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politics and politicians Title: Hilary the 'ENABLER': That's the explosive charge levelled by Trump, who claims she betrayed women by ignoring Bill's sex attacks - demonising his victims instead Shortly after I had checked into the Marriott Hotel in Charleston, West Virginia, the other day, a familiar figure ambled up to the reception desk, flanked by security men and wearing his trademark self-adoring grin. Looking rather like a stick of candyfloss, with his fluffy white hair, lobster-pink nose and beanpole frame, Bill Clinton is now a gaunt shadow of the priapic president whose cigar-assisted romps with Monica Lewinsky provided stand-up comedians with a glut of smutty material during the Nineties. He appears older than his 70 years and is arrestingly frail following heart surgery. His hands sometimes tremor and his Arkansas drawl is so husky that it is hard to make out his words. One doubts hed have much use for pretty young interns these days. One of Bill Clinton's accusers: Kathleen Willey pictured with the former president. She was a White House volunteer aide who claims Clinton sexually assaulted her in the Oval Office during his first term as president However, since the U.S. enjoyed eight years of now barely imaginable peace and prosperity during his presidency (as he never tires of reminding us), Clinton has been forgiven for his sexual predation, along with the many other scandals that sullied his tenure, and his arrival in the lobby of this modest hotel sparked near hysteria. A military dinner party was in full swing, but the ballroom emptied as the servicemen and their wives clamoured for selfies with him. The staff were similarly awestruck. I just think hes a kind of crazy guy and I admire him, giggled my waitress, a college graduate, when I inquired why she would want to go within a mile of a man with his reputation. p class="mol-para-with-font">Lowering her voice, she added: Anyway, Id rather have my photograph taken with Bill than his wife. Theres something about Hillary I dont like. I just dont trust her. One heard similar sentiments while following the Clintons on the campaign trail in the coal-mining belt of Appalachia the latest battle-ground in a presidential contest that must rank among the most ghastly yet compelling political dramas this great democracy has witnessed. Given that the aspirations of tens of millions of American woman rest on Mrs Clintons bid to break through the ultimate glass ceiling by becoming the first female president in the White House, I was astonished that so many love Bill yet plainly loathe Hill. Bill Clinton's accusers: Juanita Broaddrick (left) and Paula Jones (right) The latest polls confirm this. While 70 per cent of U.S. women voters despise the misogynistic, thrice-married, testosterone-pumped Donald Trump Hillarys near-certain opponent in this autumns election more than half also have an unfavourable view of Mrs Clinton. One of the reasons is that many American women still believe she reacted to her husbands famous infidelities by turning her fire on the lovers hed cheated with, rather than denounce him. Trump himself marched into this thorny territory this week by talking about a long-standing rape allegation against Bill Clinton, as the Republican front-runner sought to counter damaging claims about his own treatment of women. Trump was referring to a woman called Juanita Broaddrick, a former nursing home manager who claimed in 1999 that Clinton raped her 21 years earlier after she volunteered to help on his campaign to become Arkansas governor. Her claims were denied by Bill Clintons lawyer, who called them absolutely false. Broaddrick supports Trumps attack on the Clintons, saying that an entire generation of Americans havent heard about what Clinton did to the women back in that time; that they need to know. Paula Jones, meanwhile, sued Clinton for sexual harassment while working as a clerk for the Arkansas government. The case was dismissed on appeal, but not before Clinton had paid her more than £580,000 in an out-of-court settlement. Some 70 per cent of U.S. women voters despise the misogynistic, thrice-married, testosterone-pumped Donald Trump More than half of voters have an unfavourable view of Mrs Clinton. Many still believe she reacted to her husbands famous infidelities by turning her fire on the lovers hed cheated with, rather than denounce him A third woman, Kathleen Willey, was a White House volunteer aide who claims Clinton sexually assaulted her in the Oval Office during his first term as president. This, then, is the backdrop to an explosive tweet Trump wrote on Tuesday, claiming that Bill Clinton was the WORST abuser of woman [sic] in U.S. history. In an inflammatory new tactic, Trump has tried to tie Mrs Clinton to her husbands sexual misdeeds, citing evidence that she led efforts to discredit his female accusers. In a speech in Oregon, he said: She was an unbelievably nasty, mean enabler. And what she did to a lot of those women is disgraceful. He went on: Some of these women were destroyed not by him, but by the way that Hillary Clinton treated them after everything went down. Quite how Hillary will respond remains to be seen, but it would seem that if she cant command more support from her own sex, despite facing an opponent who has described woman as bimbos, fat pigs and slobs, there is clearly something fundamentally wrong with her candidacy. But then, as the polls also show, Hillary isnt much admired by men either, and while the preposterous, frighteningly unpredictable Trump looks like being the least-liked presidential nominee of modern times, she is running him a close second in the unpopularity stakes. The truth is that this election wont determine which candidate the American public likes most. It will determine whom they hate least. Hillary, of course, is acutely aware of her lack of personal appeal, and that Bill is sprinkled with stardust she will never possess (even though his serial mistreatment of women makes Trump seem like a choirboy by comparison). She also knows that when it comes to revitalising the economy, many would trust Trump, who has created a multi-billion business empire, over her. So, ironically, the aspiring first woman president is banking on her husband to swing the contest her way. This week, she unveiled plans to hand Bill, who narrowly escaped the disgrace of impeachment over the Lewinsky affair, a key governmental role should the couple return to the White House. Though he would not be a cabinet member, she told a rally she would put him in charge of revitalising the economy pointing out that he had created 22 million new jobs and record levels