Chattanooga Times Free Press

HILLARY’S HEALTH IS A VALID ISSUE

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One of the most amusing spectacles of this election season has been the whipsawing of the loyalists. Repeatedly, spinners for Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have been sent out to hammer this or that talking point, only to be left holding the bag when the candidate goes another way.

So far, Trump has been narrowly ahead in this important competitio­n. But after Sunday, Clinton may have taken the lead.

For weeks, the official position of the chattering classes was that any inquiry into Clinton’s health was “sexist.”

As Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar told MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell on Sept. 2, “I have seen her personally. You’ve seen her personally, Andrea. She is in shape. She is strong. She just has a ton of energy. And I find this actually quite sexist when these guys are saying this. I think that that is not an issue at all, and the American voters know that.”

Glamour magazine ran an item headlined, “Yes, it’s sexist to speculate about Hillary Clinton’s health.”

Last week, Clinton herself was asked if discussion of her health was sexist. She replied with a long, ironic “hmmmmmm” that typified her gift for political subtlety and nuance.

The same day, the headline for Chris Cillizza’s Washington Post column captured the prevailing attitude: “Can we just stop talking about Hillary Clinton’s health now?”

Five days later, after Clinton’s near-collapse at ground zero, another Cillizza column carried this headline: “Hillary Clinton’s health just became a real issue in the presidenti­al campaign.”

But that wasn’t the only whipsaw. On Sunday morning, the Clinton campaign put out the explanatio­n that the heat got to her. Social media lighted up with corroborat­ions that lower Manhattan was the meteorolog­ical equivalent of the jungles of Borneo. Even New York Times columnist Paul Krugman testified that it was indeed “muggy.”

My favorite take came from left-wing writer Leela Daou via Twitter: “What we REALLY should be talking about is why it’s so damn hot on a September morning,” followed by the hash tags #GlobalWarm­ing and #climatecha­nge. Not only is Clinton going to fight climate change, she’s like a polar bear searching for an ice floe: proof that it’s real!

Then, hours later, the campaign admitted that it wasn’t the heat but pneumonia. The dervishes suddenly threw the gearshift into reverse. Out with the meteorolog­ical hand-wringing, in with encomiums to Clinton’s Stakhanovi­te stamina.

I have no sympathy for the spinners; this is the life they have chosen. And I have a word of caution for reporters who seem reluctant to cover certain issues if they think it’s going to reward Trump.

Journalism-school Jesuits have been saying that presidenti­al candidates’ health is relevant ever since FDR’s “splendid deception.” And in her FBI interview, Clinton seemed to invoke her concussion and subsequent blood clot as one of the reasons she couldn’t recall security briefings. That’s news. Period.

As this pneumonia episode demonstrat­es, Clinton’s real problem isn’t her health but the entirely valid perception that she’s dishonest, secretive and exploits “the system” — including the support of the mainstream media — for her benefit.

In 2008, news outlets openly speculated about whether Sen. John McCain was too frail to be president. NBC News ran an Associated Press story under the headline, “1 in 4 chance McCain may not survive 2nd term.”

People remember these things. When Clinton faltered on Sunday, she not only humiliated her most loyal servants, who were kept in the dark by a campaign terrified of playing it straight with voters and the media, she also made countless people say, “Looks like Drudge was right again.”

Jonah Goldberg is an editor-at-large of National Review Online and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

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