Hillary Clinton

Bill Clinton in Eugene, Oregon

BILL CLINTON spoke last night at the University of Oregon in Eugene in behalf of his wife's candidacy, and of course, your trusty citizen journalist Nezua was on the scene.

The speech was attended by about 800 - 1000 people. I didn't count, but the venue was switched at the last moment from a ballroom at the EMU that had a capacity of 700, I believe, to an outside courtyard which wasn't quite full. I asked Hillary's press liaison what necessitated the change, and she told me that there were more people in line than would fit in the rather small ballroom. The switch was after the security sweep was done and everyone's credentials checked and everything locked down. Because of the last minute move, the lighting and sound and security went from controlled and having a feeling of being well-organized to an "on-the-fly" and very thrown together situation, in some ways quite lacking. But nothing that prevented us from doing our jobs.


Nezua Limon Xolagrafik-Jonez's picture

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Hillary Clinton in Eugene, Oregon [pt. 4]


LAST WEEK we watched a young man (whom one person wrote me and called "arrogant") engage the democratic process as he questioned Hillary Clinton during her Town Rally at the South Eugene High School (April 4, 2008). The bold student wanted to know if when all was said and done the Senator was more interested in her own candidacy than preserving or encouraging the viability of the Democratic Party's eventual as-of-yet-unselected nominee. In Part 4, this conclusion to our four part series, she responds.

(Please excuse the audio buzz that can be heard for aprx. the first 50 seconds.)

• Part 1
• Part 2
• Part 3
• Part 4

The latest video by Oregon's Official MTV Choose or Lose Street Team 08 Citizen Journalist, Nezua.

Clicking the picture above will take you to the video page.

Crossposted to The Unapologetic Mexican and OpEdNews.


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Why Has John Edwards Raised So Much Less Money Than Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama?

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With all of his historical advantages, what explains his relatively poorer performance?

Cross-posted at the Francis L. Holland Blog.

The numbers for the fundraising of Democratic Presidential candidates in the first quarter of 2007 have now been released, and John Edwards has raised less money than both front-runners Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Hillary Clinton raised $26 Million dollars, not counting the ten million she was able to transfer from her Senate campaign to her presidential campaign.

The New York Times reports today that Barack Obama has raised $20,000,000, and “his fund-raising prowess has helped make him the chief rival to Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York.” In Obama’s past Senate campaign, says the New York Times, “Even as he cultivated an image as an unconventional candidate devoted to the people, not the establishment, he systematically built a sophisticated, and in many ways quite conventional, money machine,” building “from the ground up”. NYT

The reasons for Clinton’s historical fundraising levels are well-known. She is a major national player in the Democratic Party, was first lady for eight years, has been elected to the US Senate twice, and her husband was President of the United States twice. Many people donate to her campaign because they believe in her policies and they believe she is most likely to win the nomination.

Barack Obama is able to raise $20 Million in the first three months of his first presidential bid because there is tremendous public excitement about the new vision he offers and the outstanding qualities of the man himself, a magna cum laude graduate of Harvard Law School who became the school’s first Black editor of the Harvard Law Review and then became the only Black member of the US Senate. He has an extraordinary personal story and two best-selling books to support his campaign.

But, the question must be asked, “Why has John Edwards, who ran for President in 2004 and became the Democratic nominee for Vice President, only raised $15 Million dollars in the first quarter, which is 25% less than Barack Obama and almost 50% less than Hillary Clinton? The Fix, WaPost

The difference cannot be explained by name recognition, since Edwards was the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 2004, while Obama has never been on a national ticket. If Edwards still had lower name recognition than Barack Obama at this point, a negative inference would have to be drawn about Edwards’ relative ability to draw the public’s attention and generate enthusiasm about his campaign. Certainly, America knows who Edwards is.

Their presence on the Internet would not seem to explain John Edwards’ inability to raise the sums that his competitors raised either. John Edwards’ website has been up longer and contains more links to social networking sites, so he does have exposure on the Internet. Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post calls the Edwards website an “exercise in social networking that includes not only a blog, where surfers can post their thoughts, but also cyber-diaries written by Edwards's family members.” WaPost But, Slashdot.Org says Edwards’ website is “a bit of a disorganized mess . . . [and] The Edwards campaign needs to hire a professional web designer (or fire the one they have).

Indeed, ZDNET says:

Clinton’s early, Web-based campaign announcement helped catapult the Clinton campaign to “number one” presidential campaign Web site status honors in January 2007. The Clinton online effort booked a commanding Web site traffic lead over the second place Obama campaign Web site and attracted almost twice the number of visitors as the John Edwards campaign Web site, according to Nielsen/NetRatings.

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Number one HillaryClinton.com drew 828,000 unique visitors in January.

In fact, John Edwards’ attempts to dominate the Internet game have led to his biggest online embarrassment. The John Edwards anti-religious blogger scandal hurt him badly, because it raised doubts about his political judgment and acumen. It may well have left Americans doubting John Edwards’ respect for religious people and/or his ability to manage a successful campaign and the country.

