She really is dreadful sometimes:
dreadful on camera, dreadful with the microphone, dreadful on the stump. The unshakable
impression of dishonesty, consistently reported by half the electorate, comes mainly from the eyes I think. Wide as windows
lacking drapes, they seem to be propped open by some unnatural force. The gaze roves
at first, then comes right at you, persists, freezes, and does not quite manage
to hide the vast underlying intelligence. So then you feel that she is sizing
you up, probing for weakness, looking for some way to use you perhaps. You
glance at the door and think you will not buy the car after all, not today.
So start with that mildly unfortunate
tic of appearance, then add in a knack for sophistry that is entirely ordinary
among politicians, one that, in a man, might be admired and expected and produce a jocular
nickname like, say, Slick Willie. Factor in the Right’s simmering paranoia, add
the relentless superficiality of the media, rev up the attack machine, let it
run for three decades, and there you have it: a widespread, devoutly held myth
of Hillary the Liar, a thrilling apprehension of evil that will not let go no
matter what evidence is chewed and spit out and chewed again. After a while,
not for the first time in American politics, suspicion becomes its own
confirmation. You just know there must be something wrong here, because so
little seems wrong: someone must have hidden the evidence.
Then there is the voice. Everything
comes too slowly, and the intonations seem to have arrived in a different
carton from the words themselves. The pacing, gestures, facial expressions are
all a flicker out of phase with the message, just enough to make them feel
rehearsed and superadded. She says, “Well, America, we are going to tell them
loudly and clearly”—making her perhaps the only native speaker in the country
who would not have said “loud and clear” — but she is obeying an oversimple
adverb rule she learned in AP English. An advisor has told her at some point
that she must show more passion, so midway through the speech, eerily, a switch
seems to be flipped, and suddenly she is shouting everything: the nouns, the
verbs, the conjunctions, the sizzling epithets, the humdrum transitions, the substance,
the filler, the throwaways, the applause lines, the parts that any child can
tell need to be whispered. You grip the edge of your folding chair and wait for
someone to jump up and run around behind her and throw the shout switch back
off.
Coming out of Super Tuesday with a
historic string of victories, she exults as follows:
Now it might be unusual, as I’ve said before, for a
presidential candidate to say this, but I’m going to keep saying it: I believe
what we need in America today is more love and kindness.
All padding, no merchandise. A great big
box full of styrofoam peanuts. But the worst thing is that she intones “love
and kindness” so fiercely it sounds like a death threat.
At other times she can fall into a listless
sing-song, a hoarse introverted mutter. It seems to happen when she is roving
around inside her own head, MIA for a minute, prowling among vast piles of information.
Somewhere back in there she has an answer for everything, absolutely everything,
and will gladly find it for you if you just wait while she runs to fetch it.
Her ex-presidential spouse looks on, his
smile so frozen he could be a tribal mask. You think of the teeth inside that famous
head, the incredible pressure they must be under. He has long since sworn to
leave off kibbutzing, remove the training wheels, let her fly solo — but, Jesus.
Why is it that someone so smart, so incredibly smart, smarter than he ever was,
simply cannot learn not to step on
her own punch lines? She drones on, giving some damn set of statistics, while
the audience tries to laugh, tries to applaud, tries to make a connection that
she is all the while, without ever knowing it, coldly spurning. When she gets
genuinely excited for a moment, exploring the wonky details of a proposed
program, only he can tell, for her pace never varies, and it is as if she is
giving a blow-by-blow account of a round of bridge, mercilessly spurred on by
her own photographic memory. Her
sentences are all too long. You know where she is heading too early, and then
you watch her laboring to get there, choosing her words too carefully. The
Wellesley-Yale vocabulary offers far too many possibilities, and there is a
very long roster of constituencies that must not be offended. She pauses,
starts, pauses, and finally settles on the blandest, dullest, most politically
correct word possible. It is Tourette’s Syndrome in reverse.
You check your watch and think, for a
guilty nanosecond, of the Trump rally next door, all the fun those idiots seem
to be having. You can afford to have it, fun, when you don’t care that you are
wrecking the country.
