Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Ghosts of 1992 hovering over California governor's race

Former President Bill Clinton just won't let go...

The Los Angeles Times provides the set-up:

Seventeen years after Bill Clinton and Jerry Brown clashed in the 1992 race for the White House, the former president made clear today that bygones will not be bygones in the 2010 campaign for California governor: Clinton signed on to support Brown rival Gavin Newsom in the Democratic primary.

It is highly unusual – perhaps unprecedented, according to the San Francisco mayor's campaign – for a former president to take sides in a California gubernatorial primary. But the bad blood between Clinton and Brown, now state attorney general, runs deep, much as Newsom would like Californians to believe that Clinton's choice is based on merit alone.

"This is not some kind of payback on Bill Clinton's part," Newsom strategist Garry South said. "He doesn't think that way."

Tensions in the 1992 race for the Democratic presidential nomination peaked at a debate in Chicago, where Brown accused Clinton of "funneling money to his wife's law firm for state business."

"I don't care what you say about me, but you ought to be ashamed of yourself for jumping on my wife," Clinton snapped, shaking his finger at Brown. "You're not worth being on the same platform as my wife."

That's just the half of it. The Whitewater Scandal wasn't something invented by the Republican Party. The first national politician to sound the alarm on it was Brown.

Neither Newsom, who is the mayor of San Francisco, nor Brown have declared their candidacies.

Imagine if Brown wins...and Hillary Clinton challenges President Obama in 2012?

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