There are a lot of things you could say about Bill Clinton. You get the bad and the good with the former president. His legislative achievements, the North American Free Trade Agreement, Donโt Ask-Donโt Tell, and the Defense of Marriage Act were flawed policies when he signed them into law. Even Clinton agrees that DADT was not his finest hour.
His personal life was as confounding as any public figureโs in recent memory.
But thereโs no disputing the manโs incredible ability to connect with people.
Last night, the former president took to the Democratic National Convention stage with that rare combination of confidence, charm, and magnetic intellect that has always been at the core of his political power. And minutes into the <a href=”http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/80808.html?hp=l1_b7
“>speech, all of the rumblings about the enthusiasm gap among Democrats seemed utterly ridiculous.
Clinton, as only he can, staked out the differences between President Obama and Republican Mitt Romney in a way that was forceful, but minus all the bitter name-calling we heard out of Tampa.
He talked about an economic recovery that worked for everyone, not just those at the upper rung of the ladder. And he took Republican Vice Presidential candidate Paul Ryan to task for his hypocritical attacks on the president regarding cuts to Medicare.
Clinton also didnโt duck or apologize for the Democratsโ brand of ideas. Nor did he run from President Reaganโs famous question: are you better off than you were four years ago? Yes, weโre better off, Clinton said, because Obama pulled us back from the brink of the disaster in which the last Republican president left us.
But the most important question Clinton raised last night had to do with who we are as citizens. What kind of country do we want to live in? Do we want to live in a country where itโs every man for himself? Or do we want to live in a country where we help each other; where government is not a villain, but a powerful partner?
This article appears in Sep 5-11, 2012.







“And minutes into the speech, all of the rumblings about the enthusiasm gap among Democrats seemed utterly ridiculous.”
In case nobody noticed, Bill isn’t running for president on the Democratic line. Whats-his-name is.
The gap remains.
While drawing distinction between Obama and Romney’s economic policies- Clinton should have shown the contrast between his own and Obama’s. Obama is not Clinton’s protegee. His over regulating and overspending will not produce the result of Clinton’s economy (a bipartisan effort of shifting to the center, not to the left).
Clinton’s speech had a number of unverifiable statements like, “No one could have done better” -statements that we are just supposed to take his word for… as good an actor as Clinton is, it’s hard to believe a man who lied to his family and lied to the country, under oath, because it was served his own interests. Wonder what he is getting for all of this.