Toronto Star

THE FIRE STILL BURNS

‘We are living through an all-out assault on truth and reason’

- VICTORIA GIBSON STAFF REPORTER

Former U.S. presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton took to a Toronto stage Thursday night in front of a cheering audience of thousands, a scene reminiscen­t of the campaign trail she left behind on Nov. 8, 2016.

Her electoral loss was almost a year old, but the sting is clearly still fresh.

“There were times when I just wanted to pull the covers over my head,” Clinton said of her failed campaign.

The appearance in Toronto was part of a 15-city tour to promote her newly released memoir, What Happened.

And, like her memoir, the speech darted between reasons for her electoral loss — including individual­s from former FBI director James Comey to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — and the “phoney stories and hysterical appeals” of right-wing press outlets.

The event itself was tightly locked down. Men and women in black suits, many with telltale earpieces snaking up their necks, shepherded media into a cordoned-off area and audience members to their places.

RCMP officers were embedded for Clinton’s protection, and maintained a low profile. Instead of their usual scarlet uniforms, they wore suits that blended easily with the crowd of about 5,000 — most of them women who howled and applauded at Clinton’s comments, which ranged in topic from Donald Trump to HGTV.

After a musical opener warmed up the crowd, playing songs such as “Sway” and “Hold On,” Clinton’s appearance began with a set of opening remarks that brought the crowd to their feet.

From the back of the room, one woman called out: “We love you!”

The comment echoed through the audience. Clinton beamed, telling the crowd her family had recently vacationed in Quebec. Veering into politics, she singled out Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as “charismati­c and compassion­ate.” “I remember when we had that in America,” she said, again delighting her listeners.

After a preamble that expressed her admiration for both Harriet Tubman and Kelly Clarkson, Clinton settled into a chair across from her moderator for the night — Caroline Codsi, founder and president of Women in Governance.

She was ready, she said, for the “hard questions.”

But the questions posed to Clinton were adoring.

Recalling a televised debate between her and Trump, the moderator described the latter as being “like a big bad wolf in a business suit.”

“Why did he refuse to say anything?” Codsi asked of Comey and the FBI’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the presidenti­al campaign. And why, it was also asked, did he choose to go public about the investigat­ion into Clinton’s emails?

“I don’t know why he did it,” Clinton responded. “I know it was the principal reason I lost the election.” She added that she had her doubts about whether the former director truly thought the allegation­s were “serious,” and said she didn’t blame voters for her loss.

She does, however, fear for the era her nation lives in under the leadership of the man who beat her. “We are living through an all-out assault on truth and reason,” she said.

All the while, the crowd clapped along, booing at mentions of Trump. Clinton didn’t shy away from jabs at her former opponent and his apparent admiration of Russian President Vladimir Putin. “He likes all that macho performanc­e,” Clinton said of Trump, adding that the current president took a liking to authoritar­ianism because it “dispenses with all the messiness of democracy.”

Comparing Canadian and American politics, she hailed the parliament­ary system north of the border — because in America, she said dryly, “literally anyone can run for president.” She openly called her oppo- nent a “creep.”

Throughout the hour, Clinton focused on issues of sexism.

“For men, profession­al success and likability go hand in hand,” she said. “Not for women.” There was a kind of “blowback about women’s progress” happening, she said. Sen. Elizabeth Warren was silenced when she tried to read a letter from Coretta Scott King in the Senate about Attorney General Jeff Sessions, she noted, but a male colleague was able to continue.

Just last week in Canada, she add- ed, former Conservati­ve cabinet minister Gerry Ritz called current Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna “climate Barbie” in a derogatory tweet.

The only way to combat sexism in politics is to increase the representa­tion of women, Clinton asserted. “It’s not just what happened to me in 2016.”

Though her experience was daunting, she said she hoped it wouldn’t dissuade other women from entering the arena. “I don’t want anyone to give up because it’s hard,” she said.

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR ?? Hillary Clinton got an enthusiast­ic reception from a crowd of about 5,000 Thursday night at the Enercare Centre.
STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR Hillary Clinton got an enthusiast­ic reception from a crowd of about 5,000 Thursday night at the Enercare Centre.

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