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Politics | 05/09/2008 9:06 am

Everything I Hate About Myself I See in Hillary, by Judy Bachrach

EDITOR’S NOTE: Judy Bachrach writes for Vanity Fair, and is the creator of thecheckoutline.org, an online advice column for friends and relatives of the terminally ill.

When I was 25 (okay, 32), I got dumped by my first untrue love. He’d fallen, six years into our relationship, for his next-door neighbor, a really pretty actress with the IQ of an asparagus and the ability to fill many a conversational lull with tributes to liposuction. But I digress.

The point is what happened after I got dumped. There was no stopping me. I wrote the guy letters. Long ones. I wrote articles, nominally on other topics, but really about him and the way he dumped me. These, unfortunately, got published. I phoned him in the pathetic hope of raising my stock by trashing his new girlfriend, along with the caliber of the movies in which she very, very briefly appeared. This was, as you will likely surmise, amazingly easy to do and also totally ineffective. I didn’t – couldn’t — let go of a guy who exchanged me for a moron, and I can’t believe these many years later that I’m telling you all this because the memory of my mortifying, excruciating almost erotic attachment to stone-cold failure haunts me to this day.

I was, in other words, simply a younger version of Hillary Rodham Clinton. I simply could not get out of the race, even though, let’s face it, the race was over.

What can I say? Everything I hate about myself I see in Hillary. It’s not the stuff you might suspect, either. Hillary’s self-absorption; her sense that the election is not about Iraq or defaulted mortgages or Wall Street piggery, or her; her Bosnian strolls down memory lane; her long and eventful relationship with Bill — this is why much of the press dislikes her, maybe with reason. But not me.

I don’t even hate Hillary because she screwed up health care. Frankly, anyone can screw up health care. It’s the other aspects of Hillary that make me squirm. To put it bluntly: they are uncomfortably familiar.

What kills me is the way Hillary deals with men other than her husband, especially powerful men. Whenever Hillary thinks Obama is onto something – a phrase, say, or even a piece of rhetoric, however tedious – she doesn’t do what most politicians do: which is to, say, challenge it. No, what Hillary does is fiddle with a syllable or two and then appropriate the last thing that pops out of her rival’s mouth as though it were her own (Yes we WILL!!).

Whenever Hillary hears a new idea, however stupid – ‘Let’s suspend the federal gas tax for the entire summer, and to hell with the laws of supply and demand! Let’s authorize Bush to take military action in Iraq and sit back and see what happens!’ – she grabs it, devours it, and calls it her own.

Then, if some new powerful guy comes along and disputes the very strategy she’s adopted from a previous powerful guy – like, oh, let’s say, maybe Obama might come along and dispute the wisdom of our military presence in Iraq — Hillary will turn around and repudiate every previous position in order to espouse that one too. In fact she’ll say she completely regrets “the way the president used the authority.” Like she never gave it up, panting and groaning.

I know I’m not supposed to talk about her that way, as though she were a groupie groveling before a rock star. I’m supposed to, as a close friend recently suggested, “understand that Hillary has to pander.” But you know what? One of the wonderful things about getting older is that you can actually stop pandering, and make your decisions clear-eyed, without reference to gender.

I’m voting for a guy.

