For those who followed politics closely in the 1990s, you’ll recall that Republicans hated Bill Clinton with the heat of a thousand suns. GOP officials and activists woke up every day with one question on their minds: “How can I destroy the Clinton presidency today?”
It was rather remarkable, then, to see Mitt Romney in Michigan yesterday, suggesting the former Democratic president is a great model. “President Clinton, remember, he said the era of big government was over. President Obama brought it back with a vengeance,” Romney said, before praising Clinton on welfare reform.
A Romney aide said the move is intended to “devised as a trick to drive a wedge between centrist and liberal Democrats.” This might be more effective if it was less ridiculous.
As Ed Kilgore put it, “[E]ither [Romney] (or his speechwriter) hasn’t the slightest clue what he’s talking about, or he’s lying.”
It’s particularly outrageous for Romney to claim that the Affordable Care and Patient Protection Act of 2010 was some sort of betrayal of the New Democrat legacy. “New Democrats” (for example, the Progressive Policy Institute, the preeminent New Democratic think-tank) relentlessly agitated for something very like the ACA going back to the early 1990s. Indeed, they differed from the defining New Democrat, Bill Clinton, only in preferring the “managed competition” model to the somewhat more rigid approach embraced by the Clinton administration itself.









