The Commercial Appeal

The path ahead for Hillary Clinton

- GEORGE F. WILL COLUMNIST Ed Rogers: In a change election, Hillary Clinton is the incumbent Leonid Bershidsky: Blaming Putin won’t help Clinton beat Trump Eli Lake: Cyber experts say Russians hacked the Democrats Noah Feldman: Kaine’s $160,000 in gifts w

Hillary Clinton’s challenge is analogous to Ronald Reagan’s in 1980, when voters were even more intensely dissatisfi­ed than they now are. There were hostages in Iran and stagflatio­n’s “misery index” (the sum of the inflation and unemployme­nt rates) was 21.98. By August 1979, 84 percent of Americans said the nation was on the wrong track.

A substantia­l majority did not want to re-elect Jimmy Carter, but a majority might do so unless convinced that Reagan would be a safe choice. Reagan’s campaign responded by buying time for several half-hour televised speeches and other ads stressing his humdrum competence.

Now, voters reluctant to support the unpleasant and unprepared Republican also flinch from Clinton, partly because of the intimacy the modern presidency forces upon them: As a Clinton adviser uneasily notes, a president spends more time in the average family’s living room than anyone who is not a family member. Clinton is not a congenial guest.

Her opponent radiates anger, and America has not elected an angry president since Andrew Jackson, long before television brought presidents into everyone’s living room, where anger is discomfiti­ng. Clinton’s campaign must find ways to present her as more likable than she seems and more likable than her adversary, both of which are low thresholds. Regarding the threshold that matters most — 270 electoral votes — she would not trade places with her opponent.

Since 1976, Florida, today’s largest swing state, has been somewhat more Republican than the nation. Clinton now is in a statistica­l tie there (in the Real Clear Politics average of polls), where the Hispanic vote is growing and moving left. She leads in Virginia, the third-largest swing state (behind Ohio), by RCP’s 5.3 points and in another purple state, Colorado, by 8 points.

One state that might indicate a tectonic shift in American politics is Arizona, which has voted for a Democratic presidenti­al candidate only once since Harry Truman in 1948 (Bill Clinton in 1996, by 2.2 points). In 2012, Mitt Romney defeated Barack Obama there by 9 points.

Today, however, John McCain’s sixth Senate campaign may be becoming his most difficult. His trademark has been “straight talk,” but now he must mumble evasions about the man at the top of the Republican ticket who has disparaged McCain’s war service. McCain, who has won his five previous elections by an average of 33.4 points, today leads in the RCP average by 5.5.

If Clinton, who is in another statistica­l tie in Arizona, decides to compete there, one reason will be the Mormons. They are just 5 percent of the state population, but 8 percent of the general election turnout. In a competitiv­e election, their deep cultural antipathy toward Donald Trump might swing 11 electoral votes. Utah Republican­s in this year’s caucuses voted 69.2 percent for Ted Cruz, 16.8 for John Kasich and 14 percent for Trump.

If Arizona becomes a presidenti­al battlegrou­nd this year, it will validate the analysis by The Atlantic’s Ron Brownstein that any Trump gains for the GOP among white bluecollar votes in Rust Belt states (e.g., Ohio, Wisconsin, Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan) may be more than matched by Clinton gains among minorities and persons with college educations in Sun Belt states and elsewhere.

Clinton’s selection of Virginia’s U.S. Sen. and former Gov. Tim Kaine represents the rare intersecti­on of good politics and good governance. He increases her chance of winning the 13 electoral votes of his state, which has voted with the presidenti­al winner in four straight elections and seven of the last nine. He, like she, has been an executive, so perhaps experience has inoculated him against the senatorial confusion between gestures and governing.

There probably is no Democratic governor or senator more palatable than Kaine to constituti­onal conservati­ves. Such conservati­ves are eager to bring presidenti­al power back within constituti­onal constraint­s, and Kaine is among the distressin­gly small minority of national legislator­s interested in increased congressio­nal involvemen­t in authorizin­g the use of military force.

As a member of both the Armed Services and Foreign Relations committees, Kaine can, if their paths ever cross on the campaign trail, patiently try to help Trump decipher the acronym NATO.

 ?? DANA SUMMERS / TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY ??
DANA SUMMERS / TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY
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