http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2092-1723872_1,00.html- snip -
These days Clinton is positively uxorious. “Gosh,” he glows about Hillary, “she’s done a brilliant job in the Senate and I’m really proud of her.” If she wants to run for president — and only the Clintons are still saying “if” rather than when — “whatever it is, I’m for her”.
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There are few swing votes in Bush-bashing and, as ever with Clinton, he has the great gift of believing, perfectly genuinely, what suits him politically. If Hillary wins the 2008 Democratic nomination, she won’t be facing Bush in battle, so why bother to take him on?
Her biggest challenge will be to persuade Americans that she has what it takes to be a commander-in-chief. Already, Clinton is positioning her to criticise the war in Iraq from the right.
“Clearly in theory I’d like it if we had fewer troops in Iraq,” he says, at a time when the Pentagon is talking about bringing some home, “but there are a lot of people — 58% of them — who want their enterprise in self-government to succeed. They voted in reliance of the action we’ve taken. So I think we ought to hang around and try to make it work.”
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He is impressed, he says, by Hillary’s ability to work on cross-party issues with right-wing senators. “In a time when the atmosphere has been so hostile and partisan to me, I think they just got to know her as a person. They see her all day, every day. It’s easier to dehumanise somebody when you are distant from them. She is basically a really good person, and most of them are too.”
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