Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Report: Least Patriotic States Voted for Hillary Clinton – Washington Free Beacon

AP

BY: Madeleine Weast June 27, 2017 11:34 am

The seven least patriotic states voted for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election, according to a new study released on Tuesday.

New Jersey was ranked the least patriotic state, followed by Illinois, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, Connecticut, and California,according to a report from WalletHub.

Each of these seven least patriotic states voted for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016.

States were graded on a 100-point scale stemming from data comparing 13 key indicators of patriotism based on military and civic engagement.A score of 100 would represent the highest level of patriotism.

The data factored inmilitary enlistees, active-duty military personnel,veterans, and share of adults who voted in the 2016 presidential election.

The lowest ranked state, New Jersey, received a patriotism score of 27.46, followed by Illinois with a score of 28.46. Clinton won by over 50 percent in both states.

New York garnered a patriotic score of 30.59, and California scored a 37.70. In both states, Clinton won with almost 60 percent of the overall vote.

Red states ranked higher in patriotism overall than blue states. Red states had an average score of 28.55, while blue states had an average rank of 23.47.

The top three most patriotic states were Virginia, Alaska, and Wyoming.

The data was collected from the U.S. Census Bureau, Department of Veterans Affairs, Defense Manpower Data Center, Corporation for National and Community Service, Peace Corps, Military OneSource, United States Elections Project, Administrative Office of the United States Courts, and Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement.

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Report: Least Patriotic States Voted for Hillary Clinton - Washington Free Beacon

Clinton’s Slow-Motion Strikeout – Jacobin magazine

How I Lost by Hillary Clinton sets out to explain Clintons 2016 defeat in Clintons voice. The book presents a collection of Hillary Clintons speeches and emails, originally published by Wikileaks, annotated by journalist Joe Lauria.

Lauria relies on a series of addresses to Goldman Sachs and at various industry events, emails from the Wikileaks Podesta release from last fall, and public campaign statements to argue that Clinton was the victim of her own insider elitism and that her elitism is to blame for her defeat.

Ultimately Lauria doesnt make a compelling argument as to how Clinton became so widely disliked by Americans of all political stripes, and how that ultimately resulted in her defeat. But How I Lost succeeds in illustrating why she was widely disliked and distrusted, showing Clinton to be completely removed from ordinary Americans.

Clintons public persona has been so thoroughly managed and filtered through focus groups that its impossible to know how genuine her personality is, nor is it easy to grasp what she really believes politically.

But as these leaks show, the Democrats promises ran aground against the reality of her private statements. Voters instead chose the more fantastical promises of Donald Trump, a man who might actually be dumb enough to believe his own bullshit.

Still, as Lauria writes, Clinton [did] not see the rise of right-wing populism in the US as being connected with the elitism she and her backers represented.

One of the long-running national criticisms of Clinton, stretching back to her run for the nomination in 2008, was that she was too tied into the inside-the-Beltway money pipeline.

It was true that Clinton was reflexively invested in the institutions she had protected for her entire public career. As she told the American people during an October 13, 2015, primary debate with Bernie Sanders and other opponents, every so often the US government needs to save capitalism from itself.

This tone-deaf approach to the aftermath of the economic crisis was nothing new. Clinton had delivered remarks to that effect two years earlier to Goldman Sachs in October 2013. Then, Clinton suggested the victims of the financial crash of 2008 misunderstood the situation completely. People were yelling at her everywhere she went, she said, because the conventional wisdom was wrong.

Tellingly, Lauria writes of those comments, she names only two victims of Wall Streets perfidy: Wall Street itself and governmentnot ordinary Americans.

Clintons inability to conceive of new ideas and her lack of any interest in turning the clock back or pointing fingers at those who destroyed the economy meant she was exceptionally vulnerable to a challenge from someone like Sanders in the Democratic primary or Trump in the general election.

Clinton refused to accept the electorates desire for a new economic direction in a country where the majority of wealth recovery since the recession had gone to the top. People wanted a change, but Clinton wouldnt or couldnt give it to them.

In a fiercely anti-establishment year for both parties, it was risky for the Democrats to put up a quintessential insider like Clinton up against the demagogue Trump, Lauria writes.

Voters felt Clinton was neither as real nor as honest as Trump. They believed she was part of the elite, and nothing she had done in the years leading up to the election disproved their view of the candidate.