One might have thought that, as a candidate who is both white and male, John Edwards might have been expected to come into the race with an advantage, based on biased perceptions of who could win and whose gender or color would make them ineligible. This might have been expected particularly because there has never been a woman or Black president of the United States.

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But, to the extent that there are still gender and skin-color biases within the Democratic Party, John Edwards does not seem to have benefited sufficiently from them to move him into the top ranks of the rain-makers.

The difference in fundraising ability also cannot be explained by time spent campaigning, since Edwards has been a full-time candidate since 2004, while Clinton and Obama have had to campaign while contending with their Senate responsibilities. But Clinton and Obama have campaigned while maintaining the prominence that comes with still being a responsible member of the US Senate. Having entered the US Senate in 1998 and run for the presidency and vice presidency, Edwards certainly has had more opportunity than Obama to draw national attention over the years.

John Edwards’ own message may have hurt his fundraising. He says that he is running for president to help the poor, which is mostly comprised of women, minorities and their children, but those groups have expressed little support for Edwards. Supporting John Edwards Supports the Status Quo http://francislholland.blogspot.com/2007/02/supporting-edwards-perpetuat... Meanwhile, voters who are not poor may have concluded that the Edwards campaign has little to offer them. Why Edwards’ Candidacy Won’t Resonate with America http://www.dailykos.com/story/2006/10/12/202415/98

It seems unlikely that hilarious capturing John Edwards combing his hair for two full minuutes was the fatal blow to his candidacy, but the video may have contributed to an overall impression that Edwards lacks gravitas.



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Support Hillary's Mexican-American Woman Campaign Chief

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I've heard some anti-immigrant sentiment recently but I'm not feeling it. I'm proud that Hillary Clinton's campaign manager, Patti Solis Doyle, is Mexican-American, second-generation. Diversity works for the Democratic Party.

Today, I received the following e-mail from Patti Solis Doyle:

Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2007 09:35:02 -0400 (EDT)

From: "Patti Solis Doyle, Hillary for President"

To: francislholland@yahoo.com

Subject: RE: I never could have anticipated

Dear Francis,

I just got off the phone after giving Hillary an update on our online fundraising before tonight's FEC deadline. We're both blown away by the incredible response to the message she sent yesterday.

Now there are just a few hours left. At midnight tonight, we have to close the books on the first quarter. When all the campaigns' fundraising reports come out, they will set the tone of the race for months to come. As Hillary's campaign manager, I'm telling you right now, every dollar we bring in before midnight will make a difference.


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Why Don't More Women and Minorities Raise Trial Baloons About Running for President?

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Thank you, Zimbel!

There are certain facts that are so obvious about America that a court would take "judicial notice" of them (recognize them as common knowledge on which no proof was necessary). For example, "There has never been a Black or woman president or vice president of the United States." Adam Nagourney's NYT Article

And yet pointing these facts out remains politically controversial, probably because, in a country that is only 35% white and male, the white male monopoly can only exist in a democracy if we all continue to pretend that it does NOT exist. (I was banned from participating at one site just days after posing the question with a diary entitled, "Will the White Male Monopoly End in 2008?")

If we do mention the white male monopoly of the presidency and vice presidency, we are supposed to pretend that it occurs by happenstance or as a result of unknowable "pipeline" style factors.

Lisa said at my blog yesterday:

"You are racist with your descriptions of the general white public never voting for a black man for President."

And to that Zimbel responded, very convincingly with a statistical argument:

A string of 43 white male presidents isn't enough to support his conclusion?

Okay- how about the string of roughly 200 national executive candidates of major parties that were white male (save one exception, Ferraro). If we completely omit race from the question, is it fair that roughly half of the population (females) are represented by roughly 0.5% of executive candidates? Isn't a 1:100 ratio of candidates versus population good evidence of sexism? And, yes, I know that this number skyrockets to an amazing roughly 2% (and about 1:35) if you discount all the time prior to the 19th amendment's ratification. Still seems like sexism to me. Zimbel

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All the king's white men.

The fact is that the 43-term white male monopoly of the presidency is indefensible in a "democracy" from a statistical standpoint, and so defenders of the monopoly argue that I and others are "racist" to even mention the statistics. If no one forcefully says otherwise than defenders of the white male monopoly (who can be of any gender and skin color) will continue to insist that the monopoly is simply the product of statistical happenstance.

Newt Gingrich is considering running for president of the United States and is being taken seriously. There are at least half a dozen Black congressmen and congresswomen with more elective experience than Newt and with better poll number nationally, so why don't they announce that they're considering running for president?

Why do so few Black people and women raise these trial baloons, making the presidential trial baloon mostly a white man's sport?

The answer is simple: Any white man in the public eye can announce that he is considering running for president, even if he has never held elective office (e.g. Wesley Clark) and immediately be taken more seriously even than 90% of the Black people and women who have held elective office for decades.

Do people who insist on supporting presidential and vice presidential candidates who are white men effectively collude to perpetuate the white male monopoly of the presidency and vice presidency? Should we all just ignore the fact that supporting white male candidates in 2008 perpetuates the 200-year monopoly, and must we ignore the fact that supporting Blacks, women and Latinos tends to end the monopoly? Is the 200-year white male monopoly of the presidency and vice presidency even relevant to the question of who we should elect in 2008. I think that it goes beyond mere relevance to being essential to the question of who we are as a nation and who we want to be.

