Hillary Clinton for
President
"Idealism and honesty
are crucial qualities for me, but I also want someone with experience who knows
how to fight hard"
Rolling Stone endorses
Hillary Clinton for president. Jann S. Wenner explains why.
I've
been watching the debates and town halls for the past two months, and Sanders'
righteousness knocks me out. My heart is with him. He has brought the Occupy
Wall Street demonstrations to the ballot box.
But
it is not enough to be a candidate of anger. Anger is not a plan; it is not a
reason to wield power; it is not a reason for hope. Anger is too narrow to
motivate a majority of voters, and it does not make a case for the ability and
experience to govern. I believe that extreme economic inequality, the vast
redistribution of wealth to the top one percent — indeed, to the top one
percent of the one percent — is the defining issue of our times. Within that
issue, almost all issues of social injustice can be seen, none more so than
climate change, which can be boiled down to the rights of mankind against the
oligarchy that owns oil, coal and vast holdings of dirty energy, and those who
profit from their use.
Hillary Clinton has an impressive command of
policy,
the details, trade-offs and how it gets done. It's easy to blame billionaires
for everything, but quite another to know what to do about it. During his 25
years in Congress, Sanders has stuck to uncompromising ideals, but his outsider
stance has not attracted supporters among the Democrats. Paul Krugman writes
that the Sanders movement has a "contempt for compromise."
Every
time Sanders is challenged on how he plans to get his agenda through Congress
and past the special interests, he responds that the "political revolution"
that sweeps him into office will somehow be the magical instrument of the
monumental changes he describes. This is a vague, deeply disingenuous idea that
ignores the reality of modern America. With the narrow power base and limited
political alliances that Sanders had built in his years as the democratic
socialist senator from Vermont, how does he possibly have a chance of fighting
such entrenched power?
I
have been to the revolution before. It ain't happening.
On
the other hand, Hillary Clinton is one of the most qualified
candidates for the presidency in modern times, as was Al Gore. We
cannot forget what happened when Gore lost and George W. Bush was elected and
became arguably one of the worst presidents in American history. The votes cast
for the fantasy of Ralph Nader were enough to cost Gore the presidency. Imagine
what a similar calculation would do to this country if a "protest
vote" were to put the presidency, Congress and the Supreme Court all in
the hands of the extreme right wing that now controls the Republican Party.
Clinton not only has the experience and
achievements as first lady, senator and secretary of state, but a commitment to
social justice and human rights that began for her as a young woman. She was one of
those college students in the Sixties who threw herself into the passionate
causes of those times, and she continues to do so today.
The
debates between Clinton and Sanders have been inspirational; to see such
intelligence, dignity and substance is a tribute to both of them. The contrast
to the banality and stupidity of the GOP candidates has been stunning. It's as
if there are two separate universes, one where the Earth is flat and one where
it is round; one where we are a country that is weak, flailing and failing; the
other, an America that is still a land of hopes and dreams.
I
keep hearing questions surface about her honesty and trustworthiness, but where
is the basis in reality or in facts? This is the lingering haze of coordinated
GOP smear campaigns against the Clintons — and President Obama — all of which
have come up empty, including the Benghazi/e-mail whirlwind, which after seven
GOP-led congressional investigations has turned up zilch.
Battlefield
experience is hard-won, and with it comes mistakes but also wisdom. Clinton's
vote authorizing Bush to invade Iraq 14 years ago was a huge error, one that
many made, but not one that constitutes a disqualification on some ideological
purity test.
Rolling Stone has championed the
"youth vote" since 1972, when 18-year-olds were first given the right
to vote. The Vietnam War was a fact of daily life then, and Sen. George
McGovern, the liberal anti-war activist from South Dakota, became the first
vessel of young Americans, and Hunter S. Thompson wrote our first
presidential-campaign coverage. We worked furiously for McGovern. We failed;
Nixon was re-elected in a landslide. But those of us there learned a very clear
lesson: America chooses its presidents from the middle, not from the
ideological wings. We are faced with that decision again.
In
2016, what does the "youth vote" want? As always, I think it has to
do with idealism, integrity and authenticity, a candidate who will tell it like
it is. It is intoxicating to be a part of great hopes and dreams — in 2016 it's
called "feeling the Bern."
You
get a sense of "authenticity" when you hear Sanders talking truth to
power, but there is another kind of authenticity, which may not feel as good
but is vitally important, when Clinton speaks honestly about what change really
requires, about incremental progress, about building on what Obama has achieved
in the arenas of health care, clean energy, the economy, the expansion of civil
rights. There is an inauthenticity in appeals to anger rather than to reason,
for simplified solutions rather than ones that stand a chance of working. This
is true about Donald Trump, and lamentably also true about Sanders.
Sanders
blaming Clinton's support of "free trade" policies for the loss of jobs
in Detroit is misleading. The region's decline began as foreign automakers
started making and exporting cars of clearly superior quality. The Big Three
saw their market share slipping, and pressed the White House to enact import
quotas on foreign cars instead of facing the competition head-on and improving
their own products. This backfired when foreign companies built their own
factories in the United States and directly took on Detroit.
Politics
is a rough game, and has been throughout American history. Idealism and honesty
are crucial qualities for me, but I also want someone with experience who knows
how to fight hard. It's about social and economic justice and who gets the
benefits and spoils of our society, and those who have them now are not about
to let go of their share just because it's the right thing to do. And Clinton
is a tough, thoroughly tested fighter.
Elections
have consequences. Bush brought us into a war that still plagues us today; he
authorized massive tax cuts for the rich and the corporations; abandoned the
Middle East peace process; ushered in the worst financial crisis since the
Depression; and totally neglected the climate emergency.
This
election is even more consequential, a tipping point like none since before the
Civil War. We are at the culmination of a decades-long effort by the right wing
to take over the government. Historian Sean Wilentz told this story in Rolling Stone. The House, the Senate
and, until a month ago, the Supreme Court are under the thumb of special
interests and the extremely wealthy, who seek to roll back decades and decades
of legislative progress that have furthered "life, liberty and the pursuit
of happiness." And most horrifying of all, they would stop the world's
last-minute effort to fight climate change, where the stakes are the fate of
civilization as we now know it.
When
I consider what's in their hearts, I think both Clinton and Sanders come out on
the side of the angels; but when I
compare their achievements in the past decades, the choice is clear. This is not the
time in history for a "protest vote."
Clinton is far more likely to win the general
election than Sanders.
The voters who have rallied to Sanders during the primaries are not enough to
generate a Democratic majority in November. Clinton will certainly bring them along, and add them to
the broad coalition that Democrats have put together in the past to take the
presidency, as did Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.
On
the question of experience, the ability to enact progressive change, and the issue
of who can win the general election and the presidency, the clear and urgent
choice is Hillary Clinton.
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