Her insistence on giving speeches to the banking institutions that had destroyed the economy only years later for fees in the hundreds of thousands was not a good look. Especially not for someone considering another run at the White House.

And the existence of the private email server she had as secretary of state was a perfect example of Clintons arrogance and disdain for playing by the rules. Using the server was a blatant violation of protocol, but Clinton didnt care.

The server, described by Clinton ally Neera Tanden as fucking insane, would be a constant theme on the campaign trail and an easy attack line from Trump (Sanders did nothing with the information during the primary, instead providing cover as the scandal grew. At a debate in October 2015, he told the crowd that he was sick of hearing about Clintons damn emails).

Beyond simply exposing the candidate as careless with sensitive intelligence, the server revealed Clinton for a career Washington insider, unwilling to play by the same rules as the rest of the country.

Lauria hammers this point home by referring to the easily exploitable cellphone hacks exposed by the Snowden leaks.

If Clinton knew about that crack in the countrys cybersecurity armor, Lauria wonders, how could she have thought using a private server in her home was a good idea? And if she hadnt been a member of the ruling elite, is there any doubt she would have faced grave legal consequences for her actions?

Of course not and thats the point. After all, no substantial punishment was given to General David Petraeus when he leaked classified information to his lover-biographer. Clinton was secure in the knowledge that her behavior would have no legal ramifications.

But there were political ramifications for Clinton. When Clintons documents were released by Wikileaks during October and November of 2016, the nation found itself staring into the insular world of a candidate representing the political and financial elite.

The existence of the server alongside the unrelated Podesta email leaks turned her damn emails into a maelstrom of corruption and scandal that the candidate would not be able to get out from under. Clinton found herself on the defensive where she would remain for the majority of the campaign.

Lauria could have used the data he collected to great effect by providing some perspective how specifically the information leaks damaged the candidate.

In the end, however, Lauria isnt able or willing to tie all the information together to make a cogent and compelling argument of the how behind the loss. He doesnt draw the reader into the kind of campaign intrigue that Shattered, the recent gossipy tell-all from the trail, was able to deliver.

Instead, Lauria wants us to interpret the speeches and comments he compiles as the explanation for Clintons loss, full stop. Clintons candidacy and campaign ultimately collapsed, Lauria argues, because the personality at the center of it was so obviously disingenuous and corrupt.

Clintons own words in this book portray an economic elitist and a foreign policy hawk divorced from the serious concerns of ordinary Americans, Lauria writes.

But how that elitism translated into her electoral downfall is never fully explained. It simply is.

Clintons elitism played a role, and not an insubstantial role, in turning voters off her campaign. But by not connecting that elitism to the many other factors that helped determine the outcome of the election, How I Lost fails to live up to the promise of its title.

The fact that Trump was able to defeat Clinton handily in November surely speaks to a widespread dissatisfaction with the politics of the center. In 2016, voters wanted something different than the same old, same old of Washington. The defeat of Clintons campaign threw this dissatisfaction into harsh relief. This, at least, is one lesson we can take from How I Lost.

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Clinton's Slow-Motion Strikeout - Jacobin magazine

Republicans take tips from Obama, Hillary Clinton on how not to pass a bill – Washington Examiner

With the Social Security Act of 1935 and the Civil Rights Acts of 1964-65, Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson gave us precedents as to how to behave when trying to pass historic and world-changing measures.

First of all, you don't do it quickly, but slowly and carefully. Second, you don't move before you know you appeal to a broad base of people. Third, you have to make it bipartisan, because nothing that isn't has moral authority. There is no type of reform that does not cause disruption, and bipartisanship is protection of sorts from the accusations of callousness that will surely ensue.

Hillarycare in 1993-94, Obamacare in 2009-2010 and Republicare now broke and are breaking all three of these guidelines. And they have given rise to the need for a fourth: They were all done for political, not policy, reasons, not to solve a crisis but to scratch an ideological itch on the part of their bases and make their own leaders look good.

There was no need or demand for a healthcare bill in 1993 or 2009, and there isn't at present. But the Democrats had two bright young wunderkinds who wanted to vault themselves into FDR country. They thought a really big bill would probably do it, and it would placate their base, which should not be confused with the voice of the people. This time, Republicans have been in a rage since 2010 over how Obamacare passed more than for what was in it. They have been longing to push repeal down the throats of the Democrats in the same manner and spirit in which the bill had been pushed down their own.