But you get a grip, re-settle your
attention. What is it now? Plans for the Middle East, one of her many strong
suits. Some good ideas, tactical expertise, plenty of detail, not half bad. If
only she weren’t wearing that wrap that looks like it has been upholstered onto
her.
But she has finally recovered from the string
of bad-hair, bad-eyebrow days she had in the eighties and nineties. This new
hairstyle looks good. In this crazy year the Toad King, destroyer of worlds,
has decreed that women’s appearances are to be, once again, fair game, if not
quite the trump-in-spades they once were. Toad King has shown that an old
paunchy white man with a cosmically ridiculous comb-over, pig eyes, a widely
ridiculed spray-on tan, and a face that billows and droops like a badly pitched
tent can purchase a succession of gorgeous daughter-wives, call other women any
name he pleases, and remark that supermodel Heidi Klum is “no longer a ten.” It
is just women of course who shall be subjected to such judgments. For men, the
only requirement is that the check must clear.
Again you think of what Bill must be
thinking. Back in 2008, in New Hampshire, a single instant of unguarded emotion
— when, exhausted, she miraculously teared up just as the cameras were probing —
brought her campaign back from the grave, made spring come early, prolonged the
battle to epic length. And now in 2016 — so very much later, not all that much wiser
— if she would just, for one damn instant, relax, forget the script, and live
in the moment, a startled and grateful country would unquestionably reward her with
the presidency.
It was what the Hound Dog himself was always
best at: living in the moment. Ask Monica, ask Paula, ask Gennifer. That talent
has its drawbacks, like every other.
For a big chunk of the electorate,
including a majority of non-college white men, Hillary has always been that
girl in high school who attracted you a little, intimidated you a lot, and
sometimes, inexplicably, filled you half full with a strange, incoherent anger.
Girls needed to be better at everything, of course, so by God she was better. She made straight As, joined
lots of clubs, and was nice to everyone. She made the tennis team, patiently
sitting on the bench during most matches. She sang lead in the school musical,
her performance as good as endless practice could make it, and memorized the
entire Constitution for AP History. While you were basically a wreck, buffeted
by unruly impulses, her desire hardly seemed to exist; it had all been
transmuted into unending, unquestioning good behavior.
So when she and Hound Dog arrived in DC
for their first lap, the antipathies were instantaneous and profound. She was Rasputin,
Tartuffe, Lady Macbeth. She was a lesbian, and the arrangement with the Dog was
purely for show. Here was Mom with all the usual power, but none of the
reassuring, redeeming warmth. Here was
Feminism sneaking in the back door, the Balanced Two Career Marriage rammed
down America’s unready throat. No one minded that she seemed to provide the
good sense in the marriage, the self-control, the spine. All that was in the
natural, patriarchal run of things. What was intolerable was her apparent lust
for achievements all her own, specifically
for power in that most intimate of spheres, health care. Cold, perfidious,
unelected Hillary! It was as if, after a lifetime of being bared and prodded by
none but male doctors, you were suddenly reassigned to that pretty new female
GP, with nary a by-your-leave. The plan she turned in was arguably a botch, too
laboriously assimilated through a mechanical process of consulting, compiling,
and splitting all differences, but it was probably doomed in any case. Harry
and Louise doused her with a bucket full of old-fashioned sentimentality, and
it melted her away on the spot, and all her flow charts and spreadsheets with
her.
What brought her back from the dead that
time was hard work, of course, but also the bizarre agony of Lewinskygate, a
purgatorial ordeal for everyone concerned, not least a public subjected to a
drumming deluge of Too Much Information. The state troopers, the unzipped fly, the
cigar, the blue dress. At first she was clearly blinded by ideology, but then it
began to look weirdly like love. She seemed to learn everything later than we
did, and for once we had the drop on her, not vice versa. America was in the awful
position of the Friend Who Knows but Can’t Decide Whether to Tell. Hound Dog
had at last gotten himself in too deep to swim without her help, and what oh what would she do when she found
out?
