Let me finish with Karl Rove’s nasty swing at Hillary Clinton this morning in his Wall Street Journal column.
He said her run for the White House is a case of “personal political ambition.”
When did having ambition become a disqualifier? More to the point, when did he become an attack line in partisan campaigning?
I know. You know. Karl Rove knows that personal ambition is what fuels politics. We don’t go out and pick candidates for office; they pick themselves. That’s the way it was in high school, in college.
Whenever there’s been an election in our lives, the ambitious come forward, put their names on the ballot and campaign for the job. We don’t pick our candidates; they pick themselves. Our job is to choose among those who’ve decided to put themselves out there.
The question people should be asking right now is not whether Hillary Clinton is ambitious, but is she ambitious enough – enough to fight another grueling, nearly two-year campaign for president?
Let’s hope she is. Politics in our system is based on people having ambition for high office. Lincoln, the Roosevelts, Kennedy, Reagan, all had personal ambition. So do the great body of the United States Congress. And, for most, it didn’t start evidencing itself when their names began showing up in newspapers. It began way back in student and campus politics.
Mitch McConnell put it best the morning following the 2014 election. He said: “I have a caucus of class presidents.”