Vanity, spite and revenge can be understood, but they are really bad reasons to fiddle around with the fortunes and lives of millions of people, especially when you have no idea what you're doing at all. Revenge can be sweet, but also short-sighted. And it's hardly revenge if you replace one badly planned and ruinous bill with another, that may bring upon you the same kind of ruin that has been your enemies' fate.

Let us recall where the Democrats stood when they began pushing healthcare in 2009. They had total control of the national government, a filibuster-proof Senate majority, and thirty state houses. In 2010, they lost the House in a landslide, and their Senate supermajority vanished. In 2014, the first election after the bill went into effect, the Senate went, too. In 2016, the first national election since the bill was enacted, they lost the White House too. Their bench was depleted at all of its levels, and their lawmaking power disappeared in all but a few states.

In 2010, Democrats thought the heavy lifting was in passing the bill, and that after that people would love it, or at least become used to it. They never did. The Republicans now believe the same thing, though their plan is less popular now than the Democrats' ever was. And that was before they received the equivalent of the 380,000 negative ads that they had flung at the Democrats in 2010.

Republicans should retreat for the moment under cover of fog, like the armies at Dunkirk, accepting that now' may arrive just a little bit later. In the meantime, they have to read up about Johnson and Roosevelt, to learn how these things should be done.

Noemie Emery, a Washington Examiner columnist, is a contributing editor to The Weekly Standard and author of "Great Expectations: The Troubled Lives of Political Families."

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Republicans take tips from Obama, Hillary Clinton on how not to pass a bill - Washington Examiner

Hillary Clinton Delivers Speech Tuesday at Chicago Conference – NBC Chicago (blog)

WATCH LIVE

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton returns to Chicago Tuesday as a featured speaker at the American Library Association's annual conference.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton returns to Chicago Tuesday as a featured speaker at theAmerican Library Association's annual conference.

Sponsored by Simon & Schuster, Clinton's speech likely will touch on her forthcoming illustrated children's book "It Takes a Village," inspired by Clinton's 1996 book of the same title, being published by the company in September.

The publishing house notes the book "will be published for the first time by Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers as an all-new, full-color picture book illustrated by two-time Caldecott Honor recipient Marla Frazee."

Why Hillary Clinton's Outfit on Inauguration Day Made a Bold Statement

Clinton speaks at 10 a.m. at the conference at McCormick Place. The cost to attend the speech is included in the conference registration.

She joins a list of notable speakers at the event, including Sarah Jessica Parker who servesas honorary chair of the ALA's new Book Club Central.

The conference runs through Tuesday.

Michelle Obama Reveals 'Secret' No One Noticed About Barack

Published at 2:13 PM CDT on Jun 26, 2017 | Updated at 3:54 PM CDT on Jun 26, 2017

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Hillary Clinton Delivers Speech Tuesday at Chicago Conference - NBC Chicago (blog)

Where Would We Be Politically If Hillary Clinton Had Won? – NYMag – New York Magazine

With Hillary Clinton in the Oval Office, one things for sure: Nobody would be obsessing over the Sixth Congressional District of Georgia. Photo-Illustration: Daily Intelligencer; Photos: Getty Images

In a year like 2017, it is probably a good thing for Democrats to maintain some perspective on what continues to feel like the baleful consequences of a presidential election that went horribly wrong. Whether or not the election of Donald J. Trump was due to the mistakes of Democrats, the intervention of Russian hackers, media distortions of the news and the issues, or just bad luck, it has depressed and/or frightened many millions of people, and made others long for the Hillary Clinton presidency that might have been.

But it is worth remembering that a Hillary Clinton presidency would hardly have been a walk in the park. Indeed, you can make a pretty good case that aside from the ever-present possibility that we will awaken to some sudden presidential decision far more distressing than a poorly written tweet, the actual facts on the ground in Washington might not be completely different had the small group of Rust Belt voters who lifted Trump to the White house changed their minds or stayed at home.

Five months into the Trump presidency, his legislative accomplishments (other than ratifying the predictable reversal of very late regulations issued by Obama) are virtually nil. That would change, of course, if Congress passes the American Health Care Act but the bill might go off the rails yet. In any case, a President HRC facing a Republican Congress would have almost certainly had the same dismal five-month legislative record.

Trump has proposed a draconian budget that he cannot enact without Democratic votes. Clinton would have proposed a much more generous budget that she would not have been able to enact without Republican votes. The odds of fiscal gridlock, a government shutdown, or a debt default would have been roughly the same with a Democratic president. The same Federal Reserve Board would have been shepherding the economy, subject to the same global trends.

