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HILLARY'S CHOICE--Book Description
Can the most controversial First Lady in American history remake
herself, again?
The author of the American classic, Passages, illuminates the
life changes of a public woman known the world over, but rendered
here in her full humanity for the first time. From her childhood
with a father who was impossible to please, to her life as the ambitious
political wife who faced a public impossible to please, Hillary
Clinton has persevered. Now, the first First Lady to have faced
down a federal Grand Jury and survived her husband's Presidential
impeachment is undergoing a race for redemption as she runs on her
own for United States Senator.
This epic journey of a modern American woman is also the story
of a marriage and the drama of presidency. Why did she choose to
abandon her own promising career and raise Bill Clinton to be president?
Why did she stay with him through repeated betrayals and even through
the Monica scandal? Why did she choose to run for the Senate from
a state in which she has never lived?
Hillary's Choice is extensively updated with saturation reporting
on the New York Senate race÷a grand opera, both comic and tragic.
Sheehy shows the exciting chrysalis of Hillary's transformation
from political wife to independent woman.
EXCERPT FROM NEW CHAPTER IN THE JUST RELEASED PAPERBACK OF HILLARY'S
CHOICE.
The Opera Isn't Over Until the New Kid Sings!
The show should have been a walk for Hillary
from the day in mid May 2000 when Mayor Rudy Giuliani dropped out
as her challenger. But this opera had a surprise fourth act. The
understudy for the male lead, Congressman Rick Lazio, a young gladiator
who had been waiting in the wings for two years to jump into this
role, was ready with a boffo entrance speech. He made it clear he
intended to paint Hillary as liberal, liberal, liberal, even, as
he put it, "far left." Her ambition, he promised, would
also be an issue (unlike his). He smiled disarmingly and showed
off a classic Republican profile for a statewide New York candidate:
the clean-cut ethnic with a solidly suburban Catholic family, a
mostly moderate voting record which appealed to independents, plus
past altar boy service to Newt Gingrich which endeared him to conservatives,
and enough boyish charm to get women to tune into his message just
to relive memories of their first prom date. Right out of the box
Lazio went on the attack. Laughably, Hillary's camp, inventors of
the War Room, slapped the wrist of the new kid for being "insulting."
The native Long Islander made much of being a native son. He also
came to the race with a record, which the Clinton camp immediately
picked apart to exaggerate those votes that could paint him as a
right-wing extremist. But the greater problem Hillary would have
in challenging Lazio's record was the evident fact that she didn't
have one. Or rather, she lacked the sort of record a typical male
politician would have built for himself. Thirty years of performing
public service with non-profit organizations and backing up a husband
's political life doesn't count for much in a high-stakes electoral
battle, not even against a 42-year-old with fewer than eight years
in the U.S. House of Representatives. And with the exit of Rudy,
Hillary had lost the greatest asset in their battle- the bully was
gone.
The Rudy-haters were suddenly bereft. From impassioned
blacks who would have fallen over themselves to get to the polls
and stomp their nemesis, to Manhattanites who know a Machiavellian
mayor drunk on power when they see one, to upstate Republicans who
felt snubbed by a city-bound candidate whom they never trusted anyway,
the hardened political ground was suddenly fluid, roiling with aftershocks,
with all the cards on the table thrown up in the air to come down
in an unpredictable disorder. From a contest where only a tiny slice
of voters had described themselves in polls as undecided, now just
about every voting bloc - blacks, Hispanics, women, Jews, gays,
suburbanites, the elderly - was up for grabs.
Within the first week of this puppyish newcomer
bounding on stage, before half the population even knew who he was,
Lazio drew dead even with the hardworking Hillary. Now it would
be a fight for the middle. A regular Democrat vs. Republican horse
race. So eager was this boychik to catch up with Hillary, who was
ten years his senior, the day before his unanimous nomination at
an upbeat convention of New York State Republicans he fell on his
face - literally. Marching in a Memorial Day Parade, he tripped
and split his lip, requiring eight stitches. It was another reminder
that Rudy's exit had not eased the competitive pressure on Hillary.
Rick Lazio was every bit as ambitious as she, and much hungrier
for the job than Rudy.
"It's definitely not a cakewalk for her,"
was the sober assessment of New York's former Democratic governor,
Mario Cuomo. "I think Rick Lazio is going to be Hillary Clinton's
worst nightmare," predicted Fred Brown, president of the New
York State Black Republicans Council. Unlike the divisive Giuliani,
he said, Mr. Lazio would "destroy the myth" that blacks
and Hispanics would automatically favor Mrs. Clinton.
"She's as confident as I've ever seen her,"
insisted a friend and supporter after schmoozing with Hillary at
two events in late May. The First Lady said she pretty much really
understood the lay of the land by that time, not just on an intellectual
level but on a hands-on level. She professed to find Lazio an easier
candidate for her to define. It was much clearer in her mind, she
said, how to run against a true Republican rather than "a quasi-Republican
like Giuliani." In fact, Lazio's positions, like Giuliani's,
were not that different from hers. They were both broadly pro-choice,
although Lazio championed more restrictions on a woman's right to
choose. They both supported further gun restrictions, but Hillary
made a strong case for licensing and registering gun owners just
like car owners. Still exceedingly cautious, she intended to stick
with the more conventional issues of education, health care, and
abortion rights, on which her positions were favored in the polls.
