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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
20.11.2007
Hillary the Thief

One other thing about those Clinton events yesterday: The woman is not at all bashful about stealing from her rivals. Between the two events, I counted six rhetorical turns I've heard other candidates employ:

She talked about goals "I hope will bring our country together," a la Barack Obama.

In response to a question about excessive partisanship, she talked about how she's not running to be president of the states that voted for Democrats, she's running to be president of the United States. This closely resembles Obama's "I don’t want to pit red America against blue America. I want to be the President of the United States of America."

She said she didn't want to be part of the first generation of Americans that didn't leave the country better off than when they inherited it, which recalls John Edwards's line about how we don't want to be the first generation of Americans whose children do worse in life than they did.

She talked about how, if video stores can keep track of their tapes and DVDs, surely we can keep track of people here on visas, many of whom overstay them and become illegal immigrants. I've heard Edwards make the same point, except he explicitly cites Blockbuster.

She argued that our young men and women in Iraq are doing everything we ask of them; it's the Bush administration and the Iraqi government who are letting them down. Edwards has argued that our soldiers have done everything we've asked of them; it's our government that's letting them down.

Finally, she made the point that opposing comprehensive immigration reform is tantamount to supporting amnesty, because it allows the present situation to continue. I've heard John McCain make the same point. (At least I think it was him--it's possible that it was some other non-Hillary candidate.)  

Granted, some of the themes here are vague enough that you could find them in two candidates' speeches without some amazing coincidence. And, in some cases, it's possible that the other candidates have borrowed from Hillary rather than vice versa. But I've now heard most of the major candidates on the stump and I can't recall ever hearing so many familiar formulations. Chalk it up to the prerogatives of frontrunner-dom.

--Noam Scheiber

Posted: Tuesday, November 20, 2007 11:24 AM with 9 comment(s)

Comments

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Wandreycer1 said:

This is excruciating - it makes me sad actiually.  I feed sorry for her! Ack!

November 20, 2007 12:24 PM

Wandreycer1 said:

ooops, how many typos in one post?

Lert's try that again:

this makes me sad and I feel sorry for her!

November 20, 2007 12:25 PM

Wandreycer1 said:

ooops, how many typos in one post?

Let's try that again:

this makes me sad and I feel sorry for her!

November 20, 2007 12:25 PM

teplukhin2you said:

Funny, didn't know that one could patent a soundbite. Sheesh, I'd better get on the horn to my lawyer and trademark "working families."

November 20, 2007 12:45 PM

ralphnelle said:

Her most shameless snatch is Obama's "Yes we can" refrain. She just can't pull it off. I guess we'll have incontestable proof she's shameless when she starts chanting "fire it up."

November 20, 2007 12:55 PM

blackton said:

Hillary the uniter! Ha, how could the audience not double over in laughter at the sheer ridiculousness of it? Republicans will be united in feeling that she was elected simply to spite them. Bush, Clinton, Bush, Clinton: I will tell you one thing that global warming is doing to America, it is turning us into a banana republic.

November 20, 2007 1:41 PM

virginiacentrist said:

Folks -

This is what primaries are all about. Candidates can test out their messages on the voters in a (mostly) friendly environment and see what works and what doesn't work. Then they pick and choose the best parts to use in their campaign.

Whoever becomes our eventual nominee (Obama or Hillary) will hopefully take a bit of John Edwards' angry economic populism, a bit of Joe Biden's frank foreign policy realism, and a bit of Chris Dodd's strict constitutionalism.

November 20, 2007 2:20 PM

The Stump said:

One of the things that struck me when I first saw Hillary on the stump six weeks ago (the other stump

January 3, 2008 10:52 AM

The Stump said:

Mike and I spent the last half-hour on dueling Clinton-Obama conference calls, and the charge that Obama

February 18, 2008 11:52 AM