What she did was more or less the
conventional thing: forgave him and took him back, the lousy SOB, after bouts
of bitterness kept mercifully behind doors but readily imagined. What was she
supposed to do, kick him out of the White House? The solution she found
instead, unlike the health plan, was simple and obvious, and it was vastly
merciful to him, to her, to the country, to everything but her own supposedly
overblown pride. White Male America, which by that time had had a number of
years to reflect on the upside and downside of a spousal paycheck (there was no
downside, it turned out), took a breath and sat up, startled. It seemed that
there was warmth there after all, and plenty of it, more than your old lady
would probably show if you got caught the same way.WMA, a critical swing
constituency that would bedevil her before and after, found it rather liked
this new Hillary: hurt, humbled, pathetically off stride. For a fleeting, magic
moment the carnival of bickering that is America seemed to pause; right and
left moved a millimeter closer together, and men and women. WMA swung over to the other side, in its
flighty way, long enough to launch a Senate career that proved successful; for
the talent the cameras couldn’t see had always really been there.
So now what? At this point it seems
clear that she has repelled the remarkably cordial assault of Gandalf and his
Hobbit army, that northern horde that seemed so fearsome for a while. Everyone
with a heart will miss Gandalf: his snowy hair, his wonderful growl, his still
more wonderful smile, his ex-athlete’s gracefulness, his exquisite timing, and
above all his success in changing the national conversation to things that
matter. Even those of us who suspected he might prove, in office, a tedious
Savonarola, lighting bonfires and not much else, will surely miss him.
Pollyannas in our number still hope final victory will hold some prize for him:
a new cabinet post, maybe, as Minister of the National Conscience.
But first the Toad King must be defeated.
He is girding for battle, crowing and grinning and beckoning, flicking his long
tongue in and out among his jowls, a small-eyed Jabba the Hut. He waits for her down in the weeds and mud,
his lips glistening, his huge throat pulsing. His zombie minions, terrifying creatures who cannot
be deterred by fact, reason, decency, or anything short of a shotgun blast
between the eyes, croak his praises ever louder. Sober analysts explain that
the Princess of Parallelograms has the exact fighting style most calculated to
underperform against the King’s underworld judo, with its magic power of
neutralizing position papers and bullet points. They predict that he will win a
split decision, having first turned the entire nation into a gigantic junior
high school, with everyone running up and down the halls crying “Did you hear
what he called you?” and “I know you are but what am I?”
So here is what I see happening in November.
Eighty-five percent of voters, about evenly divided, go into the booths passionately committed to either
the Princess or the Toad, ready to gargle razor blades sooner than vote for the
other one. As so often, everything depends on the lukewarm center, the
undecideds, the almost-didn’t-make-its. They go in and fasten the curtain,
wanting to get the thing over with, wishing they could be home catching a
favorite show. But first they must, at long last, decide. This is hard. Very
hard. Harder than they expected.
But at length there comes a question:
how pissed off am I, really? Then other questions: Do I really think the
Chinese, the Mexicans, the women, and the Muslims took my job, or was that
really sort of an excuse, and does it matter so much now that I have another
job? Do I actually know anyone who has died in a terrorist attack? Do I want
Wal-Mart prices to double in a trade war, or a thousand tanks to bloom in Kiev and Damascus? And do I really think a Toad King presidency will be as fun, as all-out
ass-kicking pure-d fun, as this crazy campaign has been?
And finally a few quiet, decisive
thoughts: if I need entertainment, hey, I’ve got cable, and if I need a date
there’s Match.com. But for President, boring is sort of what you want. You
could do worse than a bureaucratic slogger who spends every Friday night of her
life doing her homework. If she is too much a creature of polls and focus
groups, eternally shaping her answer to what she thinks you want to hear,
letting her positions drift, isn't that pretty much what democracy itself does? One thing for sure, she’ll be at work on time every Monday, ready to
learn her lines and buckle down.
Hillary by 10 pm on the 8th, hands down.
Then a presidency nowhere near as bad as people fear.
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