By Jonah Goldberg
Friday, October 09, 2015
Hillary Clinton revealed on Wednesday that she opposes
the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal, providing just the latest evidence
that she is little more than political ambition wrapped in a pantsuit.
Pay attention to the press coverage, because it’s
fascinating: Nobody takes Clinton at her word. I’m not just referring to her
conservative critics.
Slate’s Jim
Newell asks, “Will anyone find Clinton’s position convincing?” The question is
purely rhetorical. The article is headlined “Hillary Clinton Comes Out Against
TPP, at Least Until the Democratic Convention.”
In “First Read,” a newsletter put out by Meet the Press host Chuck Todd and his
colleagues, the lead item on Thursday was titled “Why Clinton’s Trade Flip-Flop
Is So Unbelievable.” They write:
Yes, Hillary Clinton’s new opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade accord cleans up something she needed to do before next week’s first Democratic debate. And, yes, it puts pressure on Vice President Joe Biden getting into the race (because he’d be the only major candidate in support of TPP). But make no mistake: This flip-flop isn’t believable at all.
Clinton had long touted TPP as “the gold standard” of
trade deals. A tally by CNN in June found at least 45 instances where she had
plumped, praised, pushed, or otherwise promoted the agreement. That, of course,
would make sense given that she was secretary of state when it was being
crafted and had a big role in selling it.
After she left the administration, Clinton said she
wouldn’t take a position on TPP until it was done. She couldn’t put it off any
longer, so she’s finally taking a stand. Well, maybe not a stand. It’s more
like a modified crouch.
Here’s how she explained her position on PBS: “As of
today, I am not in favor of what I have learned about it.”
It’s hard to say exactly how long it will be before that
cri de coeur replaces William Jennings Bryan’s declaration “You shall not
crucify mankind upon a cross of gold” as the ne plus ultra of political passion
and principle, but my hunch is it will take a while.
Clinton went on to explain that she was “worried that the
pharmaceutical companies may have gotten more benefits, and patients and
consumers fewer.” She also said she was deeply worried about safeguards against
“currency manipulation” not being part of the deal.
But as even the reliably liberal writers at Vox note, this makes no sense. The
provisions — or lack thereof — on currency manipulation are no different than
they were when then-Secretary Clinton was calling TPP the “gold standard.”
Meanwhile, the provisions on pharmaceutical companies are tougher than what the
administration asked for.
As Vox’s
Timothy Lee notes, Clinton is either making up reasons to oppose TPP now, or
she was utterly ineffectual then — i.e., when she could have made a difference
inside the administration.
I think this is a false choice; both things are probably
true.
In fact, finding evidence that Clinton operates this way
is like looking for evidence that fire is hot. In 2008, when it was in her
interest, Clinton was against federal “blanket rules” on guns; now she’s making
extra-constitutional gun-grabbing the centerpiece of her campaign (at least
this week, while a recent mass murder is still fresh in our memories). She long
opposed same-sex marriage on principle, until the times required a new
position. She initially thought the undercover videos of Planned Parenthood
were “disturbing.” But within 48 hours, she was a stalwart defender of Planned
Parenthood. As more — and more disturbing — videos emerged, she grew more
adamant that the outrage wasn’t the fetal organ harvesting, but the videos
exposing them.
And so on: the driver’s licenses for undocumented
immigrants, the Iraq War, NAFTA, taking credit for regime change in Libya, her
ever-shifting stories about her e-mail server. Hillary Clinton is like a lava
lamp. Don’t like what you’re seeing at the moment? Wait a minute. Just don’t
expect anything to last.
But all of this misses what I find so fascinating. With
most of these examples, it’s almost impossible to find someone who takes what
Clinton says or does at face value. If you’re not on her payroll, or auditioning
to get on it one day, or just painfully naive, you simply start from the
assumption that Clinton is unencumbered by any principles that might prove
inconvenient to her political ambitions.
No wonder she’s running scared from a socialist.
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