podesta-emails

Re: FW: NYT/Nader Letter

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copy On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 9:26 AM, Huma Abedin <[email protected]> wrote: > john and cheryl - see story below > ________________________________________ > From: Philippe Reines [[email protected]] > Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2014 11:52 PM > To: Huma Abedin; Rob Russo; NSM > Cc: H > Subject: NYT/Nader Letter > > Here is the story the Secretary is referring to, and this is the specific > reference: "Last week, dozens of labor scholars and activists, including > Ralph Nader, sent Mrs. Clinton a letter asking her to use her influence > with Walmart to urge the retailer to raise wages for its predominantly > female work force. From 1986 to 1992, Mrs. Clinton served on the board of > Walmart." > > Bill Clinton Defends His Economic Legacy > By AMY CHOZICK > The New York Times > April 30, 2014 > > Former President Bill Clinton, who has grown increasingly frustrated that > his economic policies are viewed as out-of-step with the current focus on > income inequality, on Wednesday delivered his most muscular defense of his > economic legacy. > > The speech reflected a strategic effort by Mr. Clinton and his advisers to > reclaim the populist ground now occupied by Senator Elizabeth Warren of > Massachusetts and other ascendant left-leaning Democrats, and, potentially, > to lay out an economic message that could propel his wife, Hillary Rodham > Clinton, to the White House in 2016. > > "My commitment was to restore broad-based prosperity to the economy and to > give Americans a chance," Mr. Clinton told students at Georgetown > University, his alma mater, as Mrs. Clinton looked on from the front row. > For nearly two hours, the former president defended the impact of policies > like welfare overhaul and the earned-income tax credit, and displayed a > series of charts detailing the number of people his policies lifted out of > poverty. > > "You know the rest," he said of the 1990s. "It worked out pretty well." > > As president, Mr. Clinton presided over one of the healthiest economies in > recent memory, but he also forged a new model of a pro-business, pragmatic > Democrat who championed public-private partnerships and open markets. His > language as president was more focused on lifting the middle class than > castigating the wealthy. That should not be confused with a lack of concern > for the poor, Mr. Clinton says now. > > That nuance has grown harder to communicate in recent weeks, especially as > Ms. Warren has promoted her best-selling book, "A Fighting Chance," which > argues that the deck is stacked in favor of big banks and against ordinary > people. A cadre of economic advisers has been helping Mr. Clinton crunch > data and think about how to better frame his economic legacy -- one that > included a balanced budget and the creation of 22.7 million jobs -- in the > context of the current climate of economic populism. > > The effort began early this year, when the Clintons were accused of using > the swearing-in of Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York as a way to shore up > their progressive credentials ahead of Mrs. Clinton's potential 2016 > campaign. > > "Today, when someone talks about inequality they're supposed to be a real > left winger," Mr. Clinton said at a book party in January. Mr. Clinton told > the small crowd, which included Martin O'Malley, the governor of Maryland > and a potential rival to Mrs. Clinton, that he had been fighting income > inequality since his earliest years in Arkansas politics. > > He slyly mocked critics who suggest that he had discovered the inequality > issue recently, saying: " 'Oh, look at Bill Clinton, he went to the > swearing-in of Bill de Blasio. He really is slick still.' " > > Framing his policies effectively has implications beyond Mr. Clinton's > legacy. As she decides whether to run for president in 2016, Mrs. Clinton > has come under criticism from some left-leaning Democrats who view her as > too cozy with Wall Street. During her 2008 bid, Mrs. Clinton had to balance > promoting the economic success of her husband's administration with > distancing herself from policies less popular with Democratic primary > voters, like the North American Free Trade Agreement and the deregulation > of the financial industry. > > Last week, dozens of labor scholars and activists, including Ralph Nader, > sent Mrs. Clinton a letter asking her to use her influence with Walmart to > urge the retailer to raise wages for its predominantly female work force. > From 1986 to 1992, Mrs. Clinton served on the board of Walmart. > > "She has been going around the country getting awards and making $200,000 > per speech giving soft, cushy addresses on mother and apple pie issues," > Mr. Nadar said in an interview. "It just surprises me as to why she > wouldn't come out for something so obvious." > > Mrs. Clinton did advocate raising the minimum wage at a speech in Boston > last week. Burns Strider, executive director of Correct the Record, an > outside group that defends Mrs. Clinton said, "Prior to it being in style > to hold court on the issue of income inequality or lack-of-opportunity, > Hillary Clinton was there, not just looking at the issue but taking action." > > Voters generally have a rosy view of the 1990s: Median family income > increased to $48,950 in 1999 from $36,959 in 1993. And, from 1992 to 2000, > unemployment fell to 7.6 percent from 14.2 percent for African-Americans > and to 5.7 percent from 11.6 percent for Hispanics, according to Department > of Commerce data. > > "People can make their criticisms, but if you look back on the economy, > people thought it was pretty darn good, especially for working-class > people," John Podesta, a former chief of staff to Mr. Clinton, and a senior > adviser to President Obama, said in an interview last fall. > > In his speech on Wednesday, Mr. Clinton called inequality "a severe > constraint on growth" and said it had not been as much of an issue in the > 1990s, when incomes grew more slowly for the richest 20 percent of families > than for the poorest 20 percent. > > And, he said, he faced a contentious Republican-led Senate and House that > would have rejected overheated talk that castigated the wealthy or focused > solely on wealth redistribution. Mr. Clinton aimed to appease the other > side by also devoting energy to deficit reduction and reforming the welfare > system. > > Al From, an adviser to Mr. Clinton who worked on his 1992 campaign, said, > "We argued starting in 1991 that the progressive position ought to be that > nobody who works full time in America to support a family ought to be poor." > > He added, "I'm sure he feels that he doesn't get the credit he deserves > for the economic gains that happened during his administration." > > Critics have accused Mr. Clinton of trying to be all things to all people > and said that some of his policies, namely the trade agreements and > legislation that allowed the commingling of commercial and investment > banks, might have exacerbated the current inequality. Others point out that > the Internet boom coincided with his presidency. > > "You can say, 'Oh, Clinton was lucky, he caught the tech boom.' 'Clinton > was lucky, he came out of a recession,' " Mr. Clinton said on Wednesday. He > pointed to a chart that showed that 7.7 million people were lifted out of > poverty during his administration, compared with 77,000 during the Reagan > years. > > If she runs in 2016, Mrs. Clinton would confront the inequality issue from > a very different place than her husband did in 1992, when he made $35,000 a > year as governor of Arkansas. Back then, Mr. Clinton seemed to have a > natural connection to people of modest means while his opponent, the elder > President George Bush, struggled to say how much a gallon of milk cost. > > On Wednesday, Mr. Clinton said he thanked God every day that "Hillary and > I and some of our friends in this audience who live in New York probably > pay the highest aggregate tax rates in America." > > The challenge is not about personal wealth, but policies, said Robert B. > Reich, a secretary of labor under Mr. Clinton. And some policy experts > argue that the era of centrist Clinton economics may have expired. > > When asked by CNN last fall whether it was "the end of the Clinton > Democrats," Mr. Clinton replied: "There's probably something to that. > America is growing more liberal culturally and more diverse." > > "But, again, let's not get carried away here," he added. "I ran on income > inequality in 1992." > > ### > ------Original Message------ > From: Evergreen > To: Huma Abedin > To: Rob Russo > To: PIR > To: NSM > Subject: Question > Sent: Apr 30, 2014 11:46 PM > > Does anybody know about this letter Chosick article in 5/1 Times says was > sent to me? >
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