New York Post

WHY 2016 WILL BE AN UGLY AFFAIR

- JONAH GOLDBERG goldbergco­lumn@gmail.com

THERE are plenty of reasons to believe 2016 will be a very ugly election year. Here’s one more. Bloomberg Politics convened a focus group of Iowa Democrats. Nearly all loved Hillary. “She’s a bad mamajama,” said one female participan­t. Bad mamajama is good, by the way. The woman explained that Clinton is “not afraid to step up” or “afraid to say, ‘No. I don’t want to do it that way. I’m going to do it this way.’ ”

Another participan­t insisted that Clinton is a “better woman than I am” — a great standard for selecting a president, to be sure — because of Clinton’s ability to weather various scandals and humiliatio­ns.

The awkward part came when Bloomberg’s Mark Halperin asked the room, “What did she accomplish that you consider significan­t as secretary of state?”

The answers — or rather, the replies, since no one had an answer — were awkward to say the least.

“I really can’t name anything off the top of my head,” one squirming Democrat admitted.

“Give me a minute. Give me two minutes. Go to someplace else,” another Iowa Democrat pleaded. A third let the uncomforta­ble silence play out before confessing, “No.”

One young man offered the most grudging endorsemen­t he could. “She’s been at a high level in numerous offices for about 25 years now. It’s either going to be that or it’s going to be Scott Walker . . . destroying America’s unions. She’s not perfect. But she’s been in the eye for a long time — in the public’s eye — and you’re going to have some stuff on her. But, you know, she has great policies, and she knows how to get stuff done.”

So, the best case for her is that she weathered a lot of scandals and, to borrow Robert Hoover’s defense of the Delta Tau Chi fraternity in “Animal House,” Hillary Clinton has “a long tradition of existence.”

Supporters also said she knows how to get stuff done but can’t name anything she’s actually, you know, done. This is like praising a coach for knowing how to win football games but not being able to cite any actual wins.

In fairness to them, Clinton can’t name anything significan­t she did as secretary of state either — because she didn’t do anything very significan­t.

The consensus inside the Beltway is that this isn’t a big problem for Clinton. I’m not so sure.

The Beltway view does have merit. Most voters are partyline voters. The young man who hates Scott Walker will vote for whichever candidate isn’t Scott Walker. (Likewise, Republican­s will likely vote for whichever candidate isn’t Hillary Clinton.) John Kerry had no significan­t accomplish­ments to his credit after decades in the Senate — and yet, in 2004, he got more votes than any Democratic presidenti­al candidate ever had up until then.

Still, Clinton has a problem. While partisan Democrats will surely vote for her, their difficulty — and her difficulty — in citing any meaningful accomplish­ments may not play well with independen­ts and swing voters.

Personally, I think swing voters are a mixed bag. We don’t have a formal parliament­ary system in this country, but in reality we vote for parties, not personalit­ies. Do you want these 5,000 appointees running the government or those 5,000 appointees? If you’re a liberal Democrat, you want liberal policies implemente­d by liberal officials. If you’re a conservati­ve Republican, you want conservati­ve policies implemente­d by conservati­ve officials.

Swing voters put more emphasis on particular personalit­ies. They also put a premium on their own selfconcep­tion as independen­t thinkers. Thus, they give a lot of weight to things like accomplish­ments, if for no other reason than to justify their “swing voterness.”

And that’s why the 2016 election will be an ugly affair. Going by her own fan base in Iowa, Clinton is not a fresh face. She has more baggage than the luggagecla­im level at O’Hare Airport. Her record amounts to surviving scandals, many of her own making. Her most compelling selling point is that she’s a woman. And her strategist­s have decided she needs to energize the “Obama coalition” of lowinforma­tion voters.

All of this points to a general election strategy of demonizing her opponent — whoever he (or she) might be. If you can’t make the case for yourself, you make the case against your opponent. And the Clintons certainly have a long record of accomplish­ment in doing exactly that.

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