Hillary Clinton is not necessarily going to run for president and even if she does she could still lose the nomination, but, hypothetically speaking, she'd be the best candidate and, by the way, her campaign will focus on working class voters.
That was the awkward message from would-be Clinton surrogates who were among the several hundred politicos, fundraisers and activists who showed up for a 'Ready For Hillary' convention in New York Friday.
At some moments, they seemed to fall over themselves insisting that the former Secretary of State's ascendancy should not be considered 'inevitable,' while at other moments they discussed in great detail the organizational structure, fundraising and messaging efforts that are already in place to buttress her 2016 campaign.
Former Albuquerque Mayor Martin Chavez said that ambivalence as a result of the pummeling Clinton's campaign received six years ago, when many Democrats considered her a shoo-in as the Democratic nominee.
'In 2008, we got eviscerated by a better campaign on the ground,' he explained. 'Lessons have been learned. So there has been extraordinary preparation and it's a very, very different, far more sophisticated operation that's there and it's ready for her, should she decide to run.'
Adam Parkhomenko, who founded the organizational group Ready for Hillary, which has spent the last two years collecting a database of roughly 3 million supporters, echoed the sentiment.
'I wouldn't have been doing this since January 2013 if I thought she was inevitable,' he said. 'We learned in 2008 she's not inevitable. No one's inevitable.'
Stephanie Schriock, the head of EMILY's List, who is expected to play a major role in a future Clinton campaign, said she looks forward to a 'healthy primary.'
'As everyone goes through a presidential primary process, it'll be the candidate who make the case,' she said, adding that Clinton, while clearly the front-runner, will not be immune to that process. 'There's nothing inevitable about 2016.'
Meanwhile, several Clinton backers, including Schriock, former Obama campaign organizer Mitch Stewart, Correct the Record's David Brock, and political strategist Chris Lehane, spoke directly about what organizations would have to work together on the ground to make a 2016 Clinton campaign most effective, what issues Clinton would be most likely to emphasize, and what message the campaign would be built around. All agreed that a hypothetical Clinton campaign will likely to focus on working class voters, who are feeling increasingly marginalized in today's economy.
Clinton must project a vision for 'economic opportunity for American families,' said Schriock. That's a phrase she used, with slightly variations, three more times over the following 20 minutes. The campaign will likely focus on connecting with working class voters, women, Hispanics and the African American community over issues like equal pay, minimum wage and leveling the playing field for the middle class, she said.
Nina Turner, an Ohio state senator, said that a Clinton campaign could easily motivate key voting blocs, like the African American community, by staking progressive positions on issues like prison reform or creating more economic opportunities for the working poor. But, she said, 'This is not about a coronation for anybody.'
Stewart agreed that 'a hypothetical Clinton campaign' would have to focus primarily economic issues. 'We have to come up with an economic message that shows working class voters that we're on their side,' said Stewart.
When asked what issues would put Clinton in the strongest position against other potential Democratic contenders, such Martin O'Malley, Bernie Sanders, or Jim Webb, who announced yesterday that he was exploring the possibility of running, Stewart demurred. 'I'm not going to comment on any hypothetical candidate,' said Stewart, laughing. 'Except my specific hypothetical candidate.'
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