Author Topic: Cheer up... it could have been much worse.  (Read 248 times)

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Offline Brett

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Cheer up... it could have been much worse.
« on: October 30, 2009, 01:14:44 AM »
Oct 29, 2009
Barack didn't pick Hillary because of Bill
10:10 AM
 

HILLARY One of the newsweeklies, Time, has excerpts from the new book by Obama campaign manager David Plouffe, and he confirms something we thought we knew: Barack Obama passed over Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Here is Plouffe's take. ("Ax," by the way, is senior adviser David Axelrod):

    What surprised me at [our first meeting to discuss the vice presidency] was that Obama was clearly thinking more seriously about picking Hillary Clinton than Ax and I had realized. He said if his central criterion measured who could be the best VP, she had to be included in that list. She was competent, could help in Congress, would have international bona fides and had been through this before, albeit in a different role. He wanted to continue discussing her as we moved forward.

    We met again a couple of weeks later in mid-June and winnowed the list down to about 10 names.

    At our next meeting, we narrowed the list down to six. Barack continued to be intrigued by Hillary. "I still think Hillary has a lot of what I am looking for in a VP," he said to us. "Smarts, discipline, steadfastness. I think Bill may be too big a complication. If I picked her, my concern is that there would be more than two of us in the relationship."

    Neither Ax nor I were fans of the Hillary option. We saw her obvious strengths, but we thought there were too many complications, both pre-election and postelection, should we be so fortunate as to win. Still, we were very careful not to object too forcefully. This needed to be his call.

    We had initially received a lot of advice from many of her supporters to pick her, though this "advice" was perhaps more accurately described as subtle pressure. Their fervor was abating a bit every day, though, helped by Hillary's comments that this was Obama's decision and that he should be left to make it.

    In early August, he narrowed his list down to three names: Senator Joe Biden of Delaware, Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana and Governor Tim Kaine of Virginia. Hillary did not make the last cut. At the end of the day, Obama decided that there were just too many complications outweighing the potential strengths. But I gave him a lot of credit for so seriously thinking about his fierce former rival. Some in the Clinton orbit thought we gave Hillary short shrift. My view is that any serious consideration was somewhat surprising given all the complications and the toxicity during the primary campaign.

The nod eventually went, of course, to Joe Biden.

(Posted by David Jackson; photo by Henry Ray Abrams, Associated Press)
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Offline kitchawan kid

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Re: Cheer up... it could have been much worse.
« Reply #1 on: October 30, 2009, 02:18:53 AM »
I think Biden was a worse choose then Hillary,he was the author of the "Assault Weapons Ban"
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Offline slim rem 7

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Re: Cheer up... it could have been much worse.
« Reply #2 on: October 30, 2009, 02:55:36 AM »
 i think if he had chosen hillary... just a few more blatant infringments on free america an his usefulness be over ,,,for the liberals..i better not say what i think would happen then.. but we would be blamed for it.. slim