When it comes to Hillary Clinton, there is no shortage of unfair and unprincipled reasons for disliking her -- and if you listen to AM talk radio for an hour, you'll probably hear them all.
I reject the sexism of those who still think a former First Lady has no place in policy debates, just as I reject the absurd theories of those who think she had a hand in the death of her close friend Vince Foster.
Having volunteered on Clinton's first senate campaign, I get mad when I hear Rush Limbaugh savage her as a liar and an opportunist. I'm also grateful to her for keeping Rudy Guiliani and Rick Lazio out of the Senate.
But you don't have to be a sexist or a conspiracy theorist to oppose Clinton's candidacy.
I don't dislike Hillary; I distrust her. And my reasons are both substantive, and based on direct personal experience.
When a major issue hit the area where I live, New York's Hudson Valley, Clinton was less than honest with her constituents, and all too eager to take credit where none was due.
For nearly 7 years, Hudson Valley communities were riven with controversy about a vast, coal-burning facility proposed by St. Lawrence Cement here in the Hudson Valley.
The company, a subsidiary of what was then the largest cement manufacturer in the world, had a horrendous track record of both environmental destruction and anti-competitive behavior, with millions of dollars of fines on the books.
The project would have burned some 500 million pounds of coal annually, with a 40-story smokestack, a 1,200-acre mine, and a huge barge facility on the Hudson, an American Heritage River. The controversy was covered everywhere from CNN to Swiss television, and every major Northeast newspapers (The New York Times, Hartford Courant, Boston Globe, et al.) opposed it editorially. The nearly seven-year battle was the subject of a PBS documentary, Two Square Miles.
Given the harsh health, scenic, noise, traffic, economic and other negative potential impacts of the project -- opponents naturally wanted to get the ear of Mrs. Clinton, and we tried everything.
She was approached at campaign whistlestops, at private dinners, and public fundraisers. Printed factsheets were pressed into staffers' hands, and handwritten letters beseeched our new Senator to help end this dangerous idea. But she refused to take any public stand.
Finally, as the leader of the grassroots opposition, I tried the old-fashioned political route. A friend identified a celebrity donor in nearby Dutchess County who was opposed to St. Lawrence's plans, and he called in a big favor. On February 12th 2003, we drove to the Capitol in his limo, and we met with Hillary first in a chamber outside the Armed Services Committee, then took a long walk and tram ride under the Capitol to her offices. Hillary was both charming, and surprisingly well-informed on our issue.
At last, here was my big chance to make a full case for her involvement.
But when I launched into a carefully-prepared spiel, the Senator stopped me: "You don't need to do the presentation," she said. "The plant is a terrible idea. Just tell me how I can help." Delighted, I described the various Federal permitting processes in which she could intervene, and the benefits of her taking a public stand.
She called in her chief environmental policy advisor, and gave detailed instructions: Get a memo on her desk right away, listing the necessary action steps and the policy rationales for each, and she'd get right to work on it. Her performance was smart and convincing, and her celebrity backer and I practically floated down the Capitol steps on the way out.
The rest was silence. After promptly delivering the requested memo, I was never able to get her staff (let alone the Senator herself) to discuss the issue again, let alone take action to stop the plant.
About a year later, Clinton was cornered on the SLC issue by an interviewer from The National Trust for Historic Preservation, who finally got her to say that she thought the proposal was "not the right direction for the Hudson Valley." These remarks were published in Preservation Magazine, which Clinton apparently thought no one would read... because when we then alerted local media to her statement, Clinton's staff denied the remarks and claimed she still had not taken a position.
Only after nearly 14,000 residents and 40 groups wrote in opposition to the Republican administration of George Pataki did this terrible project get scrapped. The company spent $60 million, and yet the citizens managed to stave off the largest cement company in the world -- no thanks to Hillary.
But there was one more damning chapter in our Clinton saga.
After we won, the group I co-founded received an award at the Waldorf-Astoria from the Preservation League of New York. During the award ceremony, it was announced that there would be a video tribute from someone who couldn't attend, but who wanted to pay her respects. Up on a giant screen came Hillary Clinton, talking about how we'd all fought such a good fight together.
Those of us who had been in the trenches for years looked at each other in amazement. All the awful things people say about Hillary were horribly validated: She didn't deliver on her promises, and then she took credit for a victory achieved without her help.
Now, some friends say, "Come now -- all politicians are the same. They tell you what you want to hear, and then do the opposite. Get over it!" Others say, "Well, Hillary dropped the ball on that one, but I still trust her on health care, education, abortion, the economy, et cetera."
To these excuses I say: Other politicians from five states had the guts to take a stand on an issue affecting hundreds of thousands of downwind residents; why couldn't Clinton?
