The Democratic National Convention is upon us, and tonight Hillary Clinton will address the crowd. What will she say?
She put up a long, hard primary fight and blew what almost everyone considered a lock for the nomination; she stands at a crossroads now, and none of the options look very good. She wants to be President, almost as badly as Bill Clinton wants her to be President. BUT...
I mentioned in an earlier post about a possibility for a last-minute Clinton move that could snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. The pieces are falling into place as I predicted:
- Barack Obama got the Florida and Michigan delegations full voting rights
- Obama picked Biden as his VP -- an establishment old white male (hardly indicative of "change")
- Clinton supporters are angry over his apparent dismissal of Hillary as a VP choice
- Hillary will be voted upon as a nominated candidate
- Bill got dissed in his speech topic (national security instead of the economy, which he believes he excels at)
- The vaunted Obama lead in the polls over John McCain has vanished
Her options at this point are few:
- She throws full and active support behind Obama, and when he wins resigns herself to the fact that she'll never become President.
- She throws half-hearted support behind Obama, and when he wins resigns herself to the fact that she'll never become President.
- She throws full and active support behind Obama, and hopes he loses so she can run in 2012.
- She throws half-hearted support behind Obama, and hopes he loses so she can run in 2012.
Well, #1 and #2 won't cut the mustard. As for the other two, hoping Obama loses is one thing but helping that happen with half-hearted support will royally piss off the Democratic Party, and she can kiss goodbye any election chances in 2012. That leaves #3, but it'll be hard to work hard for an outcome she doesn't really want.
The alternative to #3 is to pull off the Clinton Ambush. Convince her followers to vote for her nomination, while convincing a hundred or so superdelegates not to vote for Obama on the first ballot. That opens up the floor to the real question -- is Obama really best positioned to capture the White House and lead the country?
Both options -- work hard and hope he fails, or pull off the Clinton Ambush -- are fraught with peril. If she wants to be President, though, she'll need to make a hard choice. Still, making hard choices is the hallmark of a good President, isn't it?
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Keywords: Barack Obama, Clinton Ambush, Democrat, Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton, John McCain, pledged delegates, president election, super delegates, US President, US Presidential Election

