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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
25.08.2008
The Speech Clinton Wants to Give

 

Politico reports Bill Clinton is "disappointed" that, per the Obama campaign's instructions, he has to speak about foreign policy instead of domestic issues and how great his administration was when he addresses the convention on Wednesday night. Boo hoo.

Of course, convention speeches are always a delegate delicate* dance, as the speaker and convention speechwriters battle over substance, language, even punctuation. If a pipsqueak like Harold Ford can be a pri madonna prima donna*--Ford's battles with Al Gore's speechwriters at the 2000 Democratic convention are the stuff of legend--just imagine what a headache the Big Dog must be. (Even the cool and collected Obama was said to be furious in 2004 when John Kerry's speechwriters cut what he thought was one of his best lines.)

But here's the good news. Mark Penn, who's reportedly advising Clinton on his speech, has gone to the trouble of writing a whole column for Politico hailing Clintonism as "the most cohesive and successful Democratic governing philosophy the country has had since Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s election 1932 and the advent of the New Deal." So my suggestion would be for some enterprising Clintonite to head to Kinko's, print out 20,000 or so copies of Penn's column celebrating Clintonism, and then distribute it around the Pepsi Center before Bill gives his speech on foreign policy. There, problem solved.

*--Apologies for egregious original spelling mistakes. I've now had my coffee and things should hopefully improve. 

--Jason Zengerle 

Posted: Monday, August 25, 2008 9:23 AM with 12 comment(s)

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tarfon said:

Using voice-activated software?  If so, please proof the product -- "delegate dance" rather than "delicate dance," "pri madonna" rather than "prima donna"?

August 25, 2008 10:29 AM

ratnerstar said:

Public Radio International is going to be upset when their Madonna turns out to be Harold Ford.

August 25, 2008 10:29 AM

ejbenjamin said:

Clintonism only works by undermining fellow Democrats.  You can do that if you're inheriting decades' worth of Democratic majority rule, not when you're coming out of fourteen years of Republican dominance.

It also only works once.  If successive Democrats run on Clinton-like triangulation, they've effectively signaled that the Democrats are no longer a viable party.

August 25, 2008 10:33 AM

ndaremblum said:

Exactly Jason! I lurk here mostly but I had to make the point that giving Bill national security was the only way to keep him on point--attacking Bush and McCain instead of focusing on himself which is what he ends up doing when he talks about national issues and economics.

August 25, 2008 10:34 AM

miceelf said:

Please tell me you're kidding about Mark Penn being anywhere near Bill's speech.

August 25, 2008 10:34 AM

Wandreycer1 said:

Who effing cares what Bill Clinton leaks to Politico?  Are you really going to help the Clintons undermine the Democratic nominee TNR?  

Can you please write about something important rather than high school level gossip?

August 25, 2008 10:49 AM

Daily Intelligencer - New York Magazine said:

It’s safe to say this will probably never, ever end.

August 25, 2008 11:35 AM

CraigMcGil said:

If Obama doesn't let Clinton give a comprehensive case for his candidacy that would be a huge mistake. I am not sure I believe all this stuff about this huge rift.

August 25, 2008 11:39 AM

derekcatsam said:

Here is a question, and an earnest one: What if Clinton simply goes off script? Given that the man can speak, and given that he would be perfectly capable of going off teleprompter, what if he says screw you guys, here is what I'm talking about? What are the ramifications for him?

I'm not saying I hope it happens. For the love of God, I hope it does not. But I'm curious what consequences there could possibly be if Clinton goes lone wolf.

dcat

August 25, 2008 1:34 PM

austinexpat said:

For Chrissakes, the man was a two-term president, the first one Democrats managed to elect in 30 years.  Maybe he thinks he's entitled to be treated like one, rather than like an embarrassing old uncle with wandering hands and beer breath.  And maybe he's right.

All this bull-crap from Obama supporters about how he's "degraded the office" thanks to some made-up rules (can't support a candidate in the primary, can't mention the name Jesse Jackson, can't get mad when his political legacy is equated with the excesses of Gingrich-era trench warfare) that the pro-Obama forces in the media decided he was violating in order to make it easier to come down against Hillary is what's got to stop, and I mean now.

If Bill wants to talk about how great he was as president, now is not the time to disagree.  There are more important things to worry about than whether Bill Clinton is being subservient enough to Barack Obama during "his time to shine."  All those gleeful young Turks who thought that by squeaking BHO over the line to the nomination they could close the door forever on Clintons, Clintonism, and the Baby Boomers had better get wise, because Bill Clinton is as much a mover and shaker in this party as he ever was, and all the SMS messages and will.i.am videos in the world aren't going to change that.

Give the man his props, thank him for his time, and leave the chip on your shoulder at home.  Your revolution is over.  It's time for some good old-fashioned consensus-building.

August 25, 2008 4:09 PM

prnoonan said:

Let the big dog eat.  Bill is the only person on the schedule capable of making a damming indictment of Bush and McCain, so let him.  The other speakers are all about "bipartisan coming together to solve problems" and other such useless convention messages.  When is someone like Robert Wexler speaking?  He's what we need right now -- assertive, combative, intelligent, unafraid to get in the other side's face.

August 26, 2008 11:43 AM

The Plank said:

Michelle Obama's Class by David Kusnet The Surprising Inside Story Of How Obama Scored The DNC Keynote

August 26, 2008 12:14 PM