2008 following a plea deal he struck with the then-Florida US Attorney Alex Acosta but was once again arrested in July 2019 on federal charges of sex trafficking of minors in Florida and New York.

Epstein was found unconscious in his prison cell with injuries to his neck. The guards who were supposed to be conducting regular checks on Epsteins well-being fell asleep on the job and security camera footage from outside Epsteins cell was surprisingly also not usable.

It is believed that Hillarys husband, former President Bill Clinton had been a frequent flyer on Epsteins private jet with logs showing that Bill had taken at least 26 trips on the Lolita Express, Fox News reveals.

Many celebrities, politicians, and businessmen have been accused of fraternizing with the pedophile- including the president himself.

However, the presidents lawyer, Alan Garten shared in a statement that the two were never friends. There was no relationship between Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump. They were not friends and they did not socialize together, Garten revealed.

The president had made the remark about disinfectants during a press conference on Thursday, April 23. During the press conference, he seemed to suggest that coronavirus could be cured by using UV light inside the body and by injecting disinfectants.

His closest aides who were shocked at his comments blamed his remarks on an eagerness for the president to deliver some positive news, NBC reveals. The comments were subject to global mockery with many health experts quickly pointing out the dangers of consuming disinfectant.Even disinfectant manufacturers like Lysol were forced to issue a statement where they warned their customers not to try such methods and warned against consuming cleaning products as a cure for the deadly coronavirus.

On April 25, POTUS declared that the White House news conferences were not worth the time and effort as the Lamestream Media asks nothing but hostile questions.He took to Twitter to call out fake news and cancel WH press briefings. What is the purpose of having White House News Conferences when the Lamestream Media asks nothing but hostile questions, & then refuses to report the truth or facts accurately, he wrote.

They get record ratings, & the American people get nothing but Fake News. Not worth the time & effort! he added.

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Trump Jr jokes Hillary Clinton poisoned Jeffrey Epstein after her jibe at his dad for disinfectants suggestion - POP TIMES UK

Michigan supporters celebrate Trumps nomination for a second term on last night of RNC – MLive.com

SAGINAW, MI -- Supporters in an important Michigan swing county celebrated Donald Trumps acceptance of the Republican presidential nomination Thursday with a roadside party.

Trumps supporters -- some of whom did not identify as Republicans -- gathered along one of the major streets in Saginaw to wave signs, jam out to politically-themed parody songs and eat a well-cooked hotdog courtesy of Jim Conger, a retired GM worker. Thursdays event was attended by several retired autoworkers and people tied to the manufacturing industry, who said Trumps focus on blue-collar jobs earned their support for a second term.

Voters in Saginaw County were critical to Trumps surprise win in Michigan four years ago. The county is among a dozen that Trump flipped in 2016 after they previously voted for the Obama-Biden ticket twice, and Trump was the first Republican to win Saginaw County since 1984.

Pamela Mueller is a retired GM worker who made the trip south from Bay County, which also flipped for Trump after a 32-year history of voting for Democrats. Mueller said she hasnt identified as a Republican until recently, but had been hoping Trump would run for president long before his 2016 campaign.

Hes a get it done man, Mueller said. Plain and simple: I love Trump.

Mueller and her husband Rod last saw Trump in 2015, when he drew a sell-out crowd of more than 2,000 people to the Birch Run Expo Center in Saginaw. The coronavirus has cut short the presidents ability to hold large rallies in Michigan this year, but organizers of Thursdays grassroots event said theyre more than happy to keep the energy up for him.

Read more: Vice President Mike Pence to visit Traverse City Friday after Republican National Convention

Debra Ell, director of the Mid-Michigan Trump Republicans, said her organization has played a key role in building on Trumps base since 2016. She said many Democratic voters were propelled toward Trump due to his message on trade and their aversion to Hillary Clinton.

Michigan has always been blue, so it was like how do we reach out to these Democrats? Well, we had the gift of Hillary in 2016, Ell said. Union voters would come in and say theres no way in hell Im going to vote for Hillary Clinton.

Trump did earn more Saginaw County votes than Mitt Romney in 2012, but Democratic votes there dropped by 9,985 from 2012-16. Trump won Michigan by only 10,704 votes, a narrow margin that makes swing counties critical to the presidents hopes of winning the state again in 2020.

During a Wednesday Trump campaign event in Saginaw, a field organizer told residents outside the countys Republican Party headquarters that Saginaw is a must-win county for the president.

U.S. Rep. John Moolenaar, R-Midland, was also there to drum up support for Trump. He said hes seen more enthusiasm than at this point in 2016, particularly because Trump made good on his campaign promise to renegotiate a North American free trade deal with Canada and Mexico.

Democratic nominee Joe Biden is also keeping a focus on autoworkers in Michigan. The campaign is leaning on Michigan surrogates to highlight his work during the 2009 auto bailout. Biden sat down with a member of the United Auto Workers union and other middle-class workers during a segment of the Democratic National Convention last week.

I tell you what, the future of autoworkers in America, and I really believe this, can be as bright as it was back in the late 40s, 50s, Biden said last week. Simple reason, its an iconic industry, its an American industry. We made it. We made it.

