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Correct The Record Monday November 17, 2014 Afternoon Roundup

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*​**Correct The Record Monday November 17, 2014 Afternoon Roundup:* *Tweets:* *Correct The Record’s Burns Strider <https://twitter.com/BStrider/status/533828327354929152>* @BStrider: . @IamMinyon <https://twitter.com/IamMinyon> Minyon Moore's video "Marine One" rocked the #ClintonCenter10th <https://twitter.com/hashtag/ClintonCenter10th?src=hash> anniversary. She beat Big Dog in cards [11/15/14, 10:46 p.m. EST <https://twitter.com/BStrider/status/533828327354929152>] *Correct The Record's Burns Strider <https://twitter.com/BStrider/status/534020858936061953>* @BStrider: Another highlight of Sat night's #ClintonCenter10th <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23ClintonCenter10th&src=hash> party: @HillaryClinton <https://twitter.com/HillaryClinton> @billclinton <https://twitter.com/billclinton> taking the stage. pic.twitter.com/z7s6mmffhZ <http://t.co/z7s6mmffhZ> *Headlines:* *MSNBC: “For Clintons, a last party before the storm” <http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/clintons-last-party-the-storm-little-rock>* "In her first public appearance since the midterm elections, Hillary and her daughter, Chelsea, discussed empowering women and girls at a panel of their 'No Ceilings' project. 'You have to look at the past, you have to see what we’ve done and why we did it and we learned from it in order to think about what you can do for the next ten years,' the former secretary of state said of their effort to help women." *USA Today: “Voices: For the Clintons, the past is not even past” <http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2014/11/17/voices-for-the-clintons-the-past-is-not-even-past/19133511/>* “Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton these days is more likely to cite the record of her husband's administration than that of the current one, even though her tenure as Obama's secretary of State is of more recent vintage.” *The Columbus Dispatch: “Beatty signs onto ‘Ready for Hillary’ campaign” <http://www.dispatch.com/content/blogs/the-daily-briefing/2014/11/11-17-2014-beatty-says-shes-ready-for-hillary.html>* “Rep. Joyce Beatty says she’s ready for Hillary.” *Yahoo: “Facebook slams the door on political campaigns” <http://news.yahoo.com/facebook-slams-the-door-on-political-campaigns-212248365.html>* “When the API and terms-of-service changes become permanent for all apps, Ready for Hillary — as well as any campaign that has bought its voter information — won’t be able to keep up to date with its supporters’ most recent lists of friends, and will learn nothing about the Facebook friends of new supporters.” *Washington Post: “O’Malley voices opposition to Keystone pipeline in posts on Facebook and Twitter” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/omalley-voices-opposition-to-keystone-pipeline-in-posts-on-facebook-and-twitter/2014/11/17/4bc68636-6e7d-11e4-ad12-3734c461eab6_story.html>* “O’Malley’s posture plays well with environmental groups and positions him to the left of Hillary Rodham Clinton, whom O’Malley would like face for the Democratic presidential nomination and who has not taken a position on pipeline’s construction.” *The Hill blog: Briefing Room: “O'Malley urges Senate to reject Keystone” <http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/224356-omalley-urges-senate-to-reject-keystone>* “O'Malley's opposition could bolster him with green groups and position him to the left of potential 2016 rival Hillary Clinton.” *Bloomberg: “Jim Webb Vs. ‘Humanitarian Intervention’ (and the Clock)” <http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2014-11-17/jim-webb-vs-humanitarian-intervention-and-the-clock>* “Webb focused his criticism of the Obama administration's policies on the 2011 Libyan intervention, which happened to be closely identified with the leadership of then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.” *The Hill blog: Ballot Box: “Walker: I could run in 20 years and be Clinton's age” <http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/224378-walker-i-could-run-in-20-years-and-be-clintons-age>* “Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R), a possible 2016 presidential candidate, raised the subject of Hillary Clinton's age when discussing when he might run for president.” *Articles:* *MSNBC: “For Clintons, a last party before the storm” <http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/clintons-last-party-the-storm-little-rock>* By Alex Seitz-Wald November 17, 2014, 12:17 p.m. EST LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS – Purgatory has never seen a better celebration. The Clinton enterprise may be in limbo between one former president and a potential future one, but it’s all the more reason for one last hurrah. The tenth anniversary of Bill Clinton’s presidential library brought hundreds of people together, from old friends and some entertainment (Kool and the Gang for the baby boomers, Nick Jonas for the younger set) to a dash of celebrity (Kevin Spacey) and plenty of lengthy symposia. The soiree could also be seen as a grand finale, as Bill’s era may soon give way to a period dominated by his wife, especially if her expected run for the presidency in 2016 succeeds. Bill Clinton’s story has largely been written, contained in the millions of documents locked away in the archives of his presidential library here. But Hillary’s story is, as her Twitter bio states, “TBD…” “This weekend we’re concentrating on President Clinton,” said Sheila Bronfman, an Arkansas Democratic activist who met the Clintons in 1976 and has been a friend and supporter ever since. “There will be another day and we’ll look forward to what’s happening” with Hillary Clinton, she said. Bronfman was a leader of the 200 or so Arkansans who helped save Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential candidacy during the New Hampshire primary after it was rocked by draft dodging allegations. On their own volition, the “Arkansas Travelers” packed into buses and headed north to go door-to-door in the brutal New Hampshire winter to vouch for their governor. “I would still follow him to the ends of the earth,” said Kathy Roth-Douquet, a former Clinton defense advisor who now runs the veterans charity Blue Star Families. The spotlight was meant for the former president, but the looming 2016 presidential election caused the other Clinton to steal the show. “As soon as the midterm elections were over, the New Hampshire primary began,” said Terry Shumaker, a New Hampshire native who co-chaired Clinton’s 1992 campaign in the state and later served as an ambassador under the president. Ready for Hillary, the super PAC trying to draft Hillary Clinton into the 2016 presidential race, had no official presence in Little Rock, though several of the Clinton alumni who came in from as far away as Los Angeles and London are involved in the RFH effort. One handed his business card with the super PAC’s logo sheepishly to a reporter, making it clear he was not here on that kind of business. Mostly, the alumni wanted to look back and share old war stories. There were also reflections of the night Clinton first won the presidency: When the campaign staff pushed all the tables together in a long row to celebrate at Doe’s Eat Place, a Clinton favorite that serves up no-frills three pound steaks. While others were ebullient, Rahm Emanuel, now the mayor of Chicago, felt vengeful, listing off names of people who had undermined the campaign and stabbing a steak knife into the table to punctuate each one. ‘Dead!” he screamed as the brought the knife down each time. “It was like the Godfather, really,” Paul Begala, a longtime Clinton political advisor, recalled Saturday with a chuckle. A waitress at Doe’s said the former president still comes in at least once a year, though there’s little for him to eat there now that he’s a near-vegan. Wes Clark, the former four star general who briefly sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004, recalled first meeting fellow Arkansan Bill Clinton at a conference at Georgetown when they were in college. “He was escorted by a young lady on each arm,” Clark said. He’s been loyal to Clinton ever since. Late that night at the bar, economics advisor Gene Sperling recounted a time when the president intervened in his love life, urging him to call back a staffer with whom a senator had personally set Sperling up on a date. Other former White House aides groused about how George Stephanopoulos, Clinton’s former communications director, became what The New York Times dubbed a “thinking woman’s sex symbol.” Karen Finney, a former aide to Hillary Clinton in the White House, recalled a warning given on their first day: “Anyone who leaked [to the press] would be punished accordingly. It was a little different on the president’s side,” she said at event hosted by Politico. At the center of everything was the Clinton family, who looked relaxed among friends in their former hometown. Usually cloistered off from the public by barricades and Secret Service, there were no rope lines here. Bodyguards mostly kept their distance. On Saturday morning, the Clintons mingled freely in the lobby of the $165 million presidential library building, which also has an apartment on the top floor for the family’s use when they’re in town. Begala entered wearing a vintage denim jacket embossed with a giant logo of the 1992 Clinton/Gore campaign logo on the back. “Begala’s still got his jacket!” Bill Clinton said upon seeing former political advisor, pointing it out to his wife. “Oh, I love that one, oh my gosh!” she said. In her first public appearance since the midterm elections, Hillary and her daughter, Chelsea, discussed empowering women and girls at a panel of their “No Ceilings” project. “You have to look at the past, you have to see what we’ve done and why we did it and we learned from it in order to think about what you can do