Condi vs. Hillary
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Condi vs. Hillary

Dick Morris, Eileen McGann

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eBook - ePub

Condi vs. Hillary

Dick Morris, Eileen McGann

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Who will be president in 2008? Many believe that the White House is Hillary Clinton's to lose. As long-time strategists Dick Morris and Eileen McGann reveal in Condi vs. Hillary, however, Hillary's plans for higher office are vulnerable to a challenge from a most unexpected quarter: the Bush administration's secretary of state and former national security advisor, Condoleezza Rice.

Rice is the only figure on the national scene who has the credentials, the credibility, and the charisma to lead the GOP in 2008. And, as this first book on the subject demonstrates, a race between these two commanding, but very different, women is a very real possibility -- and would inevitably prove one of the most fascinating and important races in American history.

Blending insider insight and political foresight, Condi vs. Hillary surveys the strengths and weaknesses of the two candidates, finding persuasive clues about what we might expect from each of them as a chief executive. It traces their very different childhoods -- Hillary Rodham's in unchallenging suburban comfort, Condi Rice's in Birmingham, Alabama, during the civil rights era -- and finds in each the roots of their latter-day selves. It explores their career in public life -- Hillary's as an ambitious liberal who attached herself to a governor on the rise, Condi's as a woman of broad and deep talents who has earned her own way. It turns a discerning eye on how each has spent her time in government, contrasting Condi's growth and maturation in office with Hillary's record of underachievement as both first lady and senator from New York. And it reveals how a draft-Condi movement could sweep the secretary of state into the presidency even as she forgoes campaigning to address her responsibilities as secretary of state.

America, in short, may be on the verge of a perfect storm of twenty-first-century politics, pitting two of America's most popular -- and controversial -- women against each other, and offering Americans a choice between fulfilling the ambitions of one of our most polarizing figures... or changing history by electing not just the first woman, but also the first African American woman, to lead the free world into the future.

