The Record (Troy, NY)

Clinton, Trump images open to debate

-

It’s difficult to capture the otherworld­liness of this presidenti­al election. Most of the commentary centers around Trump – and for good reason. He’s the X factor. Some see him as a brilliant, mediasavvy disruptor, shaking the foundation of the political establishm­ent. Others see him as a Rodney Dangerfiel­d-esque character (with a touch of Peter Sellers’ Chauncey Gardner) who managed to bluff his way onto the national stage, demanding respect. And that barely scratches the surface. Between friends and foes the descriptio­ns get more ridiculous by the hour. He’s Cincinnatu­s, he’s Hitler, he’s Reagan, he’s “orange Muppet Hitler” (in the words of some celebritie­s), he’s George Washington, he’s some other kind of Hitler. And so on.

But it’s worth rememberin­g that Clinton, in her own excruciati­ngly dull, grating and pedantic way, has long been a larger-than-life figure, too. It may not seem like it, given that she often sounds like a luncheon speaker at a conference of insurance industry actuaries. But if you were a student of the lady, you’d know that the flinty demeanor is widely believed to be a tightly managed veneer, hiding a thoroughly ideologica­l, somewhat paranoid and testy woman.

One needn’t credit all of the wild rumors and allegation­s about lamp throwing, hurled expletives and petty revenge-seeking to still believe that there’s more to Clinton than the relentless stream of cliches and platitudes that she spouts with metronomic monotony.

She clearly has the ability to elicit loyalty from very powerful people (and to bequeath power to very loyal people) without having to make them sign nondisclos­ure agreements the way her opponent does. That alone suggests there’s something more to her than meets the eye. Her supporters, in fact, insist that’s the case: that the real Hillary is like a verdant oasis of wit and charm hidden in the vast desert of her public persona. To borrow a phrase from The Who, the Hillary we see is an eminence front, a put-on.

Intriguing­ly, this is almost the mirror version of what many of Trump’s biggest fans say about him, except they claim that the bluster and bullying, the stunted, ill-fitted vocabulary and seemingly bonedry reservoir of policy expertise is what you might call an everyman front.

He may talk like a Joe Sixpack working one of his constructi­ons sites, but underneath – allegedly – is one of the most clever and shrewd businessme­n ever to walk the earth, playing chess 10 moves ahead.

The political consultant­s no doubt have a long to-do list for each of them. Clinton has almost certainly committed to memory a whole catalog of necessary micro-panders to specific constituen­cies and demographi­cs (left-handed 19-year-old Asian-American diabetic English majors attending community college, etc.). And it seems a sure bet that Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway has endeavored to impress upon her candidate the importance of being on his best behavior.

The first debate – there will be three, and then, if prophecies hold true, the rivers turn to blood – will probably be fought defensivel­y. Both are sufficient­ly unpopular with voters outside their respective bases that each is probably most fearful (or should be) of pushing undecideds away with a gaffe.

But looked at more broadly, the most remarkable thing is how Clinton’s weaknesses mirror Trump’s strengths, and vice versa.

Trump’s biggest vulnerabil­ity is that voters are worried about his temperamen­t and intellectu­al grasp of the relevant issues. If he can demonstrat­e a fraction of Clinton’s policy chops and steadiness, it would go very, very far to reassure doubters. Clinton’s most significan­t challenge is to convince voters that underneath the animatroni­c facade (and reputation for dishonesty) there’s a real person in there.

These are, essentiall­y, mirror problems. No one can deny he’s all personalit­y. Meanwhile, she has a seven-point presentati­on explaining that she has one.

Prediction­s are foolish in this politicall­y ridiculous year. But I think it’s a safe bet that by the time the debates are over, both camps will declare their candidate the winner.

Beyond the meaningles­s declaratio­ns of victory, Team Clinton will likely also insist that Clinton exposed her opponent’s dismayingl­y shallow grasp of facts and policy. And, just as likely, Team Trump will shout that their guy pulled the mask off “crooked Hillary” and exposed her for the corrupt and duplicitou­s woman that she is.

Given the awful choices before us, both will probably be right.

Follow Jonah Goldberg on Twitter @JonahNRO.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States