Hillary Clinton
Related: About this forumInside Hillary Clintons Surreal Post-Election Life
When I walk into the Chappaqua dining room in which Hillary Clinton is spending her days working on her new book, I am greeted by a vision from the past. Wearing no makeup and giant Coke-bottle glasses, dressed in a gray mock-turtleneck and black zip sweatshirt, Hillary looks less Clinton and more Rodham than I have ever seen her outside of college photographs. Its the glasses, probably, that work to make her face look rounder, or maybe just the bareness of her skin. She looks not like the woman whos familiar from television, from newspapers, from America of the past 25 years, but like the 69-year-old version of the young woman who came to the national stage with a wackadoodle Wellesley commencement speech in 1969. With no more races to run and no more voters to woo with fancy hair, Clinton appears now as she might have if shed aged in nature and not in the crucible of American politics. Still, this is not Hillary of the woods. She is reemerging, giving speeches and interviews. Its clear that she is making an active choice to remain a public figure.
Its the day after Donald Trump has fired FBI director James Comey, the man who many including Clinton believe is responsible for the fact that she is spending this Wednesday in May working at a dining-room table in Chappaqua and not in the Oval Office. Clinton checks with her communications director, Nick Merrill, about whats happened in the past hour shes been exercising and listens to the barrage of updates, nodding like a person whose job requires her to be up-to-date on whats happening, even though it does not.
I am less surprised than I am worried, she says of the Comey firing. Not that he shouldnt have been disciplined. And certainly the Trump campaign relished everything that was done to me in July and then particularly in October. But having said that, I think whats going on now is an effort to derail and bury the Russia inquiry, and I think thats terrible for our country.
It will be days before newspapers report that Trump asked Comey to move away from the Russia investigation prior to firing him, but the implications are already clear. History, says Clinton, will judge whoevers in Congress now as to how they respond to what was an attack on our country. It wasnt the kind of horrible, physical attack we saw on 9/11 or Pearl Harbor, but it was an attack by an aggressive adversary who had been probing for many years to figure out how to undermine our democracy, influence our politics, even our elections. Her hope, in the wake of Comeys dismissal, is that this abrupt and distressing action will raise enough questions in the minds of Republicans for them to conclude that it is worthy of careful attention, because left unchecked
this will not just bite Democrats, or me; this will undermine our electoral system.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/inside-hillary-clinton%e2%80%99s-surreal-post-election-life/ar-BBByHMS?li=BBnb7Kz&ocid=edgsp
JHan
(10,173 posts)Oh my she was bringing it.. and she's so right.