for the next ten years,” the former secretary of state said of their effort to help women. Three panels of former officials on Friday made for the official retelling of what had been done at the Clinton White House. And reminiscing continued each night with the aid of bourbon at the venerable Capitol Hotel, where Barbra Streisand was staying and Kevin Spacey could be seen sharing photos of his dog on his iPhone. Bill Clinton is inescapable in Little Rock, and everyone here seems to have a story about meeting him as attorney general or governor. Many restaurants have a picture of him on the walls, and some are even named named after him. But even so, and with his approval ratings sky high, he could no longer save his own party in his home state. Democrats lost almost every major race in the Arkansas this month, despite Clinton’s best efforts. “We’ve been riding on the back of Bill Clinton for so long, but he hasn’t been in office here for 23 years,” said Charles Blake, a Democrat from Little Rock who was just elected to the Arkansas state House. Democrats have seen their numbers halved in the lower chamber since 2006, dropping from 72 seats to just 36 after this month’s elections. On Saturday night, 6,000 people filled into a giant tent set up outside the library for the final party: A concert featuring Kool and the Gang and Nick Jonas, among others. The Clinton Foundation had given away thousands of tickets to locals, especially teenagers eager to see one third of the Jonas Brothers. The former first couple sat up front and center among friends and bobbed their heads to the music. Outside, John Youngblood sold t-shirts and buttons of Clinton swag, including several promoting a Hillary Clinton presidential run. He said he had gotten some negative feedback from the crowd for focusing on 2016, but that the best-selling button of the night was one that featured a photo of the first couple as college students, with the labels “42” and “45.” (Bill was the 42nd president, Hillary would 45). Finally, after the musical acts concluded, the man everyone came to honor appeared again to conclude the weekend. “I am the old horse that can run around the track one more time,” Bill Clinton joked. Then, standing outside the library he built on the street named after him and looking out at his people in his home town, the former president draped his arm around his wife’s neck. “This is a good thing for us to do, but it’s just the beginning. And the whole idea is for it to go on and on and on and on,” he said. *USA Today: “Voices: For the Clintons, the past is not even past” <http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2014/11/17/voices-for-the-clintons-the-past-is-not-even-past/19133511/>* By Susan Page November 17, 2014, 11:44 a.m. EST LITTLE ROCK — As former Virginia governor Gerald Baliles wrapped up a day of discussion at the Clinton Library about the 42nd president's legacy, he quoted writer William Faulkner: "The past is never dead," he said. "It's not even past." Standing just behind him, former president Bill Clinton nodded and silently mouthed the second half of the familiar quotation himself. Over the past few days, the Clinton Presidential Center has celebrated its 10th anniversary and the University of Virginia's Miller Center, which Baliles heads, has released the first batch of oral history interviews with veterans of the Clinton administration. The center has conducted similar oral history projects with officials who worked for presidents Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and, now underway, George W. Bush. While every presidency carries consequences for those who follow, the past that is the Clinton White House has the potential to be all too present for the current president, and, perhaps, the future one. For President Obama, the parallels between him and Clinton are unmistakable, although the two men are not particularly close — not as personally close, interestingly, as Clinton is with the Republican presidents who bookend his tenure, the elder Bush and the younger one. (In a teasing exchange on social media last week, George W. Bush referred to Clinton as his #BrotherFromAnotherMother.) Obama and Clinton are the only Democrats to be elected twice to the White House since World War II. Both staked their early presidencies on pushing health care overhauls (Clinton's flopped, Obama's passed). Both watched Democratic majorities in the House and Senate give way to solid Republican control during their tenures, in part as a result of the controversies over their health care plans. At a panel discussion I moderated Friday, former domestic-policy adviser Bruce Reed, former Labor secretary Alexis Herman and political scientist Andrew Rudalevige of Bowdoin College recalled how Clinton responded to that changed political landscape. He built relationships with Republicans, even with the mercurial new House speaker, Newt Gingrich of Georgia, and cut compromises that often put him at odds with congressional Democrats. And he got things