Here we go again…
With Hillary Clinton mulling a 2016 presidential bid, the right is dredging up the 1990s in a gleeful effort to tarnish the potential Democratic frontrunner.
The conservative Washington Free Beacon has produced a new report on Clinton after pouring over a trove of materials about her going back to the mid-1970s. Diane Blair, a political science professor and close Arkansas friend of Clinton’s who died in 2000, kept letters, memos, and records of conversations with both Hillary and Bill. The archive, which Blair had intended to use to write a book, is currently kept at the University of Arkansas, where it has been open to the public since 2010.
Much of the Blair archive has been reported on before. Carl Bernstein told msnbc via email that “significant parts” of the archive, which is the property of the Diane Blair Trust, were made available to him by Blair’s husband, Jim, for Bernstein’s 2007 biography of Hillary Clinton, A Woman in Charge. “I believe some of the papers had yet to be transcribed and/or deposited by the Trustees at the time,” Bernstein told msnbc.
The Beacon’s report comes two weeks after Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, who’s considering a run for the 2016 GOP nomination, tried to revive the Monica Lewinsky scandal — calling Bill Clinton a “sexual predator.” Last week Paul continued the effort, saying Democrats should return money they raised while campaigning with the former president.
The Blair documents cited by the Beacon contain little that would appear to damage Hillary Clinton. Among the pieces of information unearthed:
-During Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential bid, a memo by top campaign pollsters Stan Greenberg and Celinda Lake found that voters feared Hillary Clinton was “too politically ambitious, too strong, and too ruthless.” The pollsters concluded: “What voters find slick in Bill Clinton, they find ruthless in Hillary.”
-After being told by her husband about his affair with Lewinsky, Hillary Clinton referred to the onetime White House intern as a “narcissistic loony tune,” according to Blair.









