Hillary Clinton chatted with CBS’ Katie Couric yesterday, and made a comment about what helped give her a boost in New Hampshire.
“This is the toughest job in the world. I was laughing because you know in that debate, obviously Sen. Edwards and Sen. Obama were kind of in the buddy system on the stage. And I was thinking whoever’s up against the Republican nominee in the election debates come the fall is not gonna have a buddy to fall back on. You know, you’re all by yourself. When you’re president, you’re there all by yourself.”
Andrew Sullivan, noting the “buddy system” comment, responded, “Notice another subtle use of the gender card. We really are headed back to the 1990s.”
With due respect to both, I think Clinton and Sullivan got this one wrong for different reasons.
First, I don’t think referring to the “buddy system” has anything to do with the “gender card.” Indeed, it strikes me as an entirely gender-neutral phrase. As my friend Melissa McEwan pointed out, “[T]he buddy system is used by the US Army, scuba divers, and firefighters, including, presumably, female soldiers, female scuba divers, and female firefighters. Ahem.”
Second, I think Clinton’s take was equally flawed.
I’ve heard quite a bit of late about how Barack Obama and John Edwards “teamed up” against Clinton at the debate. It was “two against one,” the conventional wisdom tells us. Clinton’s “buddy system” comment plays into that (it’s also a subtle shot at Obama and Edwards personally, suggesting that they, unlike her, can’t succeed without help).
But that’s not how I remember Saturday’s debate at all. I went back and read through the transcript this morning, trying to find what’s fed the perception that Obama and Edwards tag-teamed Clinton. There’s just not much there to support the argument.
Clinton went after Obama (on healthcare, lobbyists, experience, energy, and the Patriot Act). Edwards went after Clinton (he dismissed her as agent of the status quo). Clinton went after Edwards (she noted that his biggest Senate accomplishment didn’t actually pass). Edwards went after Obama (when he said, “You cannot nice these people to death. It doesn’t work,” there was no doubt who he meant.)
Obama, meanwhile, didn’t go after anybody. As the favorite, he didn’t feel the need to take the chance of going negative.
At one point, as has been well-documented by now, Edwards came to Obama’s defense when Clinton went on the attack. But that was part of Edwards’ week-long strategy — position himself and Obama as the agents of change, in the hopes of making it a two-person race. But that wasn’t because Edwards wanted to be Obama’s “buddy”; it was because Edwards wanted to be Obama’s rival.
I’m not sure how this meme got started, but I don’t think the debate went quite the same way the conventional wisdom suggests.