http://www.wsj.com/articles/gravity-check-1426880408
Gravity Check

[image: Mrs. Clinton]

Mrs. Clinton *Photo: Getty Images *

By

James Taranto

March 20, 2015 3:40 p.m. ET

Back in January 2014, the New York Times
<http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/26/magazine/hillary-clinton.html> magazine
ran a cover story called “Planet Hillary.” Oddly, the article itself, by
Hillary Clinton beat reporter Amy Chozick, never mentioned the word
“planet” and barely hinted at the astronomical metaphor; Chozick likened to
Mrs. Clinton and those around her as, among other things, a bridge, an
onion, a tumbleweed, a hotel and a prison.

But the editors and the art staff just loved the planetary metaphor. The
subheadline read: “The gravitational pull of a possible 2016 campaign is
bringing all the old Clinton characters into her orbit. Can she make the
stars align, or will chaos prevail?” The magazine’s cover featured a
terrifying image of Mrs. Clinton’s face, disembodied and superimposed onto
a sphere in varying shades of pinkish brown.

Eight more illustrations depicted various Clinton associates—sometimes with
heads, but not spheres—orbiting either Mrs. Clinton’s head or text bubbles
describing the group to which they belong. One set of orbiters was labeled
“Frenemies” and includes “The Media” and ABC News’s George
Stephanopoulos—the latter in an independent orbit, one assumes, because he
was once a political operative for Bill Clinton.

More than a year later, and a few weeks after the revelation of her biggest
scandal since she left the East Wing, Mrs. Clinton is still almost running
for president, and she still has her media orbiters—not least at the New
York Times
<http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/20/us/politics/israel-election-result-complicates-life-for-hillary-rodham-clinton.html>,
which today explains the meaning of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s
re-election in Israel:

Netanyahu’s victory in this week’s Israeli elections has reverberated
through American politics, reinforcing Republican faith in the political
wisdom of a hawkish foreign policy, worsening his relationship with
President Obama, and energizing liberal critics of Israel’s government. But
mostly it has complicated the life of Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Why do bad things always happen to her? But we tend to think Mrs. Clinton
is superfluous to the Times piece’s analysis, the gist of which is
that the *Democratic
Party* is increasingly divided between traditional supporters of Israel and
anti-Israel leftists—a division heightened by President Obama’s increasing
tilt toward the latter.

“Everyone is now going to have to pick a side,” Jeremy Ben-Ami of J Street
tells the Times, adding that Mrs. Clinton “would undergo ‘more and more
pressure.’ ” From whom, her primary opponents? Only if anti-Israel
sentiment is sufficiently widespread and intense within the party to
produce a real primary challenge will Ben-Ami be proved right. For now, at
least, there’s no indication of that.

It’s possible that further scandalous disclosures will weaken Mrs. Clinton
sufficiently to provide an opening for a (perhaps anti-Israel) challenger
or challengers. Reuters
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/19/us-usa-clinton-donations-idUSKBN0MF2FQ20150319?irpc=932>
reported yesterday that Mrs. Clinton reneged on a 2008 “pledge to publish
all the donors” to the Clinton Foundation “on an annual basis to ease
concerns that as secretary of state she could be vulnerable to accusations
of foreign influence”:

At the outset, the Clinton Foundation did indeed publish what they said was
a complete list of the names of more than 200,000 donors and has continued
to update it. But in a breach of the pledge, the charity’s flagship health
program, which spends more than all of the other foundation initiatives put
together, stopped making the annual disclosure in 2010, Reuters has found.

In response to questions from Reuters, officials at the Clinton Health
Access Initiative (CHAI) and the foundation confirmed no complete list of
donors to the Clintons’ charities has been published since 2010. CHAI was
spun off as a separate legal entity that year, but the officials
acknowledged it still remains subject to the same disclosure agreement as
the foundation.

Reuters further reports that during Mrs. Clinton’s tenure, contributions to
CHAI from seven foreign governments were never reviewed by the State
Department, as she had also promised.

The Wall Street Journal <http://bit.ly/1FHtrwg>, meanwhile, reports that
while Mrs. Clinton was secretary, the foundation raked in “millions of
dollars from foreigners with connections to their home governments”:

Some donors have direct ties to foreign governments. One is a member of the
Saudi royal family. Another is a Ukrainian oligarch and former
parliamentarian. Others are individuals with close connections to foreign
governments that stem from their business activities. Their professed
policy interests range from human rights to U.S.-Cuba relations.

All told, more than a dozen foreign individuals and their foundations and
companies were large donors to the Clinton Foundation in the years after
Mrs. Clinton became secretary of state in 2009, collectively giving between
$34 million and $68 million, foundation records show. Some donors also
provided funding directly to charitable projects sponsored by the
foundation, valued by the organization at $60 million.

Mrs. Clinton’s “Loyal Henchmen”—we borrow the term from one of the Chozick
star charts—have responded to the revelations about the foundation and her
private email server by insisting that voters don’t care. That’s obviously
not a substantive defense, but it’s more than wishful thinking. It is an
effort to shame the media into ignoring the scandals, lest voters pay
attention after all.