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1

Setting the Stage

“I, Hillary Rodham Clinton, do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of president of the United States and will, to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States, so help me God.”
On January 20, 2009, at precisely noon, the world will witness the inauguration of the forty-fourth president of the United States. As the chief justice administers the oath of office on the flag-draped podium in front of the U.S. Capitol, the first woman president, Hillary Rodham Clinton, will be sworn into office. By her side, smiling broadly and holding the family Bible, will be her chief strategist, husband, and copresident, William Jefferson Clinton.
If the thought of another Clinton presidency excites you, then the future indeed looks bright. Because, as of this moment, there is no doubt that Hillary Clinton is on a virtually uncontested trajectory to win the Democratic nomination and, very likely, the 2008 presidential election. She has no serious opposition in her party. More important, a majority of all American voters—52 percent—now supports her candidacy.1
The order of presidential succession from 1992 through 2008, in other words, may well become Bush, Clinton, Bush, Clinton.
But if the very thought of four—or perhaps even eight—more years of the Clintons and their predictable liberal policies alarms you; if you see through the new Hillary brand—that easygoing, smiling moderate; if you remember what a partisan, ethically challenged, left-wing ideologue she has always been, is now, and will always be, then you can see what the future holds.
That’s exactly the kind of president Hillary Clinton would be.
But her victory is not inevitable. There is one, and only one, figure in America who can stop Hillary Clinton: Secretary of State Condoleezza “Condi” Rice. Among all of the possible Republican candidates for president, Condi alone could win the nomination, defeat Hillary, and derail a third Clinton administration.
Condoleezza Rice, in fact, poses a mortal threat to Hillary’s success. With her broad-based appeal to voters outside the traditional Republican base, Condi has the potential to cause enough major defections from the Democratic Party to create serious erosion among Hillary’s core voters. She attracts the same female, African American, and Hispanic voters who embrace Hillary, while still maintaining the support of conventional Republicans.
This is a race Condi can win.
And Hillary cannot offset these losses of reliable Democratic constituencies with other voting blocs. White men don’t like her. That won’t change. And there is nowhere else for her to pick up support. It’s simple: With Condi in the race, Hillary can’t win.
The stakes are high. In 2008, no ordinary white male Republican candidate will do. Forget Bill Frist, George Allen, and George Pataki. Hillary would easily beat any of them. Rudy Giuliani and John McCain? Either of them could probably win, but neither will ever be nominated by the Republican Party. These two are too liberal, too maverick, to win the party’s support; their positions are too threatening to attract the Republican base. Jeb Bush? Too many Bushes in a row make a hedge. He’s not going anywhere. And Austrian-born Arnold Schwarzenegger can’t run. In the next election, none of the usual suspects can stop Hillary. Without Condi as her opponent, Hillary Clinton will effortlessly lead the Democratic Party back into the White House in 2008.
There is, perhaps, an inevitability to the clash: Two highly accomplished women, partisans of opposite parties, media superstars, and quintessentially twenty-first-century female leaders, have risen to the top of American politics. Each is an icon to her supporters and admirers. Two groundbreakers, two pioneers. Indeed, two of the most powerful women on the planet: Forbes magazine recently ranked Condi as number one and Hillary as number twenty-six in its 2005 list of the most powerful women in the world.
As Hillary and Condi emerge as their party’s charismatic heroines, they seem fated to meet on the grand stage of presidential politics. These two forces, two vectors, two women, and two careers may be destined to collide on the ultimate field of political battle. Two firsts in history. But only one will become president.
The year 2008 could, at last, be the year of the woman—indeed, the year of two women. Suddenly, the timing is right. Eighty-five years after the Nineteenth Amendment gave women the right to vote, the planets seem suddenly aligned to challenge history. American voters are surprisingly ready for a woman in the White House. Public opinion is rapidly settling into a consensus that a woman could actually be elected president in the next election. For the first time in our history, a majority of voters say they would support a woman for president. In a May 2005 USA Today/CNN/Gallup Poll, an amazing 70 percent of the respondents indicated that they “would be likely to vote2 for an unspecified woman for president in 2008.”3
What a revolutionary shift in thinking! No major American political party has ever nominated a woman for president. And only one woman has run for vice president—Democratic Party nominee Geraldine Ferraro in 1984. But now there are two star-crossed, qualified, and visible women who may be presidential contenders in2008. And the voters like them both:4 53 percent of those questioned in the May 2005 survey had a favorable opinion of Hillary Clinton, while 42 percent rated her negatively. Condoleezza Rice fared much better: 59 percent liked her and only 27 percent didn’t.