done, including balancing the federal budget and signing a major welfare bill. "If I got re-elected, I didn't want to be a lame duck," Clinton told the audience Friday. At a weekend event sponsored by Politico, he called "this whole lame-duck deal" a "mindset" to be avoided. He urged Obama to devise an aggressive agenda and use the budget process to make deals with Republicans on issues from immigration to taxes. "Now that they have both houses, they have a much greater vested interest in not just being against everything," he said. So far, Obama doesn't seem to be heeding that advice. Since this month's midterm elections cost Democrats control of the Senate, Obama has signaled that he may chose confrontation instead with the GOP by issuing an executive order on immigration and vetoing a measure authorizing the Keystone XL pipeline. For Hillary Rodham Clinton, her role as a powerful policy adviser as well as first lady in the Clinton White House continues to be fodder for scrutiny as she moves toward a decision on whether to run for president in 2016. In his oral history interview, former White House chief of staff Leon Panetta described her role as "chief of staff-in-waiting," not hesitant about stepping in and speaking up. The events at the Clinton Library didn't deal with such controversies as the Monica Lewinsky affair, the president's impeachment and his last-minute pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich, though those were topics in some of the oral history interviews. Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton these days is more likely to cite the record of her husband's administration than that of the current one, even though her tenure as Obama's secretary of State is of more recent vintage. In an interview with USA TODAY in June, she expressed concern about growing income inequality and said the issue could be effectively addressed. "I go back and look at what my husband achieved, and it wasn't easy," she said, saying that on easing poverty and other fronts he built "a better record than other administrations that pursued other policies." That is an argument we are likely to hear again. *The Columbus Dispatch: “Beatty signs onto ‘Ready for Hillary’ campaign” <http://www.dispatch.com/content/blogs/the-daily-briefing/2014/11/11-17-2014-beatty-says-shes-ready-for-hillary.html>* By Jessica Wehrman November 17, 2014, 12:34 pm. EST Rep. Joyce Beatty says she’s ready for Hillary. Beatty, a Jefferson Township Democrat just elected to her second term in Congress, announced in an email to supporters that she supports former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as a Democratic contender in 2016. Beatty has signed onto the “Ready for Hillary” campaign – a super PAC aimed at generating support for a Clinton presidential bid. She’s not the first Ohio lawmaker to sign on. Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Niles, signed onto the campaign in November 2013. Beatty’s support comes during a “Ready for Hillary” “Organizing Bomb,” aimed at finding 100,000 new grassroots supporters for the campaign. In her email, Beatty urges others to sign on to support Clinton as well. “What many people don’t realize is that Hillary had to give up all of her political organizing activities when she became Secretary of State,” she writes. “That means it’s up to us to build the foundation Hillary will need when and if she decides to run for president.” *Yahoo: “Facebook slams the door on political campaigns” <http://news.yahoo.com/facebook-slams-the-door-on-political-campaigns-212248365.html>* By Jon Ward November 17, 2014 [Subtitle:] An upcoming code change means Obama’s groundbreaking 2012 outreach on the site won’t happen again WASHINGTON — Barack Obama’s reelection campaign pioneered a pathway for political campaigns to reach voters through Facebook when it released an app that helped supporters target their friends with Obama-related material. But as the 2016 presidential campaign approaches, Facebook is rolling out a change that will prevent future campaigns from doing this, closing the door on one of the most sophisticated social targeting efforts ever undertaken. “It’s a fairly significant shift,” said Teddy Goff, who was Obama’s digital director in 2012, and oversaw the effort that helped the Obama campaign gain a Facebook following of 45 million users that year. Goff’s team used Facebook and other tools to register more than a million voters online and to raise $690 million online in 2011 and 2012. “The thing we did that will be most affected — by which I mean rendered impossible — by the changes they're making is the targeted sharing tool,” Goff said. More than 1 million Obama supporters in 2012 installed the campaign’s Facebook app. These supporters were given the option to share their friend list with the Obama campaign. Goff said most of the app users did so. And when they did, Goff’s team would then “run those friend lists up against the voter file, and make targeted suggestions as to who [supporters] should be sharing