There are signs the voters are doing just that. Reuters
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/19/us-usa-clinton-poll-idUSKBN0MF0DV20150319>
reports “Democrats’ support is softening for Hillary Clinton . . . with
many favoring an independent review of her personal email use when she was
secretary of state”:

Support for [Mrs.] Clinton’s candidacy has dropped about 15 percentage
points since mid-February among Democrats, with as few as 45 percent saying
they would support her in the last week, according to a Reuters/Ipsos
tracking poll.

Forty-six percent of Democrats favor an independent review of all of her
emails “to ensure she turned over everything that is work-related,” and 41%
support the House Select Committee on Benghazi’s efforts to force her
testimony. Again, that’s 41% of Democrats in favor of a Republican-led
congressional investigation.

Meanwhile, Bloomberg
<http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-03-19/new-hampshire-focus-groups-reveal-possible-problems-for-bush-clinton>
reports that in a focus group of 10 New Hampshire Democrats, “even likely
Democratic primary voters who are ardent Clinton supporters said they are
closely following and are turned off by her handling of a controversy over
her use of private rather than government e-mail while she served as
secretary of state. And several said she should turn over her private
e-mail server to a neutral third party for review”:

“She could have gone through and deleted anything she wanted,” said Dianne,
50, a homemaker. (Participants agreed to be recorded and quoted by their
first names only.)

“It seems just like a lack of judgment to do that, and to—you—be the one
deciding whose, what e-mails you’re going to delete or not,” said Alice,
60, a public health administrator. “If anything, she should have released
everything and a third party can decide what’s relevant.”

“You have to be aware of how things appear to the public,” said Alethea, a
29-year-old financial planner.

Bloomberg also conducted a focus group with 10 New Hampshire Republicans,
which found wide skepticism of Jeb Bush:

Some underpinnings of Bush’s general election appeal—his family’s legacy of
political service, a perceived openness to liberalizing immigration policy
and support of Common Core education standards—have led several likely
Republican primary voters to conclude they can’t support him, and that
there’s probably nothing Bush can do to change their minds. None said
they’d back Bush if they were voting today.

Karen, 47, an interior designer said if Bush were the first in his family
to run he might be elected. “After his father and his brother, I don’t
think he’ll have a chance,” she said. Daphne, 23, a student, said that “if
he was, you know, the only choice, then I’d vote for him” but otherwise
there was “nothing” he could do to win her vote. “I don’t know,” she said.
“I don’t like him. I’m not for him.”

Which may explain an odd Time.com
<http://time.com/3751227/hillary-clinton-george-bush/> headline we noticed
yesterday: “Hillary Clinton Praises George W. Bush and the Art of
Compromise.” Here’s the story:

“We’ve lost the essential role of relationship-building and
consensus-building,” [Mrs.] Clinton told the crowd gathered in an Atlantic
City, New Jersey convention center. “When I was in the Senate, I realized
that I might be opposed to someone’s bill today, and working with that
person tomorrow.”

“I did a lot of reaching across the aisle working with people who had a lot
of political differences with me,” she said.

Clinton recalled the days after 9/11 when as a Senator from New York, she
lobbied President George W. Bush in the Oval Office for aid to New York.
“President Bush looked at us and said, ‘What do you need?’ And I said, ‘We
need $20 billion to rebuild New York Mr. President.’ And he said, ‘You got
it.’ I will never forget that,” Clinton recalled.

“If you don’t build relationships with people and all you do is show up to
argue and show up to point fingers, you can’t get anything done,” she
continued.

Our first reaction was to think this seemed like a swipe against Obama. But
maybe she’s hoping to face Jeb Bush the November after next, and to beat
him by reminding everyone of his brother.

*The Biden Solution*
<http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/03/joe-biden-media-116240.html>
Politico’s Jack Shafer is worried about the degree of scrutiny Hillary
Clinton has been receiving, and as a remedy he urges his media colleagues
to cover Joe Biden as if he were a serious candidate for the presidency.
More persuasively, he notes that they haven’t even been covering him as a
serious vice president:

The perfect marker that the press doesn’t take Joe Biden seriously as a
potential presidential candidate came earlier this month when he addressed
members of the firefighters union, comparing labor’s foes to “blackshirts,”
“intent on breaking” unions.

The blackshirts, for the historically challenged, were Benito Mussolini’s
fascist shock troops who, during El Duce’s climb to power, were dispatched
against his many foes, including trade unionists, often with murderous
results. Ordinarily, the press would slobber at the sound of a sitting vice
president comparing his political opponents to armed violent fascists. Yet
with the exception of coverage in Politico, a Washington Post blog,
Commentary and in a CNN.com item, Biden’s political provocation drew slim
attention. The near-universal newsroom response seems to have been, *It’s
only Uncle Joe going off again.*

Biden gets a pass from reporters, but why? Vice President Dan Quayle,
equally prone to the loopy comment and awkward gesture, and similarly a
heartbeat away from the Oval Office, was punished for his gaffes. My
colleague Timothy Noah grappled with this double standard three years ago,
deciding that Biden gets the breaks Quayle didn’t because journalists
understand that Biden is “not a stupid man. He’s a smart man who often says
stupid things.”

We have another theory: It’s because Biden is a Democrat and Quayle is a
Republican.


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