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It was a little over a month ago that The New York Times’ editorial board urged voters to cast their ballots for Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primary.
On one level, the editorial was blunt.
“As Democrats look ahead to the primaries in the biggest states on Feb. 5, The Times’ editorial board strongly recommends that they select Hillary Clinton as their nominee for the 2008 presidential election,” the item, appearing a little less than two weeks before Super Tuesday, declared.
But to some, there were grace notes that suggested the editorial board would not be mortified to have to endorse Barack Obama in the general election come November.
The rather dainty endorsement was as politic as a college valedictorian’s graduation address, and as tightly wound.
In the rest of the editorial section, the rules are exactly the opposite.
In a column from Jan. 27, Times editorial columnist Frank Rich wrote that a Hillary Clinton nomination “will send the Democrats into the general election with a new and huge peril that may well dwarf the current wars over race, gender.”
On Feb. 24, he wrote that Mrs. Clinton “offers only a chilly void: Abandon hope all ye who enter here. This must be the first presidential candidate in history to devote so much energy to preaching against optimism, against inspiring language and—talk about bizarre—against democracy itself.”
Maureen Dowd’s Jan. 6 column, “Voting for a Smile,” offered Barack Obama a kiss with a kick in it when she said that “vague optimism and smooth-jazz modernity came together in a spectacular fusion with the deep yearning of Democrats who have suffered through heartbreaking losses in the last two elections with uninspiring candidates.”
Three days later, she wrote, “[Hillary Clinton’s] argument against Obama now boils down to an argument against idealism, which is probably the lowest and most unlikely point to which any Clinton could sink.”
Unlike the board that puts together The Times’ endorsements, they can say whatever they want. They can even court an R rating. They cannot, however, endorse a candidate.
“I came here in 1995 and Howell Raines told me about it,” said Gail Collins, the former editorial director, who is now herself a columnist. “His thought, as I understood it, was that it would confuse people. Columnists could hint, and could make it clear, but we couldn’t explicitly say it.” The logic goes like this: If Gail Collins endorses Barack Obama, then a reader might confuse it for the New York Times newspaper endorsing Barack Obama.
Fat chance!
“I’m happy for that not to be my job,” Ms. Collins said. “My mandate now is to help the chattering classes chatter.”
“It’s just not the way I think as a writer,” said Frank Rich. “When I was a theater critic, I never wrote a review that would say ‘Go see this play tonight! This is what I think should win the Tony Award!’”
Indeed, the editorial columnists shy away from “service journalism.” This is a more elevated and enjoyable prose, ideally.
“It certainly is challenging,” said David Brooks. “It’s like a two-year process of deliberation without reading the verdict.”
They all agreed that the non-endorsing rule forces them to write about this election with a little more texture—more showing and less telling, perhaps.
Ms. Dowd, for her part, explained via e-mail that the no-endorsing rule “isn’t challenging for me because I don’t do a partisan column (that’s all i have to say about it).”
By the way, they are pretty much all for Barack Obama.
“It’s a constraint that leads to more interesting columns,” said Paul Krugman. “If anything, it’s a little bit like having your poetry scanned—it improves the writing.”
And his case may be the greatest test of whether the kind of old-school newspaper writing these columnists have the luxury to continue practicing—writing that helps people think things instead of buy things—can survive the barefaced polemics and commercialism that seems to drive the most prolific form of opinion-writing these days: the Comments Section.
“If Mrs. Clinton gets the Democratic nomination, there is some chance—nobody knows how big—that we’ll get universal health care in the next administration. If Mr. Obama gets the nomination, it just won’t happen,” Mr. Krugman wrote in his column earlier this month.
In a December column, he describes Mr. Obama as “naïve” and concludes his column by saying, “Nothing Obama has said suggests that he appreciates the bitterness of the battles he will have to fight if he does become president, and tries to get anything done.”
“You’ve managed to completely eradicate what respect I had left for you,” responded Keith, while JS just called him a “buffoon,” two of 161 comments on a Feb. 18 post.
Clearly, he’s not thinking of his own comrades on the editorial page, but the likes of Keith and JS (whose comments are vetted by his editor), when he later writes that Obama supporters “seem far too ready to demonize their opponents.”
“I won’t try for fake evenhandedness here: Most of the venom I see is coming from supporters of Mr. Obama, who want their hero or nobody,” Mr. Krugman later wrote. “I’m not the first to point out that the Obama campaign seems dangerously close to becoming a cult of personality.”
For the benefit of our readers: We suspect Mr. Krugman supports Hillary.
– By John Koblin
Popularity: 1% [?]
The only person who would complain about a “cult of personality” would be someone who has no personality.
Hillary Clinton is not only an AIPAC pawn, she is also as boring as hell.
It is of course possible to both respect and like an individual because of his intelligence and the cogency of his arguments while disagreeing with his conclusions. For me that is so with Paul Krugman, whom I greatly respect, but regret that he does not seem to understand the essential importance of Obama’s inspirational charisma. But then Kennedy had it and look where it got him…
I’ll just bet that the 2 responses alluded to above were written by men. I wish somebody could help me understand why white men are so afraid of a strong, intelligent woman like Hillary. White Republican and Independent men are crawling out of the woodwork to vote for Obama in an effort to keep from having Hillary declared the nominee for the Democrats. Those men will vote for a Republican in November - but they’re finished!! I don’t believe the Republicans will win the presidency - nor should they after the disasters they have foisted on us for the past 7 years.
PK
In response to Phyllis, the previous responder, I would like to explain that it is not that Hillary is a woman that makes her so repulsive to us, it is the fact that she is so unlikeable and carries too much baggage. Evidently not many people like the thought of Bill being loose on the world stage causing the U.S. further embarrassment. On the subject of NY Times endorsing Hillary, our local paper is owned by the NY Times and which ever candidate they endorse looses about 90% of the time. It just shows how out of touch the NY Times is with the general public. We are just tired of the Times giving biased opinions instead just reporting the news. Their subscribers shrink every year so it looks like they could figure it out.
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