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Clinton as communicator, from Wellesley to campaign trail

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

In March 2016, Hillary Clinton said, “I am not a natural politician, in case you haven’t noticed, like my husband or President Obama.” Yet her first public speech was a star-making one, landing her in a Life magazine write-up at the age of 21.

NEW YORK >> Hillary Clinton has said it herself: She’s not the most naturally gifted public communicator.

“I am not a natural politician, in case you haven’t noticed, like my husband or President Obama,” she said in March.

Yet her first public speech was a star-making one, landing her in a Life magazine write-up at the tender age of 21. She was a senior at Wellesley, the first student chosen to address a commencement there. Unhappy with the words of the U.S. senator invited to speak before her, she parried with an unplanned rebuke, before launching into her prepared remarks. It was unscripted and rather audacious — so audacious, in fact, that the president of Wellesley felt compelled to apologize to the senator.

“Courtesy is not one of the stronger virtues of the young,” wrote Ruth Adams, in a letter recently unearthed by The Washington Post. “Scoring debater’s points seems, on occasion, to have higher standing.”

Nearly 50 years later, Clinton is facing the most important debates of her life as she squares off against Donald Trump beginning Monday — three high-stakes contests that could set the momentum for the remainder of the presidential campaign.

What kind of communicator has she become in those years since Wellesley, the last 30 or so in the public eye? That first speech is significant, says Kathleen Hall Jamieson, of the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg Public Policy Center, because it shows how even a college-age Clinton was able to think on her feet and jump on the moment — a key asset in a debate.

Clinton also showed, and has honed for years, a propensity to engage the other side, to argue and counter-argue like a lawyer, Jamieson says — not surprising, since her next stop after Wellesley was a law degree at Yale.

But along with those and other obvious strengths — such as the depth of her preparation — Clinton can sound scripted, especially in contrast to her husband, a gifted empathizer. “‘I feel your pain’ — that was a joke line about Bill Clinton, but some people have to work harder at it than others,” Jamieson says. “It was more natural for Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton than it is for Hillary Clinton.”

She’s also known to be guarded. “People who support her say she is thoughtful,” says Jamieson. “Those who oppose her say she is hiding something. But she adds that there’s good historical reason for Clinton to watch her words.

“She’s been burned by statements that were taken to mean something she didn’t necessarily intend, like her famous 1992 ‘cookies and teas’ remark,” which Jamieson says was “taken egregiously out of context.”

Then, of course, there’s the persistent description of Clinton “lecturing” — or worse, “yelling.” Many counter that this particular description is inextricably wound up in gender perceptions. (One commentator, Mark Rudov, said on Fox News in 2008 that when candidate Obama spoke, “Men hear, ‘Take off for the future,’ and when Hillary Clinton speaks, men hear, ‘Take out the garbage.”’)

“I don’t think one can talk about anything related to Hillary Clinton where gender is not (a factor), whether it’s conscious or not,” says Deborah Tannen, professor of linguistics at Georgetown University.

“What you constantly hear about is her yelling,” Tannen says. “But of course, candidates all yell. They have to.” That famous 2004 Howard Dean yell was a rare occasion when a male candidate was called out for it, she notes.

Tannen says Clinton — like other women in authority — is subject to a “double bind,” meaning whatever she does is going to violate either expectations for how a woman should speak, or how a leader should.

In other words, for a female candidate, appearing tough and empathetic at the same time is a challenge. Biographer Gail Sheehy says that during Clinton’s 2008 presidential race, her campaign emphasized the toughness, so that she would be taken seriously — especially by the military — as a potential commander in chief.

“She won that battle,” Sheehy says, “but in the process it obscured her nurturing qualities — her ability to understand and relate to people who are vulnerable. We’ve seen that ability in her actions throughout her whole life — but even today she has a hard time conveying it.”

One of Clinton’s most admired moments as a public speaker came in 1995, when, as first lady, she addressed the U.N. World Conference on Women in Beijing and made the powerful declaration that “human rights are women’s rights, and women’s rights are human rights.” But Sheehy also points to a very different moment as memorable for Clinton — the 2008 “coffee shop moment” in New Hampshire, where Clinton’s voice shook and she seemed near tears as she spoke of her goals for the country.

“She allowed herself to show a little vulnerability — in spite of herself — and wow, women all over the place related to her,” Sheehy says. “The problem is that today, there isn’t very much ‘we’ in the way she speaks. We don’t feel like she’s having a conversation with us.” In the debates, Sheehy suggests, Clinton might do well to inject some humor where she can, to portray accessibility.

Some feel Clinton shouldn’t have to be worrying about that at all.

