Bill Clinton says
Sen. Barack Obama is a highly ambitious political
prodigy who is asking voters to ''roll the dice'' and elect
him president.
He should know --
that's a fair description of Clinton when he sought the
presidency in 1992.
The fact that the
former president is stealing a page from the same
Republican playbook used against him 15 years ago
underscores the threat Obama poses to the candidacy of
Clinton's wife, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New
York.
It also
illustrates Clinton's penchant for rewriting history.
''Even when I was
a governor and young and thought I was the best
politician in the Democratic Party, I didn't run the first
time. I could have,'' Clinton said on PBS's The
Charlie Rose Show, referring to the 1988
presidential campaign.
''And I had lots
of Democratic governors encouraging me to. I knew in my
bones I shouldn't run -- that I was a good enough politician
to win, but I didn't think I was ready to be
president,'' Clinton said.
While there may
be some truth to that statement, Clinton didn't seem at
the time to lack confidence in his abilities as governor or
a potential president. He was worried about rumors of
infidelity, some which were investigated by his own
staff, and privately expressed doubts about whether he
could win in 1988.
''He's being a
little disingenuous,'' said Art English, a political
science professor at the University of Arkansas at Little
Rock.
Clinton was 42 in
1988, four years younger than Obama is now. Already one
of the nation's longest-serving governors, Clinton
accomplished little between 1988 and 1992 that added
to his depth of experience -- other than winning a
fifth term as Arkansas governor while promising not to seek
the presidency before his term expired.
He broke that
promise.
As a first-time
presidential candidate, Clinton cast himself as an
''agent of change'' in troubled times and faced criticism
from Republicans about his youth and inexperience.
Obama finds
himself in the same boat, with Clinton manning the
torpedoes.
''If you listen
to the people who are most strongly for him, they say
basically 'We have to throw away all these experienced
people because they have been through the wars of the
'90s and they made enough decisions and enough calls
that they made a few mistakes. And what we want is
somebody who started running for president a year after he
became senator because he's fresh, he's new, he's
never made a mistake, and he has massive political
skills. And we're willing to risk it,''' Clinton told
Rose.
He called Obama
an ''enormous talent'' in the way a boss condescends to a
scrappy new intern.
''Is it more
important to have somebody who is basically by his very
nature a compelling, incredibly attractive, highly
intelligent symbol of transformation, or is it more
[important] to have somebody who also would symbolize
change by being the first woman president but has actually
done incredible numbers of things to change other
people's lives?'' he said of his wife.
There is a fair
case to make that Obama is not ready for the presidency.
Less than four
years removed from serving in the Illinois state senate,
Obama can't point to more than a decade in the governor's
office, as could Clinton. He wasn't a war hero, as was
a young presidential candidate from another era, John
F. Kennedy. And he didn't serve first as vice
president, as did the 40-something Teddy Roosevelt.
Even his admirers
in Illinois have their doubts about Obama.
''The unknown is
the administrative and foreign policy experience,'' said
state senator Kirk Dillard, a Republican who supports Obama.
Obama knows he's
asking voters to take a leap of faith.
''People have to
feel comfortable that, 'You know what? This guy can
handle the job,''' he told the Associated Press last summer.
''It's a stretch for them because I haven't been on
the national scene for long and haven't gone through
the conventional paths that we traditionally draw for
our presidents, so they've got to stretch a little bit
during a period where there's a lot of stuff going on
internationally, right?''
He said at the
time that his challenge was to define experience as
something more than service in Washington or a state
capital. He needed voters to take the full measure of
his life, his judgment and his style, Obama said,
because if the race turns into a battle of resumes, he
loses.
So it was no
surprise that Obama was ready to respond to the former
president's criticism.
''Here's a
quote,'' Obama said with a smile. '''The same old experience
is irrelevant. You can have the right kind of experience or
the wrong kind of experience. And mine is rooted in
the real lives of real people, and it will bring real
results if we have the courage to change.'
''And that was
Bill Clinton in 1992.'' (Rob Fournier, AP)
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