The 45th president and his closest associates are under constant scrutiny and investigation. If the 45th presidents name had been Clinton, she, too would be under constant scrutiny and investigation, though probably from Congress exclusively rather than Congress and the FBI and a special counsel.

The one very tangible counterfactual difference between a Trump and Clinton presidency is that in the latter there would be no Justice Gorsuch on the Supreme Court. But there might not be a new progressive Justice, either, given the vows of many Republicans to block her from placing anyone on the Court. Certainly the names of lower federal court nominees would be different, but then again, a President Clinton would not have been in a position to impose her own judges on a Republican Senate, or secure a nuclear option to make their ratification easier.

However you weigh the differences between the real and the alternative 2017 at this point, one thing is very sure: The short-term electoral prospects for both parties would be very different. Since midterm elections almost always cut against the party controlling the White House (a tendency that grows stronger when that party has been in control for an extended time), it is very unlikely wed be talking about a Democratic wave election in 2018, or of a Democratic House as a realistic goal. Instead, wed probably be talking about the odds of Republicans getting to a supermajority of 60 seats in the Senate. They have the landscape for it, and absent the kind of antiWhite House factor that has Republicans worried today, theyd probably have no reason to fear significant House losses.

More immediately, its a lead-pipe cinch the whole political world would not be obsessing over a special election in the Sixth District of Georgia right now. Instead of four special elections (and another one in Alabama later this year) in Republican districts caused by Donald Trump hiring their incumbent members, wed probably have a different special election landscape. Since congressional Democrats are relatively well concentrated in urban areas, and any Clinton Cabinet would have been far more diverse than Trumps, the odds are high any vacancies would have been in heavily Democratic districts with sizable minority voting blocs. There might well be no competitive special elections at all. Even if they did exist, they would not feature Jon Ossoff and Karen Handel and Greg Gianforte and Rob Quist. Ben Jacobs would probably still have his glasses.

Its much harder to game out what the mood would be like in the two parties had Clinton won. There would be no Democratic resistance, and while restive populists would be watching HRC closely, at this point theres no reason to think Democrats would not have remained relatively united. Who knows what Donald Trump would have done in defeat? It is clearer that the many, many Republicans who opposed him or kept him at a distance until he won would have by now exerted enormous energy in trying to elbow him into retirement, preempt his message, and win over his following.

In any event, it is useful to reflect on the things that might have been, yet might not have been all that different from our real-life 2017, along with the things that might have turned the world upside down. You will never be able to convince the passionate people who cheered or wept on the night of November 8, 2016, that the turn of events we all witnessed were not fateful for the republic. But over time, it may all balance out especially if the glass ceiling HRC has tried so hard to break is finally shattered soon, as in 2020.

Following the CBO report, four Republicans said they wont even let Mitch McConnells bill be brought to the floor for debate.

The two men did exchange barbsperhaps jokinglyat a hedge fund dinner. They were not talking about Bidens deceased son.

Meanwhile, coal production is on the rise.

On one hand: 22 million people losing coverage. On the other: extra deficit savings to fund sweeteners.

He was called a snake and an evil man when jury selection began for his securities-fraud trial on Monday.

The Supreme Court did reinstate a narrower version of the order. But the White House could easily lose in the end.

It is hard to overestimate the impact of this much-rumored event, had it occurred.

In the meantime, the Court will allow the ban, in much narrower form, to go into effect.

The Senate still needs a replacement for Obamacares individual mandate. Their idea could amount to a death sentence for uninsured cancer patients.

Obama is Americas vacation-dad-in-chief.

It is bizarre to watch a party carry out a major welfare-state rollback while fervently insisting the welfare state will not be rolled back.

Republicans are laying out their demands, and its hard to see how both moderates and conservatives can be appeased.

Nobody knows, but everyones guessing.

Just wait. Watergate didnt become Watergate overnight, either.

Sixty British high-rises have already failed fire-safety tests following the devastating Grenfell Tower inferno. Hundreds more may still be at risk.

Soon there will be one less person Trump administration officials have to avoid taking selfies with.

A shooting down of an Assad-regime jet raises some questions, such as, are we about to go to war with Russia? How about Iran?

Hes complaining that Obama stole the term from him.

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Where Would We Be Politically If Hillary Clinton Had Won? - NYMag - New York Magazine