Why should we expect her to act differently the next time a major regional controversy hits? If she won't stand up for the health of our local children and the elderly, and won't expend any political capital to save a broad swath of her own adopted State as its Senator, why should we expect her to behave differently as President?
And why shouldn't I get behind another candidate who is just as strong on core Democratic issues, such as Barack Obama -- whose campaign overtly rejects this cynical brand of politics?
The whole experience brings to mind that phrase famously mangled by our current President: Fool me once, shame on me; fool me twice, shame on Hillary.
And that's why Senator Clinton doesn't have my vote on Super Tuesday. She will almost certainly carry this State, but our votes can help ensure that at least a portion of New York's delegates to the Democratic convention are awarded to a more deserving candidate.
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UPDATE #1: In the comments, Joynow dug up a quote from 2006 which makes an appropriate coda to this diary:
"I'd like to make it clear to the people who run the Democratic Party that I will not support Hillary Clinton for president. Enough. Enough triangulation, calculation and equivocation. Enough clever straddling, enough not offending anyone." -- Molly Ivins
UPDATE #2: In response to some mistaken or even malicious comments below which led to some thread-hijacking, let me just briefly note here that:
- The project in question did require Federal permits (EPA, U.S. Army Corps, FAA, Coast Guard) and thus Clinton had a legitimate role to play on the issue, beyond lending her clout to the citizens fighting a pitched grassroots battle.
- I am not a "Blogger for Obama" and never heard of the site before today; at the same time, I do not object to anyone reprinting the text of this diary, preferably with a link to Kos.
- I am actually a longtime Edwards supporter, who very recently has switched to Obama for obvious reasons. However, this opinion of Clinton was formed long before the Presidential campaign began.
- Before accusing anyone of Hillary-hating and before trying to refute the story with personal attacks, please re-read the first few paragraphs of the intro and investigate the links. More info about my background can be found in a two-part interview at Grist.org
UPDATE #3, a smoking gun: I've managed to find the original documents showing how Clinton handled the Preservation Magazine interview, once it was publicized to a wider audience:
PRESERVATION MAGAZINE, MARCH/APRIL 2004 ISSUE, INTERVIEW WITH CLINTON:
Q: A large cement factory is to be built nearby [Olana State Historic Site]. Should such a thing be allowed?
A: It would be a big step backward from what has been a return to cultural and historic preservation as an engine of economic development.
THE REGISTER-STAR [HUDSON], 1 MARCH 2004:
Sara Griffen, president of The Olana Partnership, said, "We are of course very pleased to have her come out and state publicly her opposition to the St. Lawrence Cement plant proposal."
"Obviously, we're thrilled to hear such words from a New York senator and major international figure," said Sam Pratt, director of Friends of Hudson. Both Friends of Hudson and The Olana Partnership are fighting against St. Lawrence's proposal through the state's environmental review and permitting process.
While Griffen's and Pratt's reactions are understandable considering the published comment they read, Clinton's press secretary, Jennifer Hanley, stressed that "the senator hasn't come out for or against the cement factory."
UPDATE #4: I found a memo to Clinton in my files which contains the following simple and direct "ask" for her to intervene in the Federal-level review then underway by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The ask goes as follows:
As anticipated on the day of our meeting, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has, in fact, begun its review of the cement plant proposal, and as a result we are writing to seek your assistance in ensuring a proper review of this project at the Federal level.
24 national, statewide, regional and local groups representing over 135,000 members in the region have already signed on to a joint letter to the Corps; we expect that all 32 groups opposed to this project, which account for over 175,000 members in New York State alone, will sign onto this letter. The letter calls upon the Corps to (A) halt the project entirely, or (B) at minimum to:
- Require a full Federal Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) due to the extraordinary scale and scope of the project and its impacts;
- Hold the public comment period open while waiting for other local, State and Federal agencies’ determinations, since key aspects of the project design remain in flux;
- Conduct a thorough Section 106 [Note: this is a Federal process, too] review with the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, to consider this proposal’s severe impacts to historic properties and other scenic and cultural resources.
At the Corps’ recent two-day public hearings attended by Ken Mackintosh, 4 out of 5 speakers opposed the project. Moreover, many public officials echoed these requests, including Congressman Hinchey [a Federal elected official], the Village of Athens Trustees, two Hudson Aldermen, a Hudson Supervisor, and a Dutchess County Legislator. The National Trust for Historic Preservation, which joins us in opposing SLC, also presented a very eloquent challenge to the project.
A copy of the Congressman’s letter will be faxed separately. Attached is a brief overview of the other key agencies with oversight for this project. [...]
Thanks, everyone, for all your input...