Los Angeles Times

Looking back on 2016 campaign

In Clinton’s new book, she has harsh words for Trump, Sanders, Comey — and herself.

- By Mark Z. Barabak and Barbara Demick mark.barabak @latimes.com barbara.demick @latimes.com Barabak reported from San Francisco and Demick from New York. Times staff writers Kurtis Lee and Michael Finnegan contribute­d to this report.

NEW YORK — Hillary Clinton, who spent decades on the public stage in myriad roles and changing personas, emerged Tuesday in a new one: ghost from the political past.

The reception was decidedly mixed.

On the day marking publicatio­n of her third memoir, the former first lady, U.S. senator, secretary of State, two-time Democratic White House hopeful and loser of the searing 2016 presidenti­al race made a flurry of campaign-style stops, including a book signing and media interviews.

It was a chance to reopen old political wounds and allow partisans to fall back on familiar antagonism­s.

For Clinton fans, their ardor undimmed, the reemergenc­e of their heroine offered a chance to ponder what might have been.

In New York, hundreds lined up at a bookstore for a chance to shake her hand, enjoy a snatch of conversati­on and buy their own autographe­d copy of “What Happened.”

Shannon and Jessica Marshall, 29-year-old twin sisters from New York, dug out the blue “I’m With Her” T-shirts they hadn’t worn since the early hours of Nov. 9, when Clinton conceded defeat to Donald Trump. “The world would be a lot less stressful if she’d won,” Shannon said.

The former candidate arrived nearly an hour after the scheduled 11 a.m. starting time. The crowd greeted her with shouts of “Hillary! Hillary! Hillary!”

Seated on a makeshift stage separating her from reporters and those who came to see her, Clinton made no public remarks to the media but chatted with fans, offering sympatheti­c bromides to the many who expressed their grief over the election.

“Keep up your spirits,” she was overheard saying. “We have to do better .... I’m glad you like the book.”

In the course of 491 pages, Clinton took full responsibi­lity for her stunning loss to Trump — she carried the popular vote but lost in the electoral college — except when she didn’t.

“I go back over my shortcomin­gs and the mistakes we made,” she wrote. “I take responsibi­lity for all of them. You can blame the data, blame the message, blame anything you want — but I was the candidate. It was my campaign. Those were my decisions.”

She said her lucrative speechifyi­ng after leaving the Obama administra­tion, which drew attacks from both Trump and her primary rival, Bernie Sanders, was a mistake. “I should have realized it would be bad ‘optics,’ ” she wrote. “I didn’t. That’s on me.”

She also reiterated that her decision to use a private email server as secretary of State, which led to a politicall­y enervating FBI inquiry, was “a dumb mistake.” But, she said by way of qualificat­ion, it was “an even dumber ‘scandal.’ ”

In the same fashion, Clinton’s buck-stops-here declaratio­n yielded to a number of grievances — about misogyny, a public with little patience for substance — and a gallery of villains she blamed for costing her the election.

Among those cited were Sanders, President Obama, Russian President Vladimir Putin and, especially, James B. Comey. The former FBI director came in for particular derision for his handling of the email investigat­ion — and especially reopening the case in the final days of the election.

“What happened in the homestretc­h that caused so many voters to turn away from me?” Clinton wrote. “First, and most importantl­y, there was the unpreceden­ted interventi­on by then-FBI Director Jim Comey.”

She said Obama could have been more forceful responding to Russia’s proTrump meddling in the campaign, and also writes that he kept her from going harder after Sanders.

The Vermont senator, a political independen­t and not a registered Democrat, came in for some of her most barbed commentary. “Because we agreed on so much, Bernie couldn’t argue against me in this area on policy,” Clinton wrote. “So he had to resort to innuendo and impugning my character. Some of his supporters, the so-called Bernie Bros, took to harassing my supporters online. It got ugly and more than a little sexist.”

The sniping at Sanders, who fired back after excerpts from the book were published last week, has only deepened the trepidatio­n among Democrats wishing Clinton had taken the more typical route, accepting her lumps, not writing the book and retiring to the role of respected, but seldom seen, party elder.

Instead, she will embark on a tour that will stretch into mid-December. Her sole California appearance is scheduled for Oct. 9 in Davis.

“This is not the time to be going around and talking about the past and giving reasons and excuses for why you lost a campaign. Frankly, it helps nothing,” said Jeff Weaver, a senior advisor to Sanders. “Moving forward we need fresh ideas and people who will take the fight to the Trump administra­tion.”

Not surprising­ly, Trump came in for brutal treatment in Clinton’s account.

She describes him as phony, cruel, insensitiv­e, sexist and thoroughly unqualifie­d to serve as president, though she allowed as how: “You’ve got to give it to Trump — he’s hateful, but it’s hard to look away from him.”

She suggested the president not only admires Putin, but wishes to be like him: “A white authoritar­ian leader who could put down dissenters, repress minorities, disenfranc­hise voters, weaken the press, and amass untold billions for himself. He dreams of Moscow on the Potomac.”

Speaking at the White House, Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders offered a tart rejoinder. “I think it’s sad that after Hillary Clinton ran one of the most negative campaigns in history, and lost ... the last chapter of her public life is going to be now defined by propping up book sales with false and reckless attacks,” she said.

In one of the memoir’s more tender moments, Clinton discussed her marriage to President Clinton.

“There were times that I was deeply unsure about whether our marriage could or should survive. But on those days, I asked myself the questions that mattered to me: Do I still love him?” she wrote. “And can I still be in this marriage without becoming unrecogniz­able to myself — twisted by anger, resentment or remoteness? The answers were always yes. So I kept going.”

And for those who may wonder, Clinton said, yes, it can be painful to be a public figure so deeply reviled for reasons she still cannot fathom. “For the record,” she wrote, “it hurts to be torn apart.”

But despite what Republican­s and even some Democrats might hope, she would not follow the path of those previously vanquished and quietly go away. “There were plenty of people hoping that I, too, would just disappear,” she wrote. “But here I am.”

 ?? Seth Wenig Associated Press ?? HILLARY CLINTON arrives at a New York bookstore to sign copies of her third memoir. “The world would be a lot less stressful if she’d won,” one supporter said.
Seth Wenig Associated Press HILLARY CLINTON arrives at a New York bookstore to sign copies of her third memoir. “The world would be a lot less stressful if she’d won,” one supporter said.

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