By Quin Hillyer on 5.1.08 @ 12:08AM
Her use for poor white workers will end the minute the campaign is over.
One of the more bizarre developments of this campaign season has
been to see Hillary Clinton, of all people, turned into an
electoral favorite of blue-collar white voters. The reality is that
very few people in politics have more contempt for white workers
than does this product of Park Ridge, Wellesley, the Senate
Watergate Committee, and the super powered Rose Law Firm.
This is the woman who, according to three, independent,
respected, credible witnesses, at least one of them a strong
Clinton supporter, responded to Southern whites workers voting
Republican in 1994 by telling her husband: "Screw 'em. You don't
owe them a thing, Bill. They're doing nothing for you; you don't
have to do anything for them."
This is the woman who last year insulted the whole state of
Mississippi in an interview with Iowa's famous columnist David
Yepsen, noting the lack of elected women in both states: "How can
Iowa be ranked with Mississippi?" she asked. "That's not what I
see. That's not the quality. That's not the communitarianism,
that's not the openness I see in Iowa."
This is the woman whose mentor and philosophical guiding light,
Saul Alinsky, wrote that the white working classes were always
"[s]eeking some meaning in life, [so] they turn to an extreme
chauvinism and become defenders of the 'American' faith. Now they
even develop rationalizations for a life of futility and
frustration."
This is the woman who tried to foist a massively bureaucratic
health care plan onto the American people in 1993 and 1994, but
when told that her plan would be devastating to the small
mom-and-pop shops that provide most jobs in America, dismissed
those concerns with these words: "I can't be responsible for every
undercapitalized entrepreneur in America."
(This was the same government-knows-best health plan of which
Democratic Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan said that "anyone who
thinks [it] can work in the real world as presently written isn't
living in it.")
IN TERMS OF POLICIES, her actions and positions have been directly
opposed to the interests of blue-collar workers who pay taxes. Take
welfare reform, for instance. Perhaps the single most successful
programmatic reform in the past 30 years, it saved taxpayers tens
of billions of dollars, gave people incentives to find jobs, and
quite arguably played a big role in a decade of improving
statistics in areas ranging from drops in crime to drops in the
teen birth rate and the divorce rate. (The old welfare system
encouraged divorce by making it in many cases more lucrative to be
a single mom.)
Yet her husband Bill not only vetoed welfare reform twice, but
did so in accord with Hillary's fierce advice against reform. (He
signed it at the third opportunity only to take the issue off the
table in his 1996 re-election campaign.)
This is also the woman who has spent an entire career supporting
legal positions (and judges) that are contrary to the deeply held
views of most white workers. Strong support for racial preferences?
Check. Support for partial birth abortion? Check. Judges who rule
against basic Christmas displays in the public square? Check.
Letting the government take working class homes in order to use the
land for big corporate developments? Yes again.
Her Whitewater-related shenanigans left taxpayers on the hook
for tens of millions of dollars, while old folks expecting
retirement housing were left high and dry. Her treatment of White
House career employees was notoriously nasty. Her profiteering in
the cattle-futures market, and her money-grubbing in cases too
numerous to mention, gave evidence of a sense of public entitlement
completely at odds with the values and the daily concerns of
laborers. And her opposition even to the middle-class-heavy Bush
tax cuts of 2001, if it had carried the day, would have cost most
workers well over $10,000 in the seven years since.
Yet now Hillary Clinton is depending on white, working-class
voters to power her attempted primary-season comeback. They ought
to remember that she and her husband Bill once fancied themselves
such racial conciliators that Bill welcomed the sobriquet of being
"the first black president." Yet in this campaign season we have
seen just how quickly the Clintons have fanned racial animus in an
attempt to cause a white backlash against Barack Obama.
Lesson: The Clintons are for the Clintons, and only for the
Clintons. They will abandon any voter group the moment such
abandonment can gain them an advantage. The Hillary Clinton who is
suddenly the champion of white laborers today can just as easily be
saying "screw 'em" again tomorrow.
Their votes for her are votes against their own interests and
values.
topics:
Taxes, Health Care, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Abortion, Law