Inside Clinton's Vice Presidential Campaign
With reporting by Suzanne Smalley
Let the games begin.
As Hillary Clinton signals this evening in New York that she will start to wind down her presidential campaign, behind the scenes, her next political push--a bid for the vice presidency--is already up and running.
Earlier this afternoon, reported that Clinton has finally told her supporters--either in response to a question or, according Buffalo News, by "bringing it up herself"--that she is
1) Continue to claim that it was Clinton's supporters, not the candidate herself, who brought up the veep idea. This makes it look like a grassroots movement--and not a naked power grab. "The discussion on these conference calls today about the vice presidency was unexpected," says our source. "I think it came as a surprise to virtually everyone here [at campaign HQ]... Her supporters raised it first....This was the first time many have had a chance to press it on her and several pressed this idea on her." Whether or not that's true--recall the conflicting Buffalo News report--it's certainly the campaign's story, and they're sticking to it.
2) Stress that Clinton is merely "open" to whatever is best for the party--i.e., that she's not committing a faux pas by demanding the veepship but rather respectfully recognizing her supporters' demands. Says our strategist: "She didn't make an open bid for the vice presidency...People pressed it on her. She didn't say yes. She didn't say no. She said she'll do her best to elect a Democrat president...She left the door open." Graciousness is good; pushiness is bad.
3) Let the media do the dirty work, jumping to the conclusion that Clinton has, in effect, demanded the VP slot--and therefore transforming Obama's choice, as Chris Matthews just put it on MSNBC, from "passing her over" to actively "snubbing her." Meanwhile, watch as the punditocracy speculates that an Obama-Clinton "dream ticket" is the only way to mollify Clinton's millions of devastated fans and unify the party--thereby raising the hopes of Clinton's passionate supporters and creating something of a self-fulfilling prophecy.
4) Pray that Obama feels as if he has run out of options. Either he rebuffs Clinton, rejects his beloved "unity," opposes "what's best" for the Democrats, further alienates her half of the party and risks his electoral future--that's Team Clinton's implicit argument, not mine--or he asks Hillary to be his second fiddle.
Clinton is clearly crossing her fingers for the latter. We'll see soon enough how Obama reacts.
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Andrew Romano is a senior writer for Newsweek. He reports on politics, culture, and food for the print and Web editions of the magazine and appears frequently on CNN and MSNBC. His 2008 campaign blog, Stumper, won MINOnline's Best Consumer Blog award and was cited as one of the cycle's best news blogs by both Editor & Publisher and the Deadline Club of New York. Follow Andrew on Twitter.
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