Hillary Clinton has always wanted to be the first woman president of the United States. Shortly after her husband’s election in 1992, the couple’s closest advisers openly discussed plans for her eventual succession after Bill’s second term. Of course, things didn’t turn out quite that way; Hillary has had to wait a bit. But her election to the Senate in 2000 gave her the national platform she needed to launch her new image—the “Hillary Brand,”5 as we called it in Rewriting History—and begin her long march back to the White House.
One thing is certain: Hillary Clinton does not want any other woman to take what she regards as her just place in history as America’s first woman president.
Yet, ironically, it is Hillary’s own candidacy that makes Condi’s necessary and therefore likely. The first woman nominated by the Democrats can only be defeated by the first woman nominated by the Republicans. Two firsts of their kind, locked in electoral combat, with the future—theirs and ours—on the line.
Their potential battle recalls a moment in the Civil War when the South was suffocating beneath the blanketing blockade the Union had draped over its ports.6 Anxious to redress the balance, Confederate shipbuilders fitted the captured wooden-hulled Union warship Merrimack with a coating of iron skin and renamed it the Virginia. On March 8, 1862, a new kind of vessel—the world’s first ironclad ship—sailed out to sea. There, in a single day, it demonstrated graphically its manifest superiority over every other ship in history. The Virginia rammed and sank the huge Union ship Cumberland and shelled the frigate Congress until she surrendered.
Once there was a Merrimack, however, there also had to be a Monitor, the Union’s answer to this strange new creature of the sea. And so the Northern counterpart materialized, looking like a tin can set on a raft. The two ships met in mortal combat—two firsts of their kind, each made necessary by the other’s potential to master the high seas.
The battle between the world’s first ironclads ended in a stalemate. A race between Hillary Clinton and Condi Rice will have a more decisive ending. But the parallel is clear: If there is a Hillary, there must be a Condi. One will spawn the other.
Hillary’s nomination as the first woman candidate for president by a major political party would generate extraordinary excitement and give the Democrats an undeniable advantage in the general election. The Republicans would have no choice but to respond by nominating a similarly compelling and popular candidate—one who would counteract the certain shift of women voters to Hillary. And who else could that be but Condi?
Consider this: If Hillary is nominated as the first woman ever to run for president, she is very, very likely to win. By maximizing her support among the 54 percent of the vote that is cast by women—and tapping into the enthusiasm that her husband elicits among African Americans and Hispanics—she is likely to sweep into office, easily defeating any conventional white male candidate the Republicans might send against her.
And there is only one viable Republican answer to Hillary’s candidacy: Condoleezza Rice.
Were Condi and Hillary to face one another, it would be the next great American presidential race and one of the classic bouts in history. Hector vs. Achilles. Wellington vs. Bonaparte. Lee vs. Grant. Mary, Queen of Scots vs. Elizabeth. Ali vs. Frasier. And now, Condi vs. Hillary.
But these potential combatants are as different as, well, black and white. In many ways, they are mirror images of each other: not only white/black but north/south; Democrat/Republican; married/single; suburban/urban; and, in their policy interests, domestic/foreign.
Their backgrounds are not in the least similar. While Hillary grew up in the middle-class security of white, Protestant Park Ridge, Illinois, Condi came of age on the wrong side of the racial divide in pre–civil rights Birmingham, Alabama. But growing up as an African American in the segregated South did not mean that Condi came from an impoverished background. It was Rice who came from an educated, professional family; Hillary’s was far more blue-collar. Hillary’s mother, the child of a teen pregnancy who was abandoned by her mother and raised by her grandmother, was a high school graduate; her father, a physical education major and football player at Penn State, made and sold commercial draperies. Condi’s parents and grandparents, on the other hand, were college graduates. Her father was a minister, teacher, and guidance counselor. Her mother was also a professional, a music teacher in the same school where her husband taught.
It is not only their family backgrounds and geography that were distinctive. Their careers also took very different paths. For more than thirty years, Hillary’s success has always been coupled with her relationship with one powerful man: Bill Clinton. Wherever he went, Hillary followed, supporting him, advising him, rescuing him, and, at the same time, reaping enormous rewards from his advancement. Her own talents were often obscured, her ambitions put aside, as the two worked jointly to advance his career above all else.
