Despite trial balloons that the Hillary Clinton campaign might go after 2008 Presidential nomination rival Barack Obama’s pledged delegates and put a full-court-press on collecting Superdelegates if she fizzles out in the March 4 primaries, Mrs. Clinton now has some political pundits abuzz with a new twist: she reportedly avoided vowing to keep her campaign going after March 4.
And in the the world of “we’re going to the end!” politics that is a development that needs to be watched (she can always clarify that). The Boston Globe:
In appearances on the three broadcast network morning shows today, Clinton did little to rebut that interpretation. Asked directly whether she would soldier on, no matter what happens in the make-or-break primaries in Ohio and Texas on March 4, she refused to say.
“I don’t make predictions,” she said on NBC’s “Today” show.
On “The Early Show” on CBS, however, she did deny that her closing remarks in the debate were a “valedictory” to her campaign, or that the fight was out of her.
The issue came up because contrary to most informed (which in this campaign is in many cases proving to be UNinformed as the conventional wisdom is repeatedly left red-faced) speculation, Clinton was going to have to and would go after Obama in the debate ferociously and repeatedly try to define and even provoke him.
Yet, in the end, there were minimum fireworks except for that now infamous zinger about plagiarism that fell embarrassingly flat. The plagiarism issue also self-destructed last night once bloggers and reporters found that parts of Mrs. Clinton’s final statement were similar to speeches by Bill Clinton and former Senator John Edwards — something some fierce Clinton supporters now insist is totally different than when Obama was caught using passages from a politico friend’s speeches… a classic case of “what’s good for the goose is not good for the gander.”
That plus noting that she was honored to be in the political race with Obama has therefore led some pundits to see it as her seeking a graceful way out and signaling that she won’t fight-to-the-end/be-a-sore-loser (choose the phrase that fits your political bias).
There are other reasons why some think Clinton may be rethinking battling until the last dog dies.
–Fighting until the last dog dies could mean political life after the convention could be a bitch since Clinton comeback prospects for 2012 would be soured if some Democrats felt she contributed to a splintered party that caused the Demmies’ defeat — or if Obama wins the Clinton faction would be on the outs for some time to come.
–Despite the dramatic final statement, most press accounts didn’t give the debate to Clinton. The Los Angeles Times said Obama “deflected” Clinton’s wake up call. CNN’s Bill Schneider said she didn’t slow Obama’s momentum. Reuters wondered whether Clinton’s big debate moment was her turning point or “swan song.” The San Francisco Chronicle said Clinton saw that her attack lines didn’t work and that she managed a draw, at most.
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama began February with about $10 million more to spend than rival Hillary Clinton as they prepared for a slew of primary and caucus battles, regulatory filings show.
Obama, an Illinois senator, yesterday reported that he had $19 million in cash that could be used for the fight for the nomination. Clinton had about $9 million and would have had even less if she hadn’t loaned her campaign $5 million.
So the tea-leaf reading about Clinton’s neglecting to vow to fight on after March 4th has some logic.
The official spin from Clinton’s press spokesman last night about Clinton’s final statement was…effusive:
Her strength, her life experience, her compassion. She’s tested and ready. It was the moment she retook the reins of this race and showed women and men why she is the best choice.
It could be a vote-changing moment.
But how could her statement — as dramatic and heartfelt as it was — show men and women why she is the best choice to sit in the Oval Office? Unless it is seen as the equivalent to Ronald Reagan’s “there you go again” to Jimmy Carter — but that dealt specifically with Carter’s speech and debate content, not Reagan’s emotions.
The debate was marked by excellent exchanges by Clinton and Obama on ISSUES — and presumably that could influence voters as well.
The bottom line: Her (non) statement sounds like Clinton is leaving the door open to at the very least re-evaluate.
It didn’t say she gave up going after Superdelegates or will quit after March 4.
But if her campaign has fundraising problems now, it will face bigger ones after March 4th if she doesn’t win solid victories in Ohio and Texas.
Joe Gandelman is a former fulltime journalist who freelanced in India, Spain, Bangladesh and Cypress writing for publications such as the Christian Science Monitor and Newsweek. He also did radio reports from Madrid for NPR’s All Things Considered. He has worked on two U.S. newspapers and quit the news biz in 1990 to go into entertainment. He also has written for The Week and several online publications, did a column for Cagle Cartoons Syndicate and has appeared on CNN.