
RADNOR, Penn.--You had to see this one coming. After all the carping
about Wednesday night's Democratic debate, Hillary Clinton took the
opportunity this morning on Philly television to... well, call Barack
Obama a girly-man, pretty much. "The special interests are going to be
a lot tougher than 90 minutes
of questions from two journalists," she said. "And we need a president
who is going
to be up there fighting everyday for the American people and not
complain about how much pressure there is, and how hard the questions
are." Here's the video:
There you have it:
Clinton's closing argument in Pennsylvania. With only four days left
before a primary that she needs to win--and win big--the New York
senator and her surrogates have clearly decided to flesh out the
emerging caricature of Obama as an effete elitist with debate-related
taunts. Speaking yesterday from the front porch of an American Legion
Hall in St. Mary's, former President Bill Clinton kicked off the festivities.
"After the [debate], her opponents... were saying, 'Oh this is so
negative, why are they doing this,'" he said. "Well, they've been
beatin' up on her for 15 months. I didn't hear her whining when he said
she was untruthful in Iowa." And a few moments ago here Radnor High
School on Philadelphia's tony Main Line, Hillary herself ratcheted up
the rhetoric. "My opponent [is] complaining about the hard questions,"
she said, as the crowd "awwwed" sarcastically. "Having been in the
White House for eight years and seen what happens in terms of pressures
and stresses on the resident, I'm with Harry Truman on this: if you
can't stand the heat get out of the kitchen. And speaking for myself,
I'm very comfortable in the kitchen. If the heat goes up, that's okay
with me."
I can understand the politics at work here:
Clinton is hoping to boost her margins among tough-guy, blue-collar
Reagan Democrats, trounce her rival on Tuesday and thereby sow doubts
about his electability among superdelegates. But there are two problems
with her logic. For starters, Obama never actually, you know,
"complain[ed] about how much pressure there is, and how hard the
questions are" (even if his supporters have harrumphed that the moderators
were petty and one-sided). Far from whining, in fact, Obama has gone on
the attack, accusing Clinton of playing "politics as usual" during the
debate. "She was taking every opportunity to get a dig in there, that's
her
right to kind of twist the knife a little bit," Obama said yesterday in
Raleigh, N.C. "That's
how our politics has been taught to be played. That's the lesson that
she learned when the Republicans were doing that same thing to her back
in the 1990s, so I understand it. And when you're running for the
presidency, you've got to expect it." Then, chuckling, he brushed some
metaphorical dirt off his shoulders--to thunderous applause:
Not exactly cowering in the corner, right?
The second problem: as Jake Tapper
notes, the Clintons and the Clinton campaign have been complaining for
months about the media's treatment of Hillary. There was the campaign video complaining about the "Politics of Pile-on"
after a November debate in which Clinton, then the clear frontrunner,
suffered the slings and arrows of outrageous attacks (from her fellow
Democrats, no less). Then came Clinton's complaints
in the Cleveland debate seven weeks ago about always getting the first
question. And Bill has complained every chance he gets. "The political
press has avowedly played a role in this election," he said in a
February interview. "I've never seen this before."
As
Tapper puts it, "If you haven't heard whining from your wife or from
the Clinton campaign, Mr. President, then with all due respect, you
haven't been paying attention."
Amen. The truth is, the
occasional complaint about the media doesn't disqualify anyone from
leading the free world. So Clinton should probably stop pretending that
it does--especially when she's the only candidate who's actually
indulged.