New York Post

Bubba’s Ghost

Dems must recapture his working-class appeal

- Jonathan S. tobin Jonathan S. Tobin is opinion editor of JNS.org and a contributi­ng writer for National Review. Twitter: @jonathans_tobin

THE timing for the conference in Little Rock, Ark., couldn’t have been worse. But apparently the participan­ts didn’t notice.

Commemorat­ing the 25 years since the 1992 presidenti­al election may have seemed like a great idea when the geniuses at the Clinton Foundation began planning a big party for their boss. But the celebratio­n held last weekend coincided with the epidemic of famous men accused of sexual harassment or assault, which reminded us of Bill Clinton’s equally horrible behavior.

But even before the #metoo movement began rewriting the history of the Clinton administra­tion, Democrats were already done with them. Though the party is primarily focused these days on the “resistance,” Hillary’s willingnes­s to blame everyone but herself for her loss as well as her whining about the result’s legitimacy is a gift to Presi- dent Trump and an embarrassm­ent to Democrats.

Yet just when it seems that the Clintons have been transforme­d from the ultimate power couple on an inevitable path back to the White House into political pariahs, Democrats would be wrong to ignore how the 1992 and 1996 elections were won.

The Clintons may be toast but what the Democrats need now to prevail against Trump is exactly the kind of centrist appeal that propelled those wins and enabled the 42nd president’s ability to govern effectivel­y without being in thrall to his party’s left wing.

The Clintons’ fall from grace was long overdue, and not without irony. The new consensus about the way prominent men got away with harassing and assaulting women has caused many liberals to express regret for the scorched-earth campaign they waged against Bill’s accusers.

The notion that saving his presidency was more important than the claims of the women he victimized was an article of faith for Democrats as well as those claiming to be feminists. But Hillary’s trashing of his accusers now seems no different from what Roy Moore’s defenders say.

Even before liberal pundits at The New York Times and opportunis­ts like Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand began retroactiv­ely calling for Bill Clinton’s resignatio­n, Democrats were done with the former first family.

Neither the Clintons nor their faux charity that operated as a thinly veiled political slush fund have anything more to offer after an incompeten­t campaign handed the presidency to Donald Trump. As longtime Democratic operative Donna Brazile indicated by writing a book throwing Hillary under the bus, no one need ever fear their wrath again.

Candidates who once looked to them for help will shun them like the plague. They will linger on the fringes of political life, an inescapabl­e part of our political history but also an embarrassm­ent to Democrats that may make the way the party once distanced itself from Jimmy Carter look like a warm embrace.

But at the moment when even many of their former loyalists have stopped listening to the Clintons, Bill actually has a lot to say that his party ought to be hearing.

Bill Clinton’s charm may have helped seduce a nation but his election victories were the product of an ideologica­l flexibilit­y that struck most Americans as sensible even if it also drove conservati­ve opponents and hardcore liberals crazy. He understood voters wanted a strong economy and stability, not recycled Great Society liberalism.

He could appeal to white working-class voters as well as African-Americans and Hispanics, a skill Democrats have lost as their party has become almost exclusivel­y a coalition of urban white liberals and minorities. Trump won because he reflected those working-class attitudes and concerns. Clinton knew that talking down to blue-collar Americans and ignoring or criticizin­g their worries on culture and social issues is a nonstarter, but such attitudes are second nature for today’s Democrats.

Democrats are convinced they’re headed to victory because of Trump’s unpopulari­ty. But they’re going to need a politician with the sort of historic appeal of a Barack Obama in order to win without relearning the lessons Bill Clinton taught them in the ’90s.

Since no such magical candidate is available, unless they begin acting, as Clinton did, as a party of the center rather than of the hard left, they could be setting themselves up for another astonishin­g defeat in 2020.

 ??  ?? If we can make it here: The Clintons campaignin­g in New York in 1992.
If we can make it here: The Clintons campaignin­g in New York in 1992.
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