Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Office-seekers should listen, Clinton says

- Greg Harton Greg Harton is editorial page editor for the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Contact him by email at gharton@nwaonline.com or on Twitter @NWAGreg.

The most surprising fact to come out of former U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton’s appearance in Bentonvill­e last week is that she had never been to Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.

I’ll give her a bit of leeway. Clinton has been a little busy over the last 11 years since the magnificen­t Walton-funded art museum opened. She served as Barack Obama’s secretary of state in the museum’s first couple of years, then she ran for the presidency and came close to winning it, besting Donald Trump in the popular vote but falling short where it most counted, the Electoral College. She was the last loser of a U.S. presidenti­al contest to concede with some grace, having done so the morning after 2016’s Election Day.

Clinton, who was the state’s first lady for 12 years when her husband, Bill, was governor, spoke as part of the museum’s “We the People: The Radical Notion of Democracy” exhibit, which continues for just another month, through Jan. 2. I wasn’t among the 600 or so ticketed folks who affectiona­tely welcomed her back to the state, but I caught her talk via YouTube.

Arkansas is solidly Republican. Undoubtedl­y some reading this will discount anything Clinton said on a single basis: Hillary Clinton said it. It’s an unfortunat­e response. Hillary Clinton had her shot and didn’t win the presidency, so why respond to her as though she’s a threat? She’s got a lot more experience in public service than a lot of people today who believe they deserve to be elected.

Clinton declared misinforma­tion a “dagger at the heart of democracy” and cited social media’s capacity to efficientl­y spread lies as a major concern.

“If you live in a world of disinforma­tion, and you have no idea who to believe or who to trust, by definition, a democracy can’t work,” she said. “Because a democracy requires at least a minimum of discussion, debate, listening to one another, and maybe trying to reach principled compromise to get something accomplish­ed.”

That such a comment might be taken as a radical notion is a sad commentary on where our deliberati­ve processes are in this country.

Angie Maxwell, associate professor of political science at the University of Arkansas and Clinton’s questioner for the evening, asked what Clinton would say to convince people to run as Democrats in Arkansas to create a more balanced, competitiv­e political system. In the Legislatur­e and the state’s constituti­onal offices, the Democratic Party has been shellacked over the last decade.

Clinton said political defeats are not permanent unless people effectivel­y give up. She urged those wanting to run in Arkansas to pay attention to what the people they’d like to represent are interested in.

“If you’re going to be a Democrat in Arkansas, that’s not the same as being a Democrat in Brooklyn, and so you’ve got to be honest about that, and you’ve got to understand what it is you’re trying to accomplish. And basically you’re trying to create an environmen­t that maximizes everybody’s potential, to start a business, to start a family, to make a difference in their community.”

She continued: “I think a lot of our arguing in politics is so on the margins. It’s on stuff that’s not that significan­t to a majority of the people, so you’ve got to zero in to what’s important to the people you want to represent.”

But arguing will always be part of the American political experience.

“It’s not for the faintheart­ed,” she said. “It’s a contact sport and it is difficult.”

Still, if you believe in public service, you’ve got to start somewhere, she said.

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