It was Bill who introduced her to his colleagues at the University of Arkansas Law School when she was suddenly unemployed after her work as a legal researcher on the Watergate Committee came to an end in 1973. Though a bright and talented graduate of Yale Law School, Hillary had failed the D.C. bar exam and would undoubtedly have had a hard time landing a top position in Washington. Women lawyers were not yet in strong demand, and a bar failure would have been a major strike against her, as well as a humiliating admission to make in job interviews for a supremely self-confident person like Hillary. An easy alternative was Arkansas, where she had passed the bar the previous year and had since been admitted to practice law. Her decision to move to Fayetteville, Arkansas, and accept a teaching position in a clinic handling criminal law—a subject in which she had never before shown any interest—changed her destiny and paired her future with Bill Clinton’s. From then on, as Bill moved up in Arkansas politics, Hillary simultaneously progressed in her legal career. When he was elected attorney general, she was offered a job at the Rose Law Firm, the most prestigious in Arkansas. When he was elected governor, she was named the firm’s first woman partner. And when he was elected president, she ultimately evolved into a Senate candidate from New York.
Unlike Hillary, Condi has never married, and her success has never been a matter of hitching her wagon to the political fortunes of any powerful man. Instead, she advanced strictly on her own merits. She began her career by excelling as an academic and specializing in foreign affairs. Eventually, she brought that expertise to a family of presidents. But it was always Condi’s own record of accomplishment that made her a prominent national figure. When she was still in her twenties, she was elevated to the Stanford University faculty because she amazed her colleagues with her abilities. She came to Washington during the administration of President George H. W. Bush because she had impressed National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft, who met her at Stanford. She was only thirty-four when she became the administration’s chief expert on the Soviet Union. After her White House experience, she so impressed the incoming president of Stanford that he asked her to be his provost, even though the job usually went to a dean or a department chair. Through Ronald Reagan’s secretary of state, George Schultz, she met then-governor George W. Bush, and prepared him for the foreign policy issues he would face in the 2000 campaign. The younger Bush was so awed by Condi’s abilities that he appointed her national security advisor and then secretary of state.
Condi Rice, in short, reached her position of power on the strength of her own achievements.
The two women also came to the White House in characteristically different ways. Hillary arrived as a wife, with no experience in government, no portfolio, no administrative experience. Though her husband immediately granted her sweeping authority over health care, she was still the president’s wife, the first lady, who had no expertise in the very health care issues that she completely controlled. Her power was always derivative. She was not an elected official. She was not a cabinet member. She had no designated role or powers. The public policy issues she chose to address were centered on traditional women’s issues: health care, advocacy for women and children, and protection of national treasures.
Rice entered the White House in a completely different way. She came in as a high-level expert, charged with guiding America through the delicate process of German reunification, the dismantling of the Soviets’ satellite empire in Eastern Europe, and the eventual breakup of the Soviet Union itself. A rare woman in a field long dominated by men, she held her own.
The work these two women did once in the White House likewise reflected their dramatically opposite characters. Condi quietly advanced and enhanced her reputation in the field of national security and Soviet relations with a keen understanding of how to make the system work. She was a success.
Hillary, on the other hand, created a chaotic bureaucracy just to draft her health care bill, which ran to more than one thousand pages. She alienated members of Congress—even in her own party—as well as health professionals and the press. The collapse of her reform plan was a colossal personal and professional failure on her first national public stage. Her reputation was salvaged only by her grace during the Lewinsky scandal and her enthusiastic willingness to campaign and raise funds for Democratic candidates all over the country. And, once she had rehabilitated herself, it was still her alignment with Bill Clinton that led her to the next rung in her career: a Senate seat from the state of New York.
Condi’s and Hillary’s respective reputations in politics, too, were diametrically opposed. Condoleezza Rice has never been involved in personal or professional wrongdoing; Hillary has been embroiled in scandal after scandal, ever since she entered public life. She has always teetered on the ethical edge. Her unexplainable windfall in her commodities futures speculation; the circumstances of her Whitewater investment; the disappearance of her law firm’s billing records; her role in the decapitation of the White House Travel Office employees; her solicitation and acceptance of personal gifts of expensive furniture, silver, and china during her last days in the White House while she was still first lady (but not yet a senator bound by rules about gifts); her acceptance of contributions and gifts from persons seeking presidential pardons; and the hiring of her brothers by drug dealers and others seeking pardons—all of these have led to the continuous cloud of doubt that has surrounded her personal and professional integrity.
Perhaps the most shocking example of her tin ear on ethical issues was her acceptance of furniture—and $70,000 in campaign contributions7—from Denise Rich, who was basically trying to buy a pardon for her fugitive ex-husband, Marc Rich. After a federal indictment charged Marc Rich with fifty-one counts of tax evasion and illegal trading with the enemy—Iran—during the hostage crisis of the l...

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