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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
27.08.2008
The Genius in Giving the Clintons Two Nights

For two weeks we've been hearing about how it was a huge mistake to give the Clintons not one but two nights in Denver. But one of the unforeseen advantages of this arrangement is that it's yielding 24 hours of goodwill between Obama and Bill in the run up to the latter's speech tonight. Goodwill is, of course, a commodity that's been famously absent from their relationship to this point.  

As David Maraniss and Mark Halperin both reported, Obama called Hillary after her speech to rave about it, then called Bill and said, according to Halperin:

Senator Clinton could not have been better and made the case for change. Obama said he knew how proud he must have been watching as he was last night watching Michelle speak and how grateful he was for their support.

I suspect this will, in turn, put Bill in a better frame of mind heading into tonight. As Maraniss writes:

"We all know that he wants to be loved. Just call him. Call him any time of day or night," said one associate. "Talk to him about anything. Talk to him about the Olympics or what he thinks about a certain congressional district or even about the New York Times Sunday crossword puzzle. Obama could even put the phone in a drawer and just let President Clinton talk away. It wouldn't take much. It could be so easy."

If, on the other hand, the two Clinton speeches had been piled right on top of one another, the good feelings wouldn't have had a chance to percolate, and we could have seen a more subdued Bill Clinton tonight.

I'm not sure anyone gamed it out this way, but the lineup seems to be working out about as well as it could have.

--Noam Scheiber

Posted: Wednesday, August 27, 2008 1:07 PM with 8 comment(s)

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miceelf said:

Yup.

August 27, 2008 1:21 PM

wgcreeley said:

Liking the positivity, Noam, and hoping your read is correct. I can certainly see the merit in it...

August 27, 2008 1:22 PM

Rhubarbs said:

I've actually got Bill on the phone in my desk drawer RIGHT NOW, if you know what I mean.

(I have no idea what that means, actually, but the image of getting an inveterate talker on the phone and then putting the phone in the drawer is a great one. Though it really only works if you imagine one of those old 1970s-era Bakelite AT&T boxes, in red, with the curly cord hanging out of the drawer.)

August 27, 2008 1:55 PM

scire said:

after watching Bill in the audience last night, I think that Noam is absolutely right -- love and attention and gratitude is exactly what he wants, and Obama is would be wise to spend more time kissing his ass than Hillary's: Hillary's no fool and probably would be repulsed if Obama kissed her ass too much, just as she won't kiss his. But if he strokes Bill, he might go a long way toward getting his enthusiastic endorsement. Now I'm kinda wondering why Obama didn't see that sooner.

August 27, 2008 2:15 PM

GSpinks said:

I'm thinking that the only people who are actually surprised are those who don't believe that perhaps Obama really does know and understand more about politics than the average junior (or even senior) politician. I thought it was a certain kind of obvious, given that those two are the most popular Democrats, and he has repeatedly talked about this election being about more than the candidate. But hey, dedicated nay-sayers will find a way to continue their previous memes or find new memes to propagate: never let good news keep you down seems to be their motto.

August 27, 2008 2:24 PM

newdex said:

Will Bill REALLY thinks of Barack . . . and who will be at the exclusive after-party? . . . Enquiring TNR readers want to know!  

August 27, 2008 2:26 PM

GSpinks said:

...oh yeah, and where is Obama right now? Not at the convention!

Talk about thinking 7 moves ahead! D'OH!

"But if he strokes Bill, he might go a long way toward getting his enthusiastic endorsement. Now I'm kinda wondering why Obama didn't see that sooner."

Probably because he doesn't want to be seeen as Clinton's third term: the "inexperienced" senator proving he is his own politician. Having established himself as distinct from Bill, he can now combine efforts without getting branded "O'Clinton". It becomes a two-sided attack against McCain, the Clintons on one side, Obama on the other. McCain can't ignore the Clintons because negative ads work; but trying to handle the Clintons means he has to take his eyes off the ball, or at least dedicate some of his support staff to fighting on two fronts and leaving Obama and McCain matched up one-on-one.

August 27, 2008 2:33 PM

stgla said:

great quote!  (and great comment rhubarbs).  W. Clinton sounds so needy and human, which is how we best like to think of him.  I do hope Obama reaches out to him.

August 27, 2008 2:53 PM