Rhetorical Recap: Clinton Returns
September 16, 2016
โYou know, the campaign trail doesnโt really encourage reflection, and itโs important to sit with your thoughts every now and then and that did help me reconnect with what this whole campaign is about.โ
Speech in Greensboro NC, September 15, 2016.
This week the Clinton campaign hit the pause button for three days after a calamitous weekend of unforced errors. โBasket of Deplorables,โ uttered in a lapse of awareness by yet another candidate (Hi Mitt!) lulled into thinking that being among rich donors provides insulation from the omnipresent digital eye and ear, became the most retweeted hashtag of the campaign year to date. Then came revelation of a mini-coverup of an illness that, yes, might reflect some sexism in how it was discussed, but was so characteristically a Clinton negative as to trigger joy and dread in the appropriate contestantsโ corners.
This battleground-state event thus provided a chance for the Democrat to adjust persona, message, public relations, and public expectations for the debate.ย It was an occasion for a literal and perhaps rhetorical recovery speech.
Clinton had several overlapping options on how to address the lost weekend: an apology, anย oxymoronic display of authenticity, and greater accessibility.ย Each was a plausible remedy that no doubt had its advocates in Brooklyn HQ.ย
***
First came another โA,โ acknowledgment:
CLINTON: โYou know, the campaign trail doesnโt really encourage reflection, and itโs important to sit with your thoughts every now and then and that did help me reconnect with what this whole campaign is about.โ
She then cited her good fortune at being able to recuperate, in contrast to many working family members who canโt afford to. Those are the Americans who, she said, she is running for president to help.
Before outlining her solutions, she went authentic and apologetic.
CLINTON: โWhen it comes to public service, Iโm better at the service part than the public part, but this is why I do it and this is who Iโm in it for.โ
Last time, she was in it to win it.
โEverywhere I go Iโm going to talk about my ideas for our country. You know, my campaign has rolled out detailed plans in 38 different policy areas. Yes, somebody actually counted.โ
The unabashed tough policy wonk, authentic indeed. As was the passive-aggressive contrasting that followed:
โNow, I confess, Iโll never be the showman my opponent is and thatโs OK with me. Just look atโ look at the show he put on with Dr. Oz today. But I am going to deliver for you and your family just like I did for Sarah [anecdotally invoked earlier in the speech] all those years ago with the Childrenโs Health Insurance Program that gave her the chance to be the extraordinary young woman she is.โ
The solutions Clinton put at the top of her 38-point agenda are a living wage, quality health care, paid leave, and equal pay.ย โShowmanโ is a gritty word that she hoarsely delivered.
After the address, glory be, access was granted in the form of a ten-minute news conference. In her 2 ยฝ minute opening statement Clinton explained that she came here to give a positive personal speech about her vision, that she battled lots of noise and distraction, and wanted to give Americans something to vote for and not against. But next she attacked Trumpโs dismissal of the Flint pastor who cut him off and piled on the against verbiage.ย
After fielding a Syria question cleanly, saddling Putin with key responsibility for the next move, she met her moment of reckoning for the lost weekend:
CLINTON: โThis was an ailment that many people power through and thatโs what I wanted to do.โย
โPower throughโ is an appropriate rationale that could serve as a substitute slogan. Kudos to the candidate for not scapegoating her campaign and firing someone. And a bonus point for coming onstage to โI Feel Goodโ instead of โFight Song.โ
***
Hillary Clinton remains averse to answering open-ended questions for an extended period of time in the open from a group of people who have pointedly NOT paid for the privilege. The press is one such group; there are targeted voters in others. Roger Ailes arranged a suitable format for Richard Nixon to do this in 1968, a Q-and-A in the round, and the technique would work for Clinton. Thereโd be panache in filching Ailesโs technique, too.
To put it bluntly, there is nothing Clinton or any of her all-star surrogates can say to dispel the common perception that she is accessible only to high dollar donors. She can only dispel by repeatedly performing the deed of conversing with a few Americans with cameras intentionally rolling. Otherwise, she will have to win this election in spite of her debilitating penchant to be accessible only for pay.ย
More generally, I think the best message for Clinton to stress going forward would be an embracing, if not Khan-imitative brandishing, of the Constitution. โStronger Togetherโ can be aligned with โWe The Peopleโ and โE Pluribus Unum.โย Tying her policy positions to constitutional principles would reconnect with Sanders supporters desire for campaign finance reform and appeal to Republicans alarmed at the federal debt and impressed by the Reaganesque tones struck during the Democratic Convention in Philadelphia.ย (Clinton is slated to return to Philadelphia on Monday to speak to and about, but not necessarily with, millennials.) Many voters arenโt ever going to love Clinton.ย But they love the Constitution and believe it needs reform. Such an appeal would also contrast with Trumpโs ignorant and authoritarian tendencies.
Assessment of and gratuitous advice for Donald the Third (as in number of campaign management teams) next time.