The Jerusalem Post

Clinton’s performanc­e should help stabilize backers’ concerns

- • By DAVID LAUTER

WASHINGTON (TNS) – Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont may be Hillary Rodham Clinton’s leading opponent, but for much of this year, the former secretary of state’s biggest challenge has been herself.

Headlines about her use of a private email server while running the State Department put her on the defensive. Her defensiven­ess reminded many voters about their qualms over her truthfulne­ss. Those voter qualms gave many Democratic activists and donors the jitters.

As Tuesday night’s debate began, Clinton quickly sought to break out of that vicious cycle and turn the spotlight to her strengths, not her weaknesses. And after a summer in which she seldom seemed able to keep the focus where she wanted it, the debate largely seemed to go her way.

In news conference­s and interviews, she has often displayed a clenched jaw. In the debate, she was all smiles. With nods to time spent in the White House situation room and crisp answers about five-point plans, she exuded a sense of command that her rivals on stage often seemed to lack. And, in sharp contrast with her reticence on the subject during the 2008 campaign, she repeatedly reminded viewers that with her, they could make history: After the US elected its first black president, it now had a chance to elect its first woman.

For Sanders, by contrast, the debate probably reinforced an image as a political figure who is not afraid to take positions that lie outside the perceived mainstream. For many viewers, Tuesday night was likely their first sustained exposure to the Vermont senator. While his repeated calls for political “revolution” and suggestion­s that the US should look to Denmark for answers to social policy dilemmas may have thrilled his followers on the party’s Left, they seemed unlikely to expand his support beyond the college-educated white liberals who have flocked to his rallies.

Debates are about contrasts, and Clinton, Sanders and the other three Democrats on the stage offered several on issues both large and small. But the session also served as a reminder of the relative unity that Democrats have enjoyed through most of President Barack Obama’s tenure in office. It’s a unity that is particular­ly striking at a time when the Republican Party struggles on the presidenti­al level and in Congress, to find a way to bridge fundamenta­l divisions.

For Clinton, the key moment – and the one that seems destined to be the debate’s most replayed – came when CNN anchor Anderson Cooper pressed her on the email issue. Avoiding the defensive crouch, Clinton admitted that using a private email server as she conducted public business had been “a mistake.”

“What I did was allowed by the State Department, but it wasn’t the best choice,” she said, then quickly pivoted to an attack on Republican­s that drew cheers from the crowd in the hall.

Republican­s had spent $4.5 million in taxpayer funds on an investigat­ive committee in Congress (the Benghazi special committee) that was acting as an “arm of the Republican National Committee,” she said. “It is a partisan vehicle” designed to “drive down my poll numbers,” she added, citing a statement made earlier this month by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California.

“That’s what they have attempted to do,” she said. “I am still standing.”

A moment later, Sanders endorsed Clinton’s stance.

“Let me say something that may not be great politics,” he said, “I think the secretary is right... the American people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails.” As the two shook hands the audience roared its approval.

It was, to be sure, a partisan crowd. An exchange like that will by no means reduce the intensity of Republican dislike for Clinton. Nor will it necessaril­y win over the relatively small number of voters who remain undecided about her after a generation in the public eye.

But for Clinton, winning over those voters is a problem for the future. Her more immediate challenge has been to quiet the worries among Democrats about whether she could respond to attacks without alienating voters. The cheers were partisan, but partisans are the voters Clinton largely needs to impress for the next several months.

Clinton’s secondary goal was to drive home contrasts between herself and Sanders. On that point, too, the Vermont senator gave her a considerab­le boost.

By citing Denmark as an example for social policy and insistentl­y defending his self-definition as a socialist, Sanders gave Clinton an easy opening to portray herself as a champion of American capitalism, just one who wants to “rein in the excesses.” By maintainin­g his skepticism about certain gun control measures, he allowed her to depict herself as a stronger opponent of the National Rifle Associatio­n. And by insisting that he would oppose any sort of “no fly” zone over Syria, he allowed her to paint herself as tougher in internatio­nal crises.

To seriously challenge Clinton in states beyond Iowa and New Hampshire, where the electorate­s are overwhelmi­ngly white, Sanders needs to broaden his appeal to the minority voters and moderates among whom Clinton currently holds a strong lead. He may yet do that, but except for a few remarks critical of the criminal justice system and supportive of immigratio­n reform, the debate showed little indication that Sanders has a plan to reach beyond his core base of support.

There was one other key audience for Tuesday’s debate – the man for whom CNN had saved an extra lectern, Vice President Joe Biden. Clinton and her campaign aides have been careful to avoid saying or doing anything to indicate impatience with Biden’s on-again, off-again flirtation with entering the race. But they clearly understood that a weak debate on the part of Clinton would dramatical­ly ratchet up the pressure on Biden to go ahead.

That didn’t happen. Biden’s window for entering the race has seemed to be closing in recent days as Clinton’s campaign appeared to stabilize after several bad weeks. Last month, in an interview with a Catholic magazine, Biden said that he understood that time to decide on a presidenti­al bid might run out before he could make up his mind. Tuesday’s debate seemed to make that prediction more prescient.

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