No matter what she said or did, however, in 18 months she had never
garnered more in the polls than 45 percent of the vote.
The promise of summer and fall of 2000 was greater
support from the Democratic party. As their official nominee, the
DNC and state party organization would start pumping huge amounts
of soft money into the promotion of Hillary, and Judith Hope promised
to double the magnitude of their phone bank on the First Lady's
behalf. Mrs. Clinton would also be confident enough in her own voice
by then to roll out the biggest cannon of all: President Bill Clinton,
who, judging by his job approval ratings (which had peaked at 73
percent during his impeachment and held almost steady at 60 percent
ever since) and his shamelessly stupendous fundraising abilities,
the man could run in New York tomorrow and save for the Constitution
be reelected by a landslide.
Having resisted spelling out anything like a
post-presidential agenda for himself, Bill Clinton couldn't help
quarterbacking his wife's campaign to fill the gathering void in
his own political life. A man who cannot sit still, Clinton had
smashed the record for foreign trips by a sitting President, traveling
to 72 countries by the middle of his last year in office, as compared
to Ronald Reagan who visited 24 nations in his two terms. Indeed,
his exhausted speechwriters said he was ever more the energizer
bunny in his last year, mounting an average of three speeches a
day and flying around the country to make executive orders protecting
the nation's wilderness areas and coastal waters from polluters.
As his last years became divisible into last months, Bill Clinton
spoke often and wistfully about how he much he would miss working
in the Oval Office, relaxing at Camp David, hearing the flourishes
of the Marine Band, and how he would love to run for the Presidency
forever. One of the youngest of the nation's chief executives to
be forcibly retired, at the age of fifty-four, Clinton continued
to deflect questions of what he intended to do with the rest of
his life. He phlegmatically mentioned he would write a book but
said he didn't know how he would otherwise earn a living. Although
he had the gall to represent his impeachment as good for the country,
describing it as "one of the major chapters in my defeat of
the revolution Mr. Gingrich led, "it could end up restricting
his earning power.
Eight months before his exit from national office,
the Arkansas Supreme Court's disciplinary committee recommended
that he be disbarred. His defenders blamed the same old right-wing
conspiracy. The Southeastern Legal Foundation, which brought one
of the complaints, was indeed partly funded by Clinton's eternal
pursuer, Richard Mellon Scaife. But Susan Webber Wright, the judge
who found him in contempt of court and fined him $90,686, had filed
an earlier complaint. And having cut off Arkansas by registering
to vote in his wife's adopted state, he wasn't going to see a Clinton
library built any time soon.
What options was he considering? I continually
asked people close to the Clintons. "I would venture he's given
it almost no thought," said one of his former press secretaries.
"That's way too scary. He'll drive off that bridge when he
comes to it."
With a blank slate before him after January 20,
2001, Clinton will be more dependent than ever on the kindness of
Hillary. His former press secretary Mike McCurry was asked by a
student audience at Northwestern University what President Clinton
will be doing in twenty years. McCurry barked out the obvious answer:
"Whatever Hillary wants him to do!"
The Road Not Yet Traveled
Thirty years before, Hillary ruminated that
she might spend her life solving other people's problems while completely
defaulting on solving her own. As a young woman she wrote, "I
wonder who is me. I wonder if I'll ever meet her. If I did, I think
we'd get along famously."
In her early adulthood, Hillary's choice was
to set her life course by following the man she loved. She married
a politician and chose to go down his road. Now she knows where
that road ends - draped in the tattered cloak of Bill Clinton's
legacy and wandering off into middle-aged oblivion. But the other
road, the one less-traveled by - the Hillary Rodham road - is still
open to her. She certainly has the energy and the pluck. The passion
for public service still smolders inside her. And now it is sparked
by the need for redemption, even revenge. Having thrashed her way
through the dark wood of our contemporary political jungle and survived
a thousand cuts, she has perhaps developed the rhinoceros skin that
her patron saint, Eleanor Roosevelt, said was necessary for women
in politics. Hillary has always tried to follow Eleanor Roosevelt's
ruthless intention to have an impact on her century. And what was
it her friend Sara Ehrman had told her years before, when she had
announced her headstrong choice to marry Bill Clinton? "Yes,
but remember, Hillary. Eleanor Roosevelt only became powerful when
she stopped caring about her marriage."
No matter what happens in the future, she is
already a different person. Hillary has come through the little
death of midlife and stood up against scorn. As she tries on her
own political form, she is dreaming not only of a different life
but of a different world. Her ambitions are broader than a change
in personal identity. Standing in the ruins of Al-Badi Palace in
Morocco in March 1999, swathed in a coppery sunset, Hillary gave
a long, heartfelt address on human rights: "We can alter the
direction of the planet when we follow leaders who speak of peace
and work against war, who serve their people by healing divisions,
not creating them." She wound up exhorting her audience of
royals, ministers, and ambassadors - and herself - to "alter
the direction of this planet by dreaming of a different direction
that we can all take in our own lives."
Traveling this road, Hillary Rodham may at last
meet herself. And perhaps they will get along famously.
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