Why, wonders feminist blogger Andi Zeisler, isn’t it enough for Clinton simply to show her qualifications for the job? When did it become, she asks, about being the candidate you can have a beer with — or who can dance with Ellen DeGeneres on her talk show?

“That’s not the person I want to see, and that’s certainly not who she wants to be,” Zeisler says. “I think she’s from a time when you weren’t SUPPOSED to have a beer with your president. They were supposed to be too busy and too smart.”

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Follow Jocelyn Noveck on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/jocelynnoveckap

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What political news is the world searching for on Google and talking about on Twitter? Find out via AP’s Election Buzz interactive. http://elections.ap.org/buzz

15 responses to “Clinton as communicator, from Wellesley to campaign trail”

  1. etalavera says:

    Hillary may not a great communicator, but she’s naturally gifted LIAR.

    • Boots says:

      Hardly, that description has to fall to the Donald who has constantly lied through out this campaign. Sorry Donald, until you release your taxes, I am not interested in hearing anymore of your lies. Tired of republicans always thinking they can break their promises with no penalty. And stop stiffing young girls like the Freedom girls.

      • DPK says:

        It sounds like you would have no problem supporting a formerly elected/appointed government official who, even after taking an oath, still lied to the American people. That is, of course, whenever she stated that she ‘couldn’t recall.

        Where are her Wall Street speech transcripts, the ones she was paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for? It’s obvious she’s been bought by her big dollar donors, as the vast majority of her funding comes from high rollers.

        • Boots says:

          What specific lie has Hillary told? Not saying Hillary is 100% truthful but I consider her “lies” to be insignificant compared to the lies of the Donald. You might have a point about her wall st. transcripts but that pales next to the tradition of presidential candidates releasing their tax returns. Yes it may be obvious that Hillary is influenced by big bucks by big donors but only a fool would think this does also not apply to the Donald. It would also appear that Putin may be the Donald’s biggest backer.

        • Windward_Side says:

          I suppose Hillary’s narrative to blame an internet video on the Benghazi massacre an insignificant lie? And continued that narrative directly to the face of the victims’ families. Maybe in your juvenile world this may be insignificant, but in the big boys world this was a huge misstatement. Join us in the big boys world. It may be a little enlightening.

        • lespark says:

          Boots, lies? Too many to mention in this post. Not even going there. Income taxes disclosure is optional. But for people who can’t see further than their nose what exactly do you want to see? Income, deductions, charitable contributions, tax schedules, depreciation, foreign investments, capital gains, income profit and loss? Maybe you don’t understand how from year to year, carryover, etc., tax liability is in constant flux. If the IRS is auditing his tax returns they are auditing his tax returns. What part of that don’t you understand.
          Just more Clingon malarkey.

        • DPK says:

          Boots: 70% of the donations to Mr. Trumps campaign are from donors contributing less than $200. 17% of Ms. Clinton’s donors have contributed less than $200. Source: Common Cause reports. Google it. She’s bought by the big boys on Wall Street.

        • sarge22 says:

          Lock her up. Don’t confuse Boots with facts.

      • cajaybird says:

        Stop with the stiffing young girls bit. Not only is in not true, but you’re forgetting Bill Clinton and his “Lolita trips”. The irony of your statements never ceases to amaze me.

  2. Billyther says:

    Did you charge her for this advertisement?

  3. noheawilli says:

    Nice promo piece on the candidate, and thanks for educating me that it’s because she’s female that I’m not voting for her. All this time I thought it was because of her terrible ideas of tax increases, her above the law actions, and her terrible record as Secretary of State.

  4. CEI says:

    MSM progressives gotta’ get this out before the debate because they know she’s not going to do well. Donald is a rock star and Hillary comes off as angry and mother-in-law like. Then, in an act of desperation, they drag out a feminist blogger nobody has ever heard of to bolster their case. Yes, it is about being a candidate you can go out and have a beer with, it always has been, just ask Bill. Very pathetic, I’m almost embarrassed for them. Crash and burn for democrats come November. At lest she and Bill won’t be “dead broke” when they go to the old folks home.

    • lespark says:

      Democrats are preparing for the melt down. What happen to the mouthers who were taunting the Deplorables?
      I’d sure like to see them klas and burn and stick a boot in it.

  5. butinski says:

    Tomorrow, all eyes will be on whether Gennifer Flowers will be sitting in the front row. If so, very few will notice or care what Hillary has to say since she’s been preaching the same ole, same ole, all her life. The presence of Flowers would rattle Hillary’s ample bloomers. How will she react? Perhaps bring along Monica. Now that would be a double header.

  6. Keonigohan says:

    Clintons…the most EVIL gang in American history.

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