As a contributing editor to Vanity Fair since
1984, Sheehy has written character studies of dozens of national
and world figures, including George Bush, Al Gore, Bill and Hillary
Clinton, Bob and Elizabeth Dole, Mikhail Gorbachev, Margaret Thatcher,
Saddam Hussein, Anwar Sadat, Newt Gingrich, and Gary Hart.

From behind, the silhouette of the freshman senator from New York
looks like that of a man. The ill-fitting bodice of First Lady has
been ripped off and replaced by long-jacketed pantsuits allowing
her to clasp her hands low, behind the back, and march about with
the authoritative military stance of a man. Senator Clinton can now
plant her feet on the royal blue carpet of the United States Senate
and address "My distinguished colleague from New Mexico"as
one among equals. She is magnetic to the men. Constantly surrounded
by men. Powerful men: the senate leaders, committee chairmen, floor
managers. One moment she‚s in a strategic huddle with the Democratic
leader Tom Daschle and liberal lieutenants Teddy Kennedy and Chris
Dodd, the next she is striding across the aisle to schmooze with
Senators John Warner and Jim Jeffords (then still Republican), and
woo them into supporting her national teacher recruitment campaign.
If one didn‚t focus on the blonde helmet hairdo we could all
draw in our sleep, one might mistake Hillary Clinton for just one
of the boys.
That is not to say the freshman senator from New York has shed her
femininity. If anything, she uses it more now than ever. After a
decisive vote, she makes a beeline for the white-domed icon of the
Senate who will inevitably be standing, one arm tucked in his silk
vest and one planted on his desk, Daniel Webster style, and the former
First Lady will bow her head and virtually genuflect before Senator
Robert Byrd. When Kennedy orates from the floor, often to a nearly
empty chamber, one member is almost certain to be there gazing adoringly
at that still-handsome, silver-maned lion in winter: Hillary. Teddy
will flash her the big toothy boyish grin that is the signature of
lusty American men like Kennedy and Dodd and Bill Clinton. Hillary
looks upon these men as her protectors. And they love it. But she
hardly neglects Republican men. Indeed, she makes a point of seeking
out some of the most rabid conservatives and telling them funny stories,
fluttering her hands at Pete Domenici‚s jokes, letting Orin
Hatch lay a hand on the small of her back, stoking the arm of, imagine
this, Trent Lott. From my perch in the Senate gallery I mumble, "She's
doing a Bill." A senate aide whispers to me, "The Senate
is a very touchy feely place. And she's always nodding, whatever
they say, 'Your husband is an asshole' she reaches out and puts her
arm around them."
Where did this retail political skill come from? In the early months
of her New York Senatorial campaign Hillary was stiff as Queen Elizabeth
in a cartwheel hat on a windy day. And just about everyone predicted
that she could never get along in that tight, collegial, male-dominated
body where half of the other side wanted to throw her husband out
of the White House. Wrong.
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