Politics

Clinton In Iowa Hits Frozen Poll, Spins To Finish

Hillary campaign icy as Obama e-mail breaks calm; Mark Penn put on case

This article was published in the January 7, 2008, edition of The New York Observer.

Clinton In Iowa Hits Frozen Poll, Spins To Finish
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DES MOINES, Iowa—Counting down the last 10 seconds of 2007 in a local restaurant, Hillary Clinton’s campaign staff did its best to end the year on a celebratory high note.

Just hours earlier, as the press bus pulled in to Des Moines at the end of another day of solid campaign performances by Mrs. Clinton, reporters alerted the champagne-sipping traveling campaign staff to a gloating email they had just received from Barack Obama’s campaign heralding a Des Moines Register poll that showed Mr. Obama with a seven-point lead over Mrs. Clinton.

Despite the bad news, Mrs. Clinton stood on a stage next to her husband minutes later at a New Year’s rally, broadcasting her astonished, opened-mouth smile while hundreds of tipsy supporters in sparkling hats cheered.

“We’ve got two full days till Thursday comes and then Iowans are going to pick the next president,” she said. She urged the crowd to “party, party, party” before another day of hard work. As she spoke, her campaign sent out its own e-mail preparing reporters for a memo from Mrs. Clinton’s chief pollster, Mark Penn, in which he would argue in detail that the Register’s numbers were flawed.

The mood inside the campaign has been swinging wildly in the concluding hours of the Iowa caucuses. Polls have fluctuated. Buzz and perceived momentum have moved from Mrs. Clinton, to Mr. Obama, to John Edwards and then back again.

For Mrs. Clinton, who had hoped to stay above the fray of her bickering opponents, things had gotten away from any clear, Clintonian master plan. She had felt compelled to respond, however obliquely, to the needling of her opponents, saying that it was important to do more than “talk” in order to get things done, drawing a sharp response from the Edwards campaign. At the same time, accounts of the always-competent campaign performances she turned in day after day were accompanied in the national press by trivial stories about her daughter refusing an interview to a 9-year-old reporter and a surrogate, Ohio Governor Ted Strickland, denouncing the primacy of Iowa’s caucus system.

Her task was to see to it that none of that mattered to the caucusgoers at her events, who, as a campaign spokesman correctly pointed out, would rely far more on their own judgment than on the media’s.

“It doesn’t matter to me what they say,” Jane Snyder, 54, said after hearing Mrs. Clinton campaign in Ames on Tuesday. “It’s more important for me to see the candidate.”

In speech after identical speech, Clinton’s closing argument read like a map of all the thematic ground she had covered in a year of continual calibration.

The overarching message boiled down to the notion that in these challenging and unpredictable times, the country cannot take a chance on an unknown quantity and needs a candidate who has deep familiarity with the ways of the White House.

“I’m not asking you to take me on faith,” Mrs. Clinton said at events in Keokuk, Fort Madison and Muscatine. In Traer, she said, “I am asking you to look at the record, look at the evidence.”

Exhibit A was her role in her husband’s administration.

“When I went to the White House with Bill, there were a lot of problems waiting on that desk in the Oval Office and we went about trying to solve them,” she said in Keokuk. In Fort Madison she said, “I bring 35 years of experience that is directly applicable” to the job of president. (Mr. Obama has retorted by saying that as first lady, Mrs. Clinton had no official portfolio to speak of.)

She talked about representing Iowans and all Americans in more than 80 countries, including Ireland, where she helped end the Troubles by facilitating dialogue between Protestant and Catholic women. “I brought people together,” she said in Vinton, adding, “Actually, I went to Northern Ireland more than my husband did.”

On Friday, she told voters in Dubuque about a 1990’s visit to Bosnia in which her helicopter made a “corkscrew landing” to counter the threat of sniper fire. (She didn’t mention that she was traveling at the time with daughter Chelsea, Sheryl Crow and Sinbad.)

But it was the more mundane, personal anecdotes that seemed to make the most powerful impression on audiences: her efforts to improve education and help children in Arkansas; her memories of a pediatrician who actually made house calls; her reminiscences of life before the cameras followed her every move.

Those anecdotes were the result of a tactical adjustment in December, when her campaign decided she needed to demonstrate her humanity, talking more about herself, using more body language and humor.

In Muscatine on Monday, she dressed in a sleeping-bag-size duster coat and posed for photographers with a snowman she named “Caucus.” Inside, she excoriated President Bush, and when her microphone went dead, she joked, “I knew he’d catch up with me.”

The other significant late addition to Mrs. Clinton’s delivery is an emphasis on “change,” a word she uttered 17 times in one appearance in Ames on Tuesday. Her signature line is that instead of screaming for change or hoping for it—like Mr. Edwards or Mr. Obama—she believes in working, as she says, “really, really hard for it.”

For all her efforts to dispel the notion that she is too polarizing to win a general election, most of Mrs. Clinton’s surefire applause lines carry a distinctly anti-Bush sentiment.

“We cannot listen to the two oilmen in the White House any longer,” she bellowed in Traer, where she also vowed to stop borrowing “money from the Chinese to buy oil from the Saudis.” In Muscatine she promised to “end the unfunded mandate known as No Child Left Behind” and called the Bush administration a “government of the few, by the few and for the few.” Next Page >

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Comments
Post a comment

Blueyes (not verified) says:

You Go Hillary

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Hillary, work on it;
We want to hear about what your change is how you will make it happen. What you will change "such as getting our troops home alive,get the economy back on track,create jobs for all citizens especially native born. Tell us how you can improve medicare, social security, insurance coverage for under-employed,or unemployed. Tell us how you can make the laws already on record work for the guilty spending time in prison unnecessary and unfounded. What you will do about the gang wars invading this country and how you can fix a broken system of our schools,hospitals,and job market. We want to know how you can improve the economy, stabilize the country. In order to win this you must not blatantly, but accept immigrants, but not encourage illegal crossing of the borders to get into this country.

We cannot accept everyone from all the other countries so that we become a THIRD WORLD COUNTRY. when other countries have more of our U.S.dollars says we'er not what we should be. Doing something about it is what we want to hear.

Tell us how you can halt the way the insurance companies and drug companies try to control the Dr's who have put in all their hard work and training and these manufacturies are literally profiting from control of what the dr's may or may not perform or do. Tell us what you will do about the SEX ABUSE of our children and the misuse of teen mothers of new-borns who leave their babies abandoned and are sometimes not found in time. We want to hear all about your plan for improvement. We do not want to hear about the opponet and what he did or did not do, that's not what we want to hear about. FOCUS, FOCUS, FOCUS, and GO FOR IT. Talk about what your achievements,accopmlishments, skills, and put it all in focus, then you can pick you a running mate once you'er in control. Again we don't want to hear about that other person, but about you and waht you can do for us as a people.

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