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a top staffer for her, even if it is years from now. The 2008 books suggest why a book by a prominent TV analyst might be useless.
I did read Todd's book and it was pathetic. To me, it was kind of a summation of all the linked articles on DU on the election, with everything not fitting the end result removed. My main observation is that it added no new insight on how Obama was able to build the team he did and gain the support he needed to beat a candidate with the party and media support.
The awful gossipy Game Change book, for which I've only seen the excerpts, seemed to do more, but it was limited to things people chose to leak. It does suggest the outline of strong Senate Democrats, people who knew Clinton very well, banding together and pushing Obama to run, with their tacit support. It was especially stunning to read that Schumer, who was 110% behind Clinton publicly, was included. She was stabbed in the back by the Centrist wing of the party. If it all true.
This really challenged the view I had from following the race closely here and elsewhere. In that view, Obama started with Senator Durbin, who was his only superdelegate for a long time. The first of the many major endorsements I saw was John Kerry, followed by several Conservative Democrats, and then the very important Caroline and Ted Kennedy endorsements. Reid, I thought, was neutral - his son was a prominent Clinton person, so many of us here thought, though he was neutral, he leaned to Clinton. Looked at that way, Obama owed the left - the Kerry/Kennedy wing. Remember the excitement in the week before superTuesday with those endorsements. Without them, Clinton would have won more delegates in MA, CA, NJ and NY if she ran like she polled then - SuperTuesday would have made her the nearly certain nominee.
With the new insight, how does that change? Here's where I am not sure. As the centrists were silent, how did they influence anyone? The only thing I can think of is that they could have influenced the big money donors - but, that doesn't seem likely given that Hillary's bundlers raised huge amounts of funds. What I do know is that the Kerry/Kennendys endorsements did create positive stories and energy at the critical point.
My question now is what was the real truth? Was there really a big conspiracy in the Senate to deny Clinton the Presidency? As it was publicly silent and didn't stop fund raising, what did it really do? My guess is that what we saw was a big piece of the truth and the Harris book spins what was likely encouragement to have another viable candidate in the field into a plot to explain why Clinton lost.
Will we ever know? I think we will - years from now when Axelrod, Pouffle or someone whose name we might not even know tells the story from the inside.
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