of employment as president. These days, Hillary mentions Bill at every opportunity during her speeches, and frequently looks back through a halcyon prism to their eight years in the White House. Her inference is that theirs was effectively a presidential partnership Clinton Inc and that, should it be restored, the dynamic would be the same. While talking to union leaders in Ashland, Kentucky, I listened as she told the crowd she was urging Bill to come out of retirement. Why? Because he has more ideas in a minute than any person I know. Needless to say, there was no mention of his foibles. Nor of those Clinton-era policies that a growing number of economists and political thinkers believe to have precipitated Americas economic decline. Theres the now despised North American Free Trade Agreement, for example, which has seen thousands of manufacturing jobs go overseas and resulted in a glut of cheap foreign imports, forcing American companies to the wall. Or the deregulation of Wall Street, which paved the way for the sub-prime mortgage fiasco and the Great Recession that came in its wake. It is these catastrophic setbacks which have so damaged the American middle classes, who have seen jobs dry up and incomes drop as globalisation and the struggling U.S. economy threatened the traditional affluence of the most advanced nation on Earth. Hillary gets around this by presenting herself and Bill as being synonymous with the good old days, before warmongering Bush and the arrival of Obama with his empty promises of hope and change. So it is that, having spent the past 15 years schmoozing do-gooding rock stars, billionaires and statesmen to promote his various global initiatives (and amassing a vast fortune in the process, much in the manner of Tony Blair), Bill is now busily criss-crossing the country to trumpet his wifes dubious credentials. Anyone hoping for a double-act on the campaign trail will be disappointed, however. For these days, this is a strictly political marriage, and though they reportedly discuss strategy daily by phone, insiders say they havent spent much time together much less shared the same bedroom in more than 20 years. The truth is that this election wont determine which candidate the American public likes most. It will determine whom they hate least As the polls also show, Hillary isnt much admired by men either, and she is running Trump a close second in the unpopularity stakes While Hillary holds court at their seven-bedroom mansion in Washington DC, surrounded by her circle of largely female friends and advisers, he is either travelling on behalf of the family charitable foundation, entertaining at his penthouse above the new presidential library in Little Rock, Arkansas, or at their country house in Upstate New York. The years have been kinder to Hillary, however. While he looked worryingly fragile on the stump, 69-year-old Hillary appeared suspiciously youthful, prompting rumours she has resorted to Botox or even a facelift to convince the voters she is young and vital enough to be President and Commander-in-Chief. She is certainly not the frumpy, overweight figure I saw in 2008, when she lost the democratic race to Obama. Though she still wears those trouser suits, they are now designed by Oscar de la Renta. She is slimmer, by virtue of a largely vegan diet, and blonde highlights streak the Hillary bob these days. Wisely, someone has also convinced her to stop rolling her eyes and effecting those inane, gee-by-golly-thanks expressions when her supporters cheer her. The overall impression is of a woman so confident of victory that she is perhaps already planning to rid all traces of Michelle Obama for whom she reportedly has scant regard from the White House. At the moment, polls predict that she would beat Trump. Yet the gap is narrowing, and in West Virginia and Oregon in recent days where she was beaten in the primary elections by her Democrat rival Bernie Sanders there were signs that Trump might yet persuade the electorate he is the lesser of two evils. Even many blue-collar Democrats told me they would much prefer the Republican tycoon, with his hard-line policies on immigration, gay marriage and the freedom to carry guns, to Clintons brand of liberalism. In Logan, West Virginia, a grimly depressed mining town, hatred for Hillary burns as fiercely as the top-grade coal they produce in ever-decreasing amounts and here, for once, Bills bluster cut no ice. As he clambered out of his limousine, he was confronted by a menacing throng of miners and their families. The barracking went on as Clinton spoke in a gym, and for a moment he looked so vulnerable and bewildered that you had to feel a pang of sympathy. He won some admiration by stopping state troopers from ejecting the protesters. Had Hillary been there, my guess is she might have been lynched. However, she clearly chooses her audiences more carefully, and at times her chutzpah was breathtaking. Take her speech in the college town of Athens, Ohio, for example. As a new grandmother, the former First Lady told her supporters, she was zeroing in on the struggles faced by many young families. What she didnt say was that her 36-year-old daughter Chelsea is married to a Wall Street investment banker, and that this struggling young couple recently moved, with their 19-month-old daughter Charlotte, into a $10million Manhattan apartment. Her hypocrisy will not escape the finely tuned political antennae concealed beneath Trumps combed-over thatch. The Donald has also threatened to rake up the Lewinsky saga and it could prove a vote-winning line of attack. For leading womens rights advocates have already judged Hillarys pretentions to feminism as outdated and phoney. And by seeking to discredit her husbands sexual victims when she was First Lady, they accuse her of slut-shaming an apparently unforgivable act of sisterly betrayal. In a damning email to the Daily Beast website, the influential feminist academic Camille Paglia wrote: Hillary Clintons feminism is a fraud. She rode her husbands coat tails to wealth and power, and she amorally colluded in the vilification and destruction of [the women involved in] her husbands serial abuse. That, of course, is exactly what Donald Trump was referring to this week. The worrying fact is that the Trump bandwagon is gathering momentum, and for swathes of this bitterly divided nation, the self-made maverick who talks of obliterating Isis by any means necessary, and building a wall across the Mexican border is eminently more appealing than a return of the Clintons, with all their sleazy baggage. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
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