stuff with.” This was a powerful new form of voter outreach. The Obama campaign had concluded that many voters — especially younger Americans — viewed TV and other forms of advertising from the campaign with suspicion and skepticism. But they were still open to messages that came from friends and acquaintances. The key to getting persuasive messages in front of persuadable voters going forward, the campaign decided, was to have them come from people they knew. “It's extremely powerful for a campaign to be able to say to [a user], ‘Hey, here are your persuadable friends, ranked in order of where they live: Ohio first, Virginia second, et cetera. Go share this video directly with them,'” Goff said. The Romney campaign also started doing this, but only in October, a month before the presidential election. Then in the spring of 2014, Facebook — responding to growing privacy concerns — cracked down on how much information third-party applications could gain about those who installed the apps. “We've heard from people that they're often surprised when a friend shares their information with an app,” wrote Facebook engineering manager Jeffrey Spehar in a blog post. “So we've updated Facebook Login so that each person decides what information they want to share about themselves, including their friend list.” Today, when Facebook users choose to share their friend list with an app, only those friends who also use the app become visible, Facebook spokeswoman Tera Randall told Yahoo News. The changes went into effect for new apps on April 30, and existing apps were given a year before the change applied to them. (In technical terms, what Facebook is doing is changing its Graph application programming interface, or API, as well as the terms of service for app developers.) What this means in practice is that a group like Ready for Hillary, the grass-roots network of supporters for a Clinton presidential run, has been able to use targeted sharing over the past year. That means it has the Facebook friend lists of all the people who’ve installed Ready for Hillary’s app on the social network. But when the API and terms-of-service changes become permanent for all apps, Ready for Hillary — as well as any campaign that has bought its voter information — won’t be able to keep up to date with its supporters’ most recent lists of friends, and will learn nothing about the Facebook friends of new supporters. Facebook’s change becomes permanent on April 30, 2015. Most of the Republican presidential hopefuls, meanwhile, will not get the chance to use the tool at all. Aside from a brief article over the summer in Campaigns & Elections, the political press has not taken notice of the change. Already, though, the National Republican Senatorial Committee has decided not to put time and resources into using Facebook’s targeted sharing tools. “We could have continued to use it just for this cycle, and it could have been useful to some degree, but for me it was a question of resource prioritization,” said a senior NRSC official. “I wanted to focus on getting the fundamentals right first, then building up the chain of sophistication.” The NRSC official said that when the committee did use targeted sharing in the Massachusetts special election in June 2013, it showed results, but “we just didn't see the engagement numbers we needed to see to indicate that it was going to be transformative this [past] cycle.” “Plus, the API and News Feed changes have been so frequent over the past several years that we somewhat doubted the assurances that it would still work on [Election Day],” the NRSC official said. “Even if so, anything we built would have to be scrapped after the cycle; it couldn't serve as the foundation for future cycles, like email list development.” But the quest to reach voters through their friends will continue to be a highly competitive space in politics. “I’m not convinced there aren’t going to be ways [to work around the Facebook change]. But nobody has found a way yet,” Goff said. Stu Trevelyan, CEO of NGP VAN, the top software tool for Democratic campaigns, said that there are still ways to “track relationships in non-Facebook ways.” NGP VAN’s interface, which taps into voter databases, is used by virtually every Democratic campaign up and down the ballot. So the level of volunteer use around the country is high. And NGP VAN has also created an Action Center tool that has been mapping relationship data among Democratic volunteers and Ready for Hillary supporters. “[Ready for Hillary] said, ‘Hey supporters, go to the Action Center and share with your friends that they should come and sign up for a free Ready for Hillary bumper sticker,'” Trevelyan said. “Let’s say I clicked on your link and went and asked for a bumper sticker. My record would show in the VAN database that I was recruited by you and you recruited me. There’s a whole level of observed activity.” “There is an element of our tool currently that uses that Facebook API, but it’s not the only way or even the predominant