Rick Riebschleger, a Republican candidate for Saginaw County sheriff, said Bidens work during the auto bailout doesnt impress him.

The only fresh air weve had for decades is President Trump, Riebschleger said. The Democrats are like balled tires. It doesnt matter how many times you put them on your tire or where -- they wont help you in the snowstorm.

Thats not to say Saginaw is solely home to Trump voters. Demonstrators attracted a fair number of boos and middle fingers as well as honks of support from passersby. One driver blared the Nipsey Hussle song F*** Donald Trump, which elicited a mild reaction from the crowd.

Ell acknowledged Biden doesnt inspire the same negative feelings as Clinton but also said Republicans dont trust Biden to govern as a moderate. She said the Democratic Party of John F. Kennedys era -- which stood up for the little guy -- is gone.

The Republican Party isnt the same either, Ell said. Its now Trumps party.

Ell said Trumps rise to the head of the GOP has caused some internal resistance. Several Republicans spoke at last weeks Democratic National Convention against Trump, and former Michigan Republican Party director Jeff Timmer is part of a big-dollar effort to help Biden.

They dont realize we are the party; its not a thing, its not an entity, Ell said. Its the heart of the people, and our heart is with Trump.

READ MORE ON MLIVE:

Why Michigan Trump supporters are sticking with the president in 2020

Kamala Harris highlights voter suppression in virtual meeting with Michigan Black women

Michigan Trump campaign teases positive vision for Republican National Convention

Bidens socially distant campaign feels strong in Michigan after Democratic Party rebuilt itself to beat Trump

Biden campaign aims to blame Trump for economic impact of COVID-19 in Michigan

In must-win Michigan, Trump campaign takes fight door to door as polls show Biden with strong lead

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Michigan supporters celebrate Trumps nomination for a second term on last night of RNC - MLive.com

Hillary Clinton to give online talk as part of Bar Harbor college’s summer institute – Bangor Daily News

Former Democractic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton will make a virtual appearance at College of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor this month as one of the guest speakers at the schools annual Champlain Institute.

Clinton is expected to address the online gathering live at 5 p.m. Monday, July 27. She is one of 19 speakers, some of whom will appear together, scheduled to address the Institute, which is being held entirely online this year from July 27-31 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The focus of this years institute will be on the upcoming national elections on Nov. 3, including a focus on U.S. diplomacy, climate change, income inequality, national security, the Second Amendment and the Supreme Court.

Clinton served as First Lady when her husband, President Bill Clinton, served in the White House from 1993 through 2001, before serving as a U.S. senator from New York and as Secretary of State in President Barack Obamas administration.

Other speakers include former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell, federal appeals Judge Douglas Ginsburg, native Somali journalist (and now Mainer) Abdi Nor Iftin, New York Times Assistant Managing Editor Sam Sifton, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Frances FitzGerald and writer Roxana Robinson, among others.

The talks are free and accessible to the public, but advance registration is required and can be done online. More information about the 2020 institute is available on COAs website.

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Hillary Clinton to give online talk as part of Bar Harbor college's summer institute - Bangor Daily News

Hillary Clinton thinks she would handle coronavirus pandemic better than Trump, would beat him in November – FOX 10 News Phoenix

ST LOUIS, MO - OCTOBER 09: Democratic presidential nominee former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) and Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump listen during the town hall debate at Washington University on October 9, 2016 in St Louis, Miss

Former 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton believes she would have handled the coronavirus pandemic better than President Trump, and that she would win if she was on the ballot this November.

"We wouldn't have been able to stop the pandemic at our borders the way that Trump claimed in the beginning, but we sure could have done a better job saving lives, modeling better, more responsible behavior, she said in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter.

I don't think we necessarily should have had as deep an economic assault on livelihoods and jobs as we have, she said. So I know I would have done a better job."

The former secretary of state lost to Trump in 2016, but the feud between the two has dragged on long past election day. Trump regularly mentions and attacks his former rival, while Clinton has published a book and regularly speaks about her grievances related to the election and how Trump has handled his time in the White House.

In particular, she has stoked conversation about how she believes disinformation, particularly from the Russians, influenced the outcome of the election. It was a theme she returned to in the interview where she said Facebook needed to be held accountable for the role it played.

Facebook has to be held accountable because they trafficked in conspiracy, they trafficked in misinformation, they trafficked in Russian disinformation, and they've got to be held accountable because we're gonna have another election, and everybody should know what's at stake and then cast their vote accordingly," she said.

Asked about whether she believes Russians influenced vote counts, she said that there are still a lot of unanswered questions about what they were doing probing registration bases and what they were doing probing election systems.

So far, that has not been nailed down, she said. But the influence certainly has."

She went on to say that while it is not on the cards for her to run for the presidency again, she believes she would beat him in November if she was on the ballot.

Yes, she said. But I think people believe that this is a referendum on him."

Get updates on this story at FOXNews.com

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Hillary Clinton thinks she would handle coronavirus pandemic better than Trump, would beat him in November - FOX 10 News Phoenix