I started
reading Shattered:
Inside Hillary Clinton’s Doomed Campaign and quickly found myself
paying close attention to the numerous accounts of the presidential candidate’s
interactions with her speechwriter, Dan Schwerin. Perhaps it was because corporate
(and a little political) speechwriting has been such a large part of my career.
Perhaps it was because the accounts, as chronicled by authors Jonathan Allen
and Amie Parnes, rang so true to my own experience.
Perhaps it was
because I worked for a wide array of executives, a few of whom shared character
traits in common with Clinton.
After reading
the book, here’s my understanding of Clinton and her speechwriter. She liked
him; he was a fine speechwriter. She worked him tirelessly; he believed in the
candidate and was willing to work long, thankless, hours. But she was never
really satisfied with his work, because he seemed unable to articulate why she
was running for President of the United States.’
There was a good
reason for that, one that went right to the heart of why Clinton ultimately
lost the election. The candidate herself could never articulate why she was
running for President. “I’m the most experienced and competent candidate ever”
was not a compelling campaign narrative. “It’s time we broke the glass ceiling
for women” was also not a reason.
That wasn’t the
speechwriter’s fault.
Allen and Parnes
take the reader on a highly detailed, in-depth tour of the Clinton campaign, from
the time before the announcement that she was a candidate all the way to the
post-election remorse and recriminations. I didn’t for a minute doubt that they
themselves were Clinton supporters, but this book is not a flattering kiss-up
to the candidate. Instead, it is a clear-eyed view of what happened and why.
And other factors built on her inability to articulate her reason for being in
the race in the first place.
Clinton was
determined to avoid the mistakes she believed her team had made running against
Barack Obama in 2008. She was so consumed with this that she ended up making
many of the same ones, because she missed the essential nature of those
mistakes in 2008.
The campaign
relied heavily on data analytics – perfected by the Obama campaign teams in
2008 and 2012 – and less on traditional polling. They likely should have relied
on both. Data analytics misled them in Florida, Wisconsin, and Michigan, until
it was too late to do anything about it.
The candidate
and the campaign team first missed and then misunderstood the huge wave of
populism that rose like a monster from the political deep. Bernie Sanders and Donald
Trump both rode that wave. Both Sanders and Trump were able to articulate
clearly why they were running for the country’s highest office. And both
Clinton and her team saw but seemed unable to deal with the revolt of the
American working class, especially in the Rust Belt.
The campaign
team and the candidate assumed the “narrative of the blue wall” – and believed
that states that had gone Democratic in recent elections would continue to do
so. The Sunday before the election, warning lights were flashing full tilt in
the Rust Belt, and the response was too little and way too late.
The ruthless
power struggles within the campaign team, by the paid consultants, and by the DNC
were all factors.
Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes |
The perceptions
of the Clinton political empire played a role – the Clinton Foundation and its
acceptance of money from all comers; the speeches she made to groups like
Goldman Sachs; the hovering presence of Bill Clinton, who always believed he
knew better than the campaign team. Sometimes he was right. Sometimes he was
wrong, like when he met with Attorney General Loretta Lynch at the Phoenix
airport.
Clinton went
into the campaign hobbled by the ongoing media coverage of her private email
server used for State Department business. And once Wikileaks started the
release of the hacked John Podesta and Democratic National Committee emails,
most people conflated those emails with Clinton’s server problems.
FBI director
James Comey playing popup-head with “We’re ending the criminal investigation of
Clinton, no indictment but she did a bunch of illegal things,” “We’re reopening
the investigation,” and “We didn’t find anything after all” was also a
significant factor.
All of this, and
the details of the primary campaigns and the general election, form the
narrative of Shattered. Donald Trump
plays a small role in this story. Clinton’s campaign team had never run into a
candidate like him before, not to mention some of his wild statements and
antics (like inviting four alleged women victims of Bill Clinton to one of the
presidential debates). But the authors clearly see the reasons for Clinton’s
defeat not so much explained by Trump as by the significant failings of the
candidate and her campaign team.
Allen is an
award-winning journalist with a long political reporting pedigree, including
Politico, Bloomberg News, and Roll Call. He’s currently the head of community
and content at Sidewire and an adjunct professor at Northwestern University.
Parnes is senior White House correspondent for The Hill and has also written
for Politico. She has previously reported on the 2008 and 2012 election cycles.
Allen and Parnes are also the co-authors of HRC:
State Secrets and the Rebirth of Hillary Rodham Clinton (2014).
Dan Schwerin, the speechwriter |
The authors rely
a lot on unnamed sources (like “a senior campaign official”), but they explain
why and how they managed that. The account of the Clinton campaign in Shattered has the ring of truth. And
while the authors don’t cover much beyond the two days following the election,
there is much here that points to what happened in the months afterward – the shock
of the defeat, the rage it engendered, and the “Russia interfered with our
election” narrative. Among others.
And I keep
thinking about Schwerin, the speechwriter, struggling to write his candidate’s
speeches in the context of a vicious campaign, constant crises upending
finished speeches, sniping from the campaign team, Obama’s people, the consultants,
the DNC, and the candidate herself. Of all the people covered by this book, he’s
the one – the only one – that garners my sympathy.
Shattered is an absorbing book, but if you’re not
a political junkie, it does require some stamina to get through the detail. But
there’s a reason for that – the explanation is in the details.
Top photograph: a Hillary for President
campaign poster.
1 comment:
Very interesting book. I never really stopped to think about what was going on behind the scenes. I don't know that I would pick up this book to read it. I am not much into the politics of things, but you never know.
Maybe I should one day just sit back and think of the behind the scenes of campaigns and maybe think to pick up a book on someone I might be interested in learning in. Clinton is just not one of them.
Thank you for an interesting review to read about.
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