I encourage more women and Blacks to announce that they are considering running for president, senator and governor in the future, if only to better accustom the public to considering all of the possibilities.

For too long we have been dominated and monopolized by the excess credibility of white men and the excess credulity that the American public gives to white men. And that's why George W. Bush is president of the United States today.


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Basic Childhood Vaccinations Becoming Less Accessible, More Precarious in US

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I have found that basic health care is more accessible in Brazil than in the United States.

The New York Times reports today that the process in the United States for getting basic vaccines against deadly childhood diseases is becoming more and more expensive and precarious.

Getting a vaccination was not always so difficult. In 1980, it cost only about $23, or $59 adjusted for inflation, for the seven shots and four oral doses needed to immunize a child, according to data provided by Thomas Saari, who is emeritus professor of pediatrics at the University of Wisconsin.

Today, though, a child who receives all the recommended vaccines would receive as many as 37 shots and 3 oral doses by the 18th birthday — at a cost exceeding $1,600. NYT

Before I moved to Brazil in 2004, I contacted public and private clinics in New Jersey, looking for the basic vaccines that were recommended before my travel. It would have cost me $800 dollars or more to receive these vaccinations in the United States. Since I didn't have that much money and I was not covered by any insurance, I decided to go to Brazil without first receiving this basic and easily administered medical care.

When I got to Brazil, I discovered that all of the medications that I needed but could not afford in the United States are available for free at all Brazilian government health clinics, even for visitors from the United States. In fact, there is a hospital a block from my house that provides all medical care for free. So I have more access to health care in Brazil than I did in the United States.

A couple of weeks ago, my Brazilian wife informed me that the government was recommending that everyone in our state receive shots for malaria. The first time we went to the clinic, the supplies had been exhausted. The following week, I, my wife and two children went to the government clinic and we all got our shots for free, with no lines or additional waiting. The government of Brazil cares for my medical health more than my own government does.

I have also discovered that the same anti-depressant drugs that cost $200.00 USD per month in the United States may cost $40.00 USD per month at regular Brazilian pharmacies and only twenty dollars per month at Brazil's government run pharmacies. But at certain Brazilian government pharmacies, many basic medications are available at no charge whatsoever, to anyone who has a prescription, while supplies last.

I hope someday that the United States will have a public health system that is as accessible to the public as Brazil's health care system is now. In the 2008 Democratic presidential primaries, I'm absolutely going to vote for a presidential candidate who has a long-standing and proven dedication to seeing that we in the United States have care that is at least as accessible and affordable as the care now available to people in so-called "Third World" countries like my new home, in Brazil.


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"What If " Hillary is Where She is Because of Bill's Incredible Popularity?

[Ed. Note]: Content removed for reasons explained in the comment thread. Here is a visual approximation of the diarist's efforts.


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The American Electorate Does Not Reward Apologizers

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Candidates and supporters who believe we can win the presidency on a wave of apologies should learn the lessons of history.

Cross-posted at MyDD.

NEW YORK - Democrat

John Edwards said Tuesday that honesty and openness were essential qualities for a president, and that he was proud to acknowledge his 2002 vote authorizing the invasion of

Iraq was a mistake . . .

"If you asked me what I think the most important personal characteristics of the next president are, I would say honesty, openness and decency," he said. "There's not a single voter in America who doesn't understand that their president is human, and their president will sometimes makes mistakes." Yahoo.News

In the September 30, 2004 debate between George W. Bush and John Kerry, the word "mistake" arose 13 times in the context of Iraq, offering Bush ample opportunity to admit that he had made at least one mistake.  Kerry admitted to having made significant mistakes while George Bush admitted to none.

BUSH: My opponent says help is on the way, but . . . it's certainly hard to tell it when he voted against the $87-billion supplemental to provide equipment for our troops, and then said he actually did vote for it before he voted against it.

Not what a commander in chief does when you're trying to lead troops.


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I always have difficulty expressing my political judgments in a clear, emphatic, and strong way—I feel pretentious, as if I'm saying things that are not quite true. This is because I know I cannot reduce my thoughts about life to the music of a single voice and a single point of view—I am, after all, a novelist, the kind of novelist who makes it his business to identify with all of his characters, especially the bad ones. Living as I do in a world where, in a very short time, someone who has been a victim of tyranny and oppression can suddenly become one of the oppressors, I know also that holding strong beliefs about the nature of things and people is itself a difficult enterprise. I do also believe that most of us entertain these contradictory thoughts simultaneously, in a spirit of good will and with the best of intentions. The pleasure of writing novels comes from exploring this peculiarly modern condition whereby people are forever contradicting their own minds. It is because our modern minds are so slippery that freedom of expression becomes so important: we need it to understand ourselves, our shady, contradictory, inner thoughts, and the pride and shame that I mentioned earlier.


— Orhan Pamuk
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