way that we are mapping relationships,” Trevelyan said. But as the NRSC official put it, “It seems that the days of getting 1 million users to scrape all of America's social data are gone.” *Washington Post: “O’Malley voices opposition to Keystone pipeline in posts on Facebook and Twitter” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/omalley-voices-opposition-to-keystone-pipeline-in-posts-on-facebook-and-twitter/2014/11/17/4bc68636-6e7d-11e4-ad12-3734c461eab6_story.html>* By John Wagner November 17, 2014, 12:42 p.m. EST Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) took to social media on Monday to urge the U.S. Senate to reject the Keystone XL oil pipeline, saying the country needs to look beyond “smallball choices facing us on energy.” O’Malley, who is weighing a 2016 White House bid, wrote on Facebook that the pipeline would produce “too much carbon dioxide and not nearly enough jobs” and should be rejected. He also expressed his opposition on Twitter. The Republican-led House voted last week 252-to-161 to move forward with the project, while a planned Senate vote on Tuesday is expected to be very close. President Obama could also veto the measure. O’Malley’s posture plays well with environmental groups and positions him to the left of Hillary Rodham Clinton, whom O’Malley would like face for the Democratic presidential nomination and who has not taken a position on pipeline’s construction. Environmental groups have argued that the pipeline, which would stretch from Canada’s oil sands to the Texas Gulf Coast, would adversely affect climate change. “We need a jobs agenda that meets our climate challenge — we need solutions that simultaneously reduce carbon emissions and create jobs,” O’Malley wrote on Facebook. “With a bold focus on renewable energy, we can solve the climate challenge, unleash America’s innovative spirit, and re-invigorate American economic dynamism.” *The Hill blog: Briefing Room: “O'Malley urges Senate to reject Keystone” <http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/224356-omalley-urges-senate-to-reject-keystone>* By Peter Sullivan November 17, 2014, 10:31 a.m. EST Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley (D), a possible 2016 presidential candidate, urged the Senate to reject the Keystone pipeline, tweeting his opposition on Monday. *Gov. Martin O’Malley* @GovernorOMalley: We need a jobs agenda that meets our climate challenge. I hope the Senate rejects #KeystoneXL: it's too much CO2, & not nearly enough jobs. [11/17/14, 10:02 a.m. EST <https://twitter.com/GovernorOMalley/status/534360894877499392>] O'Malley's opposition could bolster him with green groups and position him to the left of potential 2016 rival Hillary Clinton. Clinton has declined to take a position on the Keystone pipeline. In June, she cited her tenure as secretary of State, when she had oversight over the approval process for the pipeline, as the reason why she "can't really comment at great length." Environmental groups are strongly opposed to the pipeline, citing its effect on climate change. The Senate is set to vote on a bill approving the pipeline on Tuesday, and it is expected to be close. The House last week also passed a bill approving the project. A Keystone bill though would still have to get past a potential veto from President Obama. Obama indicated at a press conference on Sunday that he intends to let the administration's approval process continue, rather than have his hand forced by the bill out of Congress. "We’re going to let the process play itself out," Obama said. "And the determination will be made in the first instance by the Secretary of State. "But I won’t hide my opinion about this, which is that one major determinant of whether we should approve a pipeline shipping Canadian oil to world markets, not to the United States, is does it contribute to the greenhouse gases that are causing climate change," he added. *Bloomberg: “Jim Webb Vs. ‘Humanitarian Intervention’ (and the Clock)” <http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2014-11-17/jim-webb-vs-humanitarian-intervention-and-the-clock>* By David Weigel November 17, 2014, 1:11 p.m. EST [Subtitle:] The dark-horse candidate takes on the administration and the Clinton record, as few watch. If the advantage of being a front-runner is getting the rest of the world to adapt to your time, the curse of the dark horse is living by other peoples' stopped clocks. On Monday morning, after a weekend that saw a substantial press corps descend on Arkansas to cover the Clinton family's 2016 plans, former Virginia Senator Jim Webb found himself in a Hyatt basement ballroom, waiting to address a Washington meeting of Economists for Peace and Security. And waiting. And waiting. Webb, who has not ruled out a 2016 presidential campaign, was scheduled to speak at 11:30. At that time, as a panel on trade and jobs dragged on, Webb was sitting in a corner, his London Fog topcoat bundled on the same table as a rapidly depleting coffee carafe. The panel dragged on as