294 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

zut alors
Judy Bachrach has my total admiration for going mano a mano with a Fox News bubblehead when Bush was throwing $40M bash after stealing the election a 2nd time, and when soldiers are dying in his Halliburton war from lack of armor. I thought that at the time how incredibly declasse, but never heard anyone else say it except Judy. Thank you! And here she is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RU58M4Afjwc This is from Vanity Fair, one of top 5 best magazines in the country, with one of the greatest exec editors publishing has ever seen, Graydon Carter. “Judy Bachrach joined Vanity Fair as a contributing editor in 1995. She has profiled Silvio Berlusconi, Harold Ickes, Goldie Hawn, and novelist Patricia Cornwell, among others. She reported on the decision to place Chile’s former dictator Augusto Pinochet under house arrest near London, and covered the Randy “Duke” Cunningham scandal. Prior to joining Vanity Fair, Bachrach was a political columnist with The Washington Star. She began her career as a TV critic at the Baltimore Sun and went on to write for the style section of The Washington Post for five years. Bachrach wrote Tina and Harry Come to America: Tina Brown, Harry Evans, and the Uses of Power (Free Press, 2001). Here’s a piece on the righting of the media (Judy, I hope that VF is interviewing Arianna Huffington’s new book, Right is Wrong. She used to be a neighbor on Riven Rock Road in Montecito…the book should be fantastic and just what is needed) http://www.digitaljournalist.org/issue0111/bachrach.htm It’s a metaphor…..criminy!!! She does and writes things that are slightly controversial— and I say, go for it.
By zut alors on 05/09/2008 8:20 pm
Kay Weeks
Elizabeth, I agree with you completely! I have said, if men do it with their fists and weapons, women do it with words. Hillary is a marathon runner…I admire her greatly for her passion and commitment. I believe I am going to change my vote, if I have a chance!
By Kay Weeks on 05/12/2008 7:31 am
Diana T
A comment after my own heart, Mugsy! I have been working on recognizing my shadow side for the past few months and it is so very enlightening. And, yes, I feel much freer.
By Diana T on 05/09/2008 4:14 pm
Diana T
Mugsy, I would like to publicly thank you for introducing me to soulfulliving.com. I can see right now that it is going to be a very valuable site for me. I have already sent it to several of my friends. Again, thank you!
By Diana T on 05/09/2008 4:26 pm
Rachel B
I agree with you, Mugsy. This bashing of Sen. Clinton painfully reminds me of the other thread on this board, the one about women being harder on other women: http://www.wowowow.com/question/are-women-harder-each-other-they-are-men and I’m hating it.
By Rachel B on 05/09/2008 5:59 pm
Victor Melone
That’s why we will always vote for a guy!
By Victor Melone on 05/10/2008 7:00 am
Dr. Mark Klein
Very astute piece. Good work. I’m also voting for Obama. Hate to admit being a conservative Republican but a dose of old fashioned liberalism and New Deal style economic regulation are what we need now. I didn’t leave the Republican Party. The party left me.
By Dr. Mark Klein on 05/09/2008 9:40 am
Lady Gator
Dr. Klein — Guess what? I didn’t leave the Democratic Party — The party let me a long time ago. And I thank old LBJ to this day!!!
By Lady Gator on 05/09/2008 1:42 pm
Robert Moon
This doesn’t make much sense. The Republican Party left you by moving too far to the left, so you deicde to vote for a candidate who is the most liberal Senator in our Government. Obama is not a new deal, he is all far big government, high high taxes and he knows nothing about economics or foreign relations. Obama will be a complete disaster for our nation, he’s another Jimmy Carter only worse. Open your eyes and look past the smooth talk.
By Robert Moon on 05/09/2008 2:44 pm
Diana T
Robert, I always hear the cliche “big government, high taxes” used. Please be more specific. Tell us how we are supposed to pay for this war with fewer taxes, in addition to all other obligations incumbent on the government by the Constitution. Tell us how we are supposed to be able to have an economy that works without regulations. Making general comments is very easy; proving them in debate is a little more tricky. Definition of insanity: Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. No way, I am going to vote for McCain unless I want things to stay in the status quo. As conservative is Mark Klein is, I think it is very telling that he intends to vote for Obama, and I am hearing more and more of my more conservative friends talking this way.
By Diana T on 05/09/2008 4:34 pm
Diana T
We agree with the Republican Party bit. And, I think Obama will be a good dose of something new that this country needs. And, all this lack of regulation is one of the reasons we find ourselves in so much trouble in this country.
By Diana T on 05/09/2008 4:23 pm
zut alors
God, we agree on something…is that Hell freezing over?
By zut alors on 05/09/2008 5:31 pm
zut alors
Meant that for MK, Diana….not you….
By zut alors on 05/09/2008 8:24 pm
C A Rose
It’s thin ice.
By C A Rose on 05/15/2008 12:47 am
Ms. Dee
Good for you, Dr. Klein. Whatever your reasoning, I believe in this case you’ve drawn a worthy conclusion. How y’doin with Nora Ephron?
By Ms. Dee on 05/09/2008 6:22 pm