Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Morris: Hillary Will Go Negative

After former Clinton insider and pollster Dick Morris broke with the Clintons he began writing for the NY Post. Today he predicts:

As her once-formidable lead in national polls dwindles and Barack Obama moves ahead of her in the all-important Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses, Hillary Clinton will likely intensify her negative campaign against her rivals.

The Clintons' political MO has always had a good dose of negative campaigning, especially when the going gets rough. There's no reason to assume that they will alter their game plan now.

I remember Bill's race for re-election as Arkansas governor back in 1990, when he found himself falling behind Hal McCrae, his unknown Democratic primary opponent. After Clinton's 10 years as governor, McCrae's attacks - featuring Daliesque stretched-out clocks tolling the time for him to go - were hitting home.

Hillary decided to attend McCrae's next press conference and engage him in a public, impromptu debate about his attacks on her husband. She gave as good as she got - and her foray marked the start of a four-week campaign of negative ads that brought McCrae down.

The Clintons used negative ads and attacks in each gubernatorial campaign - and, of course, in Bill's two races for president.

Until now, the '08 Democratic contest has been a referendum on Hillary: The basic decision facing voters has been: Would you vote for her? The Clintons need to get people thinking about whether they like her rivals any better.

Negative ads would do the trick - but at a price: By attacking an opponent, they'd concede that Hillary isn't inevitable. That would give Obama (or John Edwards, should they decide to aim at him instead) added credibility - and perhaps more access to funding and contributions.

Historically, such considerations have never deterred the Clintons - who are always ones to anticipate their adversaries' strength rather than to belittle it.
How will they do it?

Their favored method of getting out negative material about their foes is to hire private investigators to dig up dirt, which they then release through feeds to friendly journalists.

Consider the Lewinsky scandal. When Linda Tripp got to be a danger, the Clinton people released her Pentagon personnel file to Jane Mayer (then a reporter for The New Yorker). A federal judge later reprimanded two Clinton operatives for this violation, and the government had to pay Tripp more than $600,000 - but the damage was still done.
And what made Linda Tripp such a danger to the Clintons? What made them so angry at her?

I’ve a hunch it had a lot to do with Tripp advising Lewinsky not to have “your blue dress cleaned.”

If Lewinsky had her blue dress dry cleaned, there’d have been no sperm stain from which to take DNA material and President William Jefferson Clinton could’ve gone right on telling everyone: “I never had sex with that woman, Ms. Lewinsky.”

Morris continues:
Meanwhile, Clinton staffer (and Hillary favorite) Sidney Blumenthal peddled the line that Monica was a stalker to journalist Christopher Hitchens. And White House operatives told ABC News' Linda Douglas of incoming [Republican] House Speaker Bob Livingstone's infidelity scandal before it was made public.
Did you read the news that Blumenthal has just joined Hillary’s team as a “senior advisor?”

More from Morris:
In the '92 presidential campaign, the Clintons openly disclosed their use of private detectives to dig up ammunition on women who had accused the presidential candidate of having affairs with them, disclosing that they paid detective Richard Palladino over $100,000 in campaign funds. But, of late, they avoid such embarrassing disclosures by hiding their detective bills in their legal expenses.[…]
Morris’ entire column is here.

Question: Can you remember the last time Dick Morris was interviewed on NPR’s All Things Considered?

I can’t.

Why doesn't NPR, which claims it has no news bias, consider asking Morris about the Clintons?

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

NPR goes to enormous lengths to select commentors who speak in the same sonorous cadences that their announcers cultivate. Most likely, Dick Morris speaks like a human and doesn't qualify. Less likely, none of their announcers was willing to stand in for Morris in giving correct responses to interview questions.

Oh, there's an exception to the commentor selection criteria. That's when they visit underpriveleged or foreign neighborhoods and ask enough residents enough questions that they can select a few responses to make the same point, in their picturesque native dialects, that the NPR announcers do.