I don't have a copy of Benjamin Barber's book The Truth of Power, and so can't verify the Huffington Post's Sam Stein's characterization, but it's awfully strong stuff:
In January 1995, as the Clintons were licking their wounds from the
1994 congressional elections, a debate emerged at a retreat at Camp
David. Should the administration make overtures to working class white
southerners who had all but forsaken the Democratic Party? The
then-first lady took a less than inclusive approach.
"Screw 'em," she told her husband. "You don't owe them a thing,
Bill. They're doing nothing for you; you don't have to do anything for
them."
The statement -- which author Benjamin Barber
witnessed and wrote about in his book, "The Truth of Power:
Intellectual Affairs in the Clinton White House" -- was prompted by
another speaker raising the difficulties of reaching "Reagan Democrats."...
As Harry Boyte, the director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Democracy and Citizenship
who was at the retreat, told The Huffington Post: "[Hillary Clinton]
sees herself as the champion of the oppressed, but there is always a
kind of good guy versus bad guy mentality. The comment before that was
that 'the Reagan Democrats are our enemies and they weren't on our
side,' and she was agreeing with that comment. She said we should write
them off: screw them."
More here.
--Christopher Orr