Difference between revisions of "The Case for Hillary Clinton"
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* Discusses HRC's lifelong support of abortion rights. | * Discusses HRC's lifelong support of abortion rights. | ||
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===Three: "But Can She Win?"=== | ===Three: "But Can She Win?"=== |
Revision as of 22:03, 1 April 2012
The Case for Hillary Clinton was written by Susan Estrich and published by the publishing house of William Morrow on October 11, 2005.
Estrich wrote the 288-page book to argue that "In an atmosphere where conservative Hillary-bashing is still as virulent as ever, Estrich demonstrates all the reasons that this principled leader still blows away any other potential contender in the early polls for 2008."[1]
In the introduction to the book, Estrich writes, "Can a woman who has been more vilified, humiliated, put down (and, yes, lied to), more than any of us--can she stand up, fight back, use her own intelligence and power, find her authentic voice, her real style, her center, grow into exactly who she was meant to be, and at the age of sixty -- in her true prime -- shatter the glass and change the world?" For Estrich, the answer to that question in the book is an emphatic "yes".
Notable quotes
- "The right has already played all its heavy guns against Hillary."[2]
- "Several of these people had been in and out of Arkansas in his campaigns, and sometimes they told stories involving Bill Clinton and women...I heard all these stories as the only woman in the room. I laughed at all the appropriate moments, and never objected or expressed shock...People like me knew that her husband cheated on her left and right."[3]
- "In June 1992, after the Gennifer Flowers mess, I once teased him, 'Look, I don't mind defending you, but I wish you had better taste.' 'She used to be better looking,', [Bill Clinton] joked about Flowers."[4]
- "When the makeovers ended and she became the principal instead of the wife, the voters responded and her numbers climbed. Voters are like that. They know."[4]
- "She would turn out to be more conservative and less strident, more Midwestern, more white-bread, than people expected...all we Americans needed to do was what New York voters had done: Move beyond the old caricature and focus on the woman she had become."[5]
Chapter summaries
One: "Imagine"
- Topics discussed
Two: "If Not Now, When?"
- Topics discussed
- The claim is made that it would matter if the President of the United States was a woman.
- "We would never have to worry about Roe v. Wade again."
- The Geraldine Ferraro campaign in 1984, and Estrich's role in it.
- Claim that after the Ferraro candidacy, there was a "dramatic increase" in the number of women elected to office in America.
- Estrich's role as campaign manager for Michael Dukakis in 1988.
- Estrich says that the feminist movement was stalling out as of 2005. In 2005, 22.5% of state legislators were women.
- As of January 2005, 13 of the 100 largest cities in American had a female mayor.
- Discussion of some lawsuits in the 1970s the led to women having a more equal legal status with men.
- Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Shirley Abrahamson was "horrified" to learn from Estrich that most of Estrich's law school classmates did not pursue legal careers wholeheartedly, and instead invested themselves in marriage and childrearing.
- As of 2005, according to Estrich, social equality has eluded women and except at the lowest level of society, does not exist.
- Women have "become complacent about failure" to achieve equality.
- If Hillary Clinton were to be elected, the movement for women's equality would immediately be galvanized. "It would rock the boat in a way nothing else I can imagine could."
- "Every bigwig from corporate America will look around and say, 'We better have some women on board.'"
- More women will become partners in law firms if Hillary is elected.
- "Bit by bit", if Hillary is elected, "we'll get that old revolution started again."
- Discusses HRC's lifelong support of abortion rights.
- If HRC is elected, women will have a better chance to balance work and life.
Three: "But Can She Win?"
- Topics discussed
Four: "What's Wrong With Hillary"
- Topics discussed
Five: "Can She Lose? The Rock Star and the Rest"
- Topics discussed
Six: "It Isn't Just About (Her) Sex"
- Topics discussed
Seven: "Moments of Truth"
- Topics discussed
See also
References
External links
Template:Hillary Template:Hrc stub
- ↑ From the Publisher's Description
- ↑ The Case for Hillary Clinton, Kindle Version: Location 302 of 1352
- ↑ The Case for Hillary Clinton, Kindle Version: Location 327 of 1352
- ↑ Jump up to: 4.0 4.1 The Case for Hillary Clinton, Kindle Version: Location 363 of 1352
- ↑ The Case for Hillary Clinton, Kindle Version: Location 476 of 1352