people recognized him, bent over and handed him their business cards. Webb didn't get to take the stage until 11:55. "I was told to be here by 11:15," he said, pre-apologizing for truncating his speech. Over 15 minutes, he boiled down the argument he's been making in Washington and in Iowa, about an America that had "fallen into that Pandora's box of the killer of empires" by over-committing and occupying in the Middle East and Arab world. Webb focused his criticism of the Obama administration's policies on the 2011 Libyan intervention, which happened to be closely identified with the leadership of then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. "It was not a civil war," he said. "The logic that we used to go in was different than any situation that I can remember in terms of the use of force. There were no treaties at risk, there were no Americans at risk, there were no terrorist attacks coming out of Libya ... in the name of what was called 'humanitarian intervention'–this was the new concept that was enunciated–we established a new concept that the president can unilaterally decide what humanitarian conditions are, anywhere in the world." When Webb wrapped, his fellow former Republican, Michael Lind, asked him about the difficulty of explaining actual policy and strategy choices to the average voter. "It's very difficult for any administration to engage with Iran without being criticized," said Webb, by way of an example. "I'm not saying we should completely trust them, but I'm certain we should be having that discussion." Why did Webb's old colleagues in the Senate fail to discuss these matters sensibly? "It's very difficult for many people who've been elected for reasons other than foreign policy reasons to go through this kind of a drill," he said. "You need clear talking-point kind of advice for them, so they don't go out and make a mistake in public ... they defer to the administration so they don't have to enter into very complex debates." The only quasi-praise Webb had for the Obama administration came when he discussed its plans, punted after the election, to ask Congress to authorize continued action against the Islamic State. "It's a very smart move, finally, for the president to say he wants a vote of Congress to say what we're going to do with ISIS," he said. In a short conversation after the speech, Webb declined to dictate what Congress should ask for. "The administration should come forward, to the Congress, with the rationale for continuing to do so," he said. I asked Webb what he'd made of the confused presentations that the Defense Department made the previous week, and the confused response of Congress. "Presidents need to lead!" said Webb. He punctuated that line with a loud, sharp laugh. *The Hill blog: Ballot Box: “Walker: I could run in 20 years and be Clinton's age” <http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/224378-walker-i-could-run-in-20-years-and-be-clintons-age>* By Peter Sullivan November 17, 2014, 12:37 p.m. EST Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R), a possible 2016 presidential candidate, raised the subject of Hillary Clinton's age when discussing when he might run for president. "Whether it’s two years, six years, 20 years from now, because at 47, I mean I think about Hillary Clinton, I could run 20 years from now for president and still be about the same age as the former secretary of State is right now," Walker said in an interview with the local Fox affiliate published Sunday night. The comments about Clinton, who is 67, came as Walker was discussing the toll of being president. “I say this only half-jokingly, that you have to be crazy to want to be president," Walker said. "Anyone who’s seen the pictures of this president or any of the former presidents can see the before and after, no matter how fit, no matter how young they are, they age pretty rapidly when you look at their hair and everything else involved with it." Walker said last week that Clinton was the "biggest loser" in the midterms and that she embodies an "old, tired top-down approach from the government." A range of possible Republican presidential candidates could use the strategy of portraying themselves as a new alternative in contrast to Clinton. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, for example, previously told The New York Times that Democrats have "old, tired ideas being produced by old, tired candidates." Walker is coming off of a high-profile reelection victory over Democratic challenger Mary Burke. He has stoked presidential speculation by saying governors would make better presidents and telling NBC: "Not only do I care about this great state, I care about this country." He was noncommittal in the local Fox interview, though, saying he thinks someone should run if "they feel called to." “Right now, I still feel called to be governor of the state of Wisconsin," he said. "And I’m going to do the best job I can over the next four years.”
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