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The Hillblazers Hope To Vanquish The Old Boys Club

01 Nov 2007 07:57 pm

DURHAM, NH -- At her first campaign outing in this college town thirty miles east of Manchester, Hillary Clinton unveiled her nationwide young voter activist platform. They're her Hillblazers, (not to be confused with the Hillraisers, who are mostly big-money bundlers).

Young Democrats in New Hampshire are supposed to like Barack Obama and his message of generational change; Young Democrats everywhere are supposed to like Barack Obama and his message of generation change, but Clinton will not cede him one inch of ground. One of her earliest political experiences, she said, was traveling up I-93 from Wellesley College near Boston and campaigning for Eugene McCarthy in 1968. "I don't care what the polls say," Clinton said. "I'm going to campaign for every vote."

Just in case YOU care what the polls say: as Clinton was speaking, an aide distributed a memo to reporters highlighting the numbers showing that "young people are standing up to voice their support for Hillary Clinton." Young women, in particular.

To wit: 50,000 supporters on Facebook and "more Friendster supporters than any other candidate." As Clinton's national lead expanded over the summer, her performance across every demographic group has improved.

Her speech mixed policy proposals aimed at young voters with a bit of nostalgia about her own college days. Clinton poked fun at her Wellesley-era verbiage: "authentic reality" and the like. But one phrase, she said, stuck with her.

"Politics is the art of making what appears to be impossible, possible," she said

The crowd was more appreciative and curious than enthusiastic, but campaign aides privately acknowledged they did not expect a raucous rally. A thirty minute post-call start-time may have contributed to the blah feeling along the outer reaches of the crowd. paintbox.jpgThe campaign's advance staff (see diagram) made sure to pack the front of the house with dozens of sign-waving true-blue supporters, thereby amplifying the applause lines .Don't fault the campaign for this tactic: every campaign does it at every event. But when the periphery of the crowd is less ecstatic, it shows. Don't misunderstand -- Clinton did shake hundreds of hands, and her campaign collected hundreds of names.

Before and after her speech, Clinton met privately with privileged supporters, including a few dozen of the 352 Student Leaders For Hillary the campaign announced in a press release.

From there, she was off to a stop at a nearby coffee shop. Her staff, Secret Service contingent and random magazine bloggers outnumbered the patrons, but the proprietor was thrilled to see her second presidential candidate in less than a month. (The other was the diner-hopping Rudy Giuliani).

Clinton should get a sheaf of good press clips out of the day. The national press will stick to the debate storyline, and in a way that is arguably favorable to the campaign.

And when he introduced her at UNH, state chair, Billy Shaheen, couldn't help himself. "If you stick together," he said, "no matter how much garbage they throw at her, we're going to change this country. We're going to change this world."

At the coffee shop, a dentist presented Clinton with a toothbrush "just in case the debate left you with a bad taste in your mouth."

And ABC's influential tip sheet/racing form "The Note" led its afternoon digest by pointing to Clinton's remark, earlier in the day, about the "All Boys' Club Of Presidential Politics."

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Comments (9)

Hillary must have a very low opinion of women if she thinks women would vote for her because she's a chick. The 60's is over. The young women today are not so stupid as to fall for her flogging the "feminist" label.
She is out of touch.

No, we're not stupid enough to vote for her just because she's a woman. Thanks, Captain Obvious!

I'm one of her Facebook supporters (glad to see it's a growing number!), and I'm voting for her because she's the best qualified to lead the country and has the experience to get things done. And on top of that, yes, I'm proud to help elect our first woman president - to me, that's what the politics of hope is all about!

How do we know she is the most qualified since she wont let Bill release her WH records and by her performance at the debate on Tues, she doesn't fare well under pressure. If that is the best woman canidate we can come up with, then Lord help us. Hillary is not Presidential material, maybe at a small new england college.

The "Stop Hillary Clinton: (One Million Strong AGAINST Hillary)" group has over 500,000 members. No group supporting her comes close to that number. And is there anyone really on Friendster anymore?

"They were mean to me, and they shouldn't be because I'm a woman." Is not a winning strategy. It can be translated as "waaaaaaaaa"

If the national coverage of the debate is "arguably favorable" to her campaign, I'd like to hear that argument.

The straightforward argument for the opposite conclusion is that the national coverage is harmful in two ways. First, a lot of the premise for Clinton's candidacy is that she is supposed to be the best politician the Democrats have, someone who is running a flawless campaign. Widespread reports of a terrible debate performance obviously undermine that premise. A second problem is that people generally don't watch these debates, so when they hear in the press coverage that she performed poorly, they will ask why. They will then get information only about the worst aspects of her performance.

That is pretty harmful. So how is it overall favorable? Is it that the national press is reporting on her "you can't hit me, I'm a girl!" spin? Does Ambinder really think that is going to outweigh everything else and turn this into a favorable event?

She is the best qualified candidate that we have running for President. Besides that, I made the most money under Bill's adminstration. I am tired of Bush and his big oil buddies leeching us for every last dime. Costs for everything is on the rise and it all goes back to the prices we are paying for oil. Big Oil tried this before and if everyone thinks back Bill Clinton had the cajones to open up the Federal Oil reserves and make their oil worthless and prices immediately came down. You will NEVER see a GOP member do that.

Clinton is not qualified to be president. Anyone who thinks a vote for Hill is a vote for Bill is being ridiculous.

I am woman looking forward to the day I get to vote against Clinton. I also look forward to the day she goes home and leaves our poor country alone.

A fair question: "What exactly has Hillary Clinton done which has benefited our country?" While she reminds us of her "35 years of experience", that doesn't answer the question.

What intelligent person would deny that the history of a presidential candidate needs to be reviewed? As to Hillary's earlier experiences, read what Jerry Zeifman has written.

Hillary Clinton promotes Socialism (some call it Marxism or Communism). Learn what those who lived under these regimes have to say. I quote one of them who legally moved to the United States: "This is Paradise!"

What sane person would allow a Hillary or any leftist to bring about socialism in our country? I've read her words and have no doubt about her destructive intentions.

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