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Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Sunday Update

by @ 7:32 am on February 24, 2008.

In today’s New York Times, Patrick Healy reports on the sense of malaise and inevitable loss that is settling in over the Clinton campaign:

To her longtime friends, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton sounds unusually philosophical on the phone these days. She rarely uses phrases like “when I’m president” anymore. Somber at times, determined at others, she talks to aides and confidants about the importance of focusing on a good day’s work. No drapes are being measured in her mind’s eye, they say.

And Mrs. Clinton has begun thanking some of her major supporters for helping her run for the Democratic presidential nomination.

“When this is all over, I’m really looking forward to seeing you,” she told one of those supporters by phone the other day.

Mrs. Clinton has not given up, in her head or her heart, her quest to return to the White House, advisers say. But as resolute as she is, she no longer exudes the supreme confidence that was her trademark before the first defeat, in Iowa in January. And then there were more humbling blows, aides say: replacing her campaign manager on Feb. 10, then losing the Wisconsin primary and her hold on the women’s vote there last Tuesday.

And, as for the staff, well it’s the same thing you always see when people start realizing that the ship is sinking:

Morale is low. After 13 months of dawn-to-dark seven-day weeks, the staff is exhausted. Some have taken to going home early — 9 p.m. — turning off their BlackBerrys, and polishing off bottles of wine, several senior staff members said.

Some advisers have been heard yelling at close friends and colleagues. In a much-reported incident, Mr. Penn and the campaign advertising chief, Mandy Grunwald, had a screaming match over strategy recently that prompted another senior aide, Guy Cecil, to leave the room. “I have work to do — you’re acting like kids,” Mr. Cecil said, according to three people in the room.

Others have taken several days off, despite it being crunch time. Some have grown depressed, be it over Mr. Obama’s momentum, the attacks on the campaign’s management from outside critics or their view that the news media has been much rougher on Mrs. Clinton than on Mr. Obama.

Meanwhile, one of Clinton’s biggest supporters, and one of the few Kennedy’s who isn’t backing Obama is already talking about the end:

“Townsend said she expects Sen. Barack Obama to win the Democratic presidential nomination and that Clinton is finished. She believed that the Wisconsin results demonstrated that Clinton’s coalition (voters over the age of 50 and those earning less than $50,000) had fallen apart. When asked why the Clinton campaign had failed, Ms. Townsend had plenty of opinions and she placed significant blame on Bill Clinton and his racially tinged statements in South Carolina. She also felt that Clinton made a tactical error in making “experience and inevitability” her central campaign themes. Townsend argued that Clinton had little more experience than Obama and far less than candidates such as Senators Dodd and Biden. Additionally, making the inevitability claim hurt her when she lost Iowa… Townsend then lamented Clinton’s decision to go negative and question Obama’s readiness. She said that she called the Clinton campaign and advised that they ‘go out on a high note’ but her advice was politely dismissed.”

There will be many post-mortems written after this campaign is over, but none of them will come any closer to figuring out just why Hillary failed than Townsend just did.

As Healy notes, some campaign insiders are saying much the same thing:

Over take-out meals and late-night drinks, some regrets and recriminations have set in, and top aides have begun to face up to the campaign’s possible end after the Texas and Ohio primaries on March 4. Engaging in hindsight, several advisers have now concluded that they were not smart to use former President Bill Clinton as much as they did, that “his presence, aura and legacy caused national fatigue with the Clintons,” in the words of one senior adviser who spoke on condition of anonymity to assess the campaign candidly.

(…)

On occasion she has looked backward. The strategy hatched by her advisers, her husband and herself — to run as an incumbent on a strength-and-experience message — was clearly not enough to carry her for 13 months. (It did work well for a time, if polls were any measure.) But mostly she has tried to look forward, and has pointedly not talked to her staff about the notion that she might drop out someday.

Nonetheless, the unstated reality is that that day is come closer by the second.

H/T: Liberal Values

Previous Posts

Hillary Clinton Death Watch
Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Afternoon Update
Hillary Clinton Death Watch Saturday Update

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9 Responses to “Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Sunday Update”

  1. Folks, seriously, the Democratic race is not over « The right-wing liberal Says:

    [...] seriously, the Democratic race is not over So now the New York Times and Below the Beltway’s Doug Mataconis have joined what the latter colorfully called the “Hillary Clinton [...]

  2. Below The Beltway » Blog Archive » Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Monday Update Says:

    [...] Watch Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Afternoon Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Saturday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Sunday Update   [...]

  3. Donklephant » Blog Archive » Is the Clinton campaign undead? Says:

    [...] Mataconis is attending to the “Hillary Clinton Death Watch” , while Kos says no need, she is already dead. Larry Kudlow also says it is over, over, [...]

  4. Below The Beltway » Blog Archive » Hillary Clinton Death Watch Wednesday Update Says:

    [...] Watch Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Afternoon Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Saturday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Sunday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Monday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Tuesday Update   [...]

  5. Below The Beltway » Blog Archive » Hillary Clinton Death Watch Thursday Upate Says:

    [...] Watch Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Afternoon Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Saturday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Sunday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Monday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Tuesday Update Hillary [...]

  6. Below The Beltway » Blog Archive » Hillary Clinton Death Watch Friday Update Says:

    [...] Watch Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Afternoon Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Saturday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Sunday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Monday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Tuesday Update Hillary [...]

  7. Below The Beltway » Blog Archive » Hillary Clinton Death Watch Friday Afternoon Update Says:

    [...] Watch Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Afternoon Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Saturday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Sunday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Monday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Tuesday Update Hillary [...]

  8. Below The Beltway » Blog Archive » Hillary Clinton Death Watch Saturday Update Says:

    [...] Watch Hillary Clinton Death Watch, Afternoon Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Saturday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Sunday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Monday Update Hillary Clinton Death Watch Tuesday Update Hillary [...]

  9. Daniel Castellanos Says:

    Hillary could have very well been a good running mate. However, Hillary’s campaign appears to be more about vanity and self praise in constantly stating the obvious “first woman president” as opposed to focusing on a worthy presidential platform. Obviously she would be the first female president if nominated but that goes without saying. So literally saying it makes one think that shes on more of an ego or power trip. Barack Obama isn’t mentioning the obvious race issue of him being the first black president but rather remains focused on his platform.

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