What the Clinton Haters on the Left Get Wrong | Washington Monthly
A new book epitomizes the risible belief that the 42nd president betrayed liberals and the 1990s were a right-wing hellscape.
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What the Clinton Haters on the Left Get Wrong
A new book epitomizes the risible belief that the 42nd president betrayed liberals and the 1990s were a right-wing hellscape.
Bill Clinton's economic and environmental achievements are the greatest of any president in the past 50 years. The record is conspicuous by its absence in a new book, "A Fabulous Failure," by two academics, Nelson Lichtenstein and the late Judith Stein. Here: President Bill Clinton addresses a crowd before at Kutztown University in Kutztown, Pennsylvania Wednesday, Jan. 25, 1995. (AP Photo/Doug Mills)
Philosophers, political scientists, and journalists these days often lament the “post-truth” era of politics. The epoch allows “alternative facts” to triumph over actual facts and prioritizes hunches and whims over evidence and logic. One of the least acknowledged casualties of the “post-truth” orientation of political culture is the legacy of former President Bill Clinton.
Especially in the increasingly ideological and bizarre sphere of podcasts and social media, it is common to hear denunciations of Clinton from the left as a “corporatist” guilty of “criminalizing the poor” and “wrecking everything” to serve something called the “neoliberal consensus,” which is a blunderbuss moniker for everything from Ronald Reagan’s closure of mental health hospitals to George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq. The hard-left mouthpieces share a predilection to act like the 1990s never happened or were a right-wing hellscape. Barack Obama gets some of this treatment, too, as does Joe Biden. But Clinton-loathing is unsurpassed on the left.
The 1990s did happen. Billions of people lived through them. Those interested in truth might recall that every socioeconomic indicator of American life moved in the right direction during Clinton’s two terms. GDP improved while poverty declined. First-time homeownership rates increased, and the high school dropout rate diminished. Wages, particularly for those in the lower income brackets, rose while crime and teenage pregnancy dropped. College graduation and faith in government institutions climbed, and unemployment fell.
No president has godlike power to manipulate the universe. It would overstate the case to argue that Clinton was solely responsible for the good fortune and steady societal improvements of the 1990s, but it is disingenuous and wrong to assert that his policies were not profoundly influential over the welcome trends of his presidential tenure.
In fact, the Clinton administration’s economic and environmental records are the best of any presidency in the past 50 years. The record is conspicuous by its absence in a new book, A Fabulous Failure, by two academics, Nelson Lichtenstein and the late Judith Stein.
The authors begin their analysis with an acknowledgment that Clinton’s 1993 health care reform proposal was “more radical” than the Affordable Care Act and proceed to fit themselves for Sigmund Freud costumes by positing that its defeat restrained Clinton’s reformist ambitions to the extent that his presidency ended as a “betrayal of progressivism.”
Given the sinking foundation on which it rests, it is hardly surprising that the rest of the book is nothing more than a greatest-hits collection of the fallacies and folklore that have come to poison political debate: Bill Clinton did the bidding of Milton Friedman; the deindustrialization of the American heartland was only the consequence of trade, which Clinton championed, rather than the more consequential factor of automation; and the hateful cult surrounding Donald Trump grew exclusively out of objection to said trade policies, rather than, as the evidence overwhelmingly indicates, racism, xenophobia, and Christian nationalism.
So much went right during the Clinton years that the far left, which consistently demonstrated an obstinate distaste for the Clinton presidency, sharing the “Slick Willie” disdain of the right, has adopted the bizarre tendency to argue that he is responsible for almost everything that went wrong after he left office. Indeed, some of the recent problems have roots in Clinton’s decisions. Far more problems, however, are the consequences of abandoning the policies and policy outlook of Clinton’s two terms.
The theory that Clinton is the primary source of the country’s current political crisis is ironic, considering that its leftist promulgators are oblivious to how it exonerates George W. Bush, Trump, and the anti-democratic and plutocratic forces that supported their presidencies.
As their book title suggests, Lichtenstein and Stein are not shy about forcefully denouncing Clinton. What is surprising is how mealy-mouthed they are about the fascist right. The closest they can muster to an acknowledgment of the real generator of democracy’s danger is the following bit of tortured writing:
Legitimacy drained from the nation’s economic and political system as the populist anger that might have been channeled against the twenty-first-century financial elite stoked Tea Party and Trumpist resentment toward the multiracial cosmopolitanism of the Obama era and the modestly social democratic initiatives of that moment, health care reform above all.
Passive and weird syntax of this kind is littered throughout A Fabulous Failure, underscoring the dubiousness of the propositions they champion.
Lichtenstein and Stein repeat the popular bromide that Clinton was responsible for the financial crisis of 2008 because he authorized the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, which separated commercial banking from investment banking. The evidence does not support it. A Fabulous Failure maintains the pattern, not even mentioning that the commercial banks that collapsed during the crisis, Wachovia and Washington Mutual, made bad loans—something Glass-Steagall would not have prevented. Furthermore, banks like Washington Mutual were not giant bank holding companies and, therefore, not in the purview of Glass-Steagall. More broadly, the subprime mortgage lending disaster—inseparable from the crash—also had nothing to do with Glass-Steagall. AIG received a government bailout during the “Great Recession,” but AIG is a global insurance organization, not a bank.
The political history also refutes the argument that the repeal of Glass-Steagall was responsible for the crash. By the time Clinton signed the repeal in 1999, years of weakening the act’s regulatory provisions by previous administrations had already made it impotent. Clinton’s pulling the respirator on the New Deal–era law had no effect. When Clinton said in 2015 that the repeal did not cause the crash, PolitiFact deemed his statement mostly true with some minor quibbles.
Intellectual honesty requires Clinton defenders to acknowledge mistakes. The one piece of financial legislation Clinton signed that clearly made the financial crisis worse, the deregulation of derivatives, received virtually no pushback from liberals at the time, except for Brooksley Born, a commissioner on the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, under whose purview derivatives fell, and a cover story by then Senator Byron Dorgan in the Washington Monthly.