Joseph Lane: Why Would Hillary Clinton Want to be Secretary of State?
After all, she won’t be the first female Secretary of State (in fact, she will make it 3 out of the last 4 who have been women), and the office has not been, at least not recently, considered a suitable consolation prize for those who don’t quite make it to be president.
However, we have to wonder whether she hopes to take the office of Secretary of State back to the future, transforming it into a role in the U.S. system that it once occupied, and perhaps should again.
Over the last fifty years, the office of Secretary of State has been held by three types of public figures
1) Foreign Policy “Experts” chosen from academia, the diplomatic corps, or the military because they are thought to have a special intellectual insight into the dynamics of foreign affairs (e.g. Condoleeza Rice, Colin Powell, Lawrence Eagleburger, Henry Kissinger, John Foster Dulles);
2) Senior Statesmen who are capping long careers by giving their services to the highest diplomatic office (e.g. Warren Christopher, Edmund Muskie, Dean Rusk);
3) Symbolic Figures who are given the office because the President plans to be his own chief diplomat and needs someone who can deliver his statements effectively on his behalf (e.g. Madeleine Albright, Christian Herter).
Hillary Clinton fits into none of these categories, unless we assume that she is looking upon this post as her capstone gift to the nation. I tend to doubt that she sees it that way.
More likely, she is looking back to a much earlier vision of the Secretary of State as the proving ground for past and future presidential aspirants.
Between 1801 and the Civil War, six of the eleven men elected to the presidency had previous served as Secretary of State (Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Martin Van Buren, and James Buchanan). At least five other future or former Secretaries of State had made major runs at the office (Henry Clay in 1824, 1832, and 1844; Lewis Cass in 1848; William Seward in 1856 and 1860; and John C. Calhoun and Daniel Webster who were perennial presidential contenders although neither secured a major party nomination).
The most interesting, and I think most plausible, reason why Hillary Clinton wants to be Secretary of State now is that she plans to secure the next open contest for the Democratic presidential nomination. In this regard, her decision to approach that goal in this way may help us reconsider where to look for presidential nominees. There are a number of very sound reasons why we might want to return to an idea that the Secretary of State is a fit training ground for presidential aspirants. The wide open race in 2008, with its nearly uncountable number of debates, demonstrated again and again why the most common modern incubators fail to provide the right types of experiences for the presidential office.
Senators. 2008 aspirants who performed their major public work as U.S. Senators included six Democrats (Clinton, Obama, Biden, Christopher Dodd, John Edwards, and Mike Gravel) and three Republicans (McCain, Fred Thompson, and Sam Brownback) made up nearly half of the total field. But we are repeatedly told that Senators lack training as executives with little need to manage personnel or administrative tasks, and some Senators (depending on committee assignments) may lack extensive familiarity with foreign policy.
Governors. Five 2008 aspirants performed their major public work as governors (Republicans Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, Tommy Thompson, and Jim Gilmore; and only one Democrat, Bill Richardson), and governors have tended to make up the major part of most presidential fields since the twentieth century. Four of the last seven presidential winners (Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush) trained as governors. Furthermore, we should not forget that John McCain chose a governor as his vice presidential nominee, and apart from his doomed hope to get Republicans to accept Joe Lieberman, he appears to have seriously considered only present and former governors for the post (Tom Ridge, Bobby Jindal, Charlie Crist, and Tim Pawlenty). Governors like to point out that they have executive and administrative experience, but by the very nature of holding state offices, they lack foreign policy experience (whether they can see foreign countries from their states or not).
Secretary of State, however, is a post that involves both significant executive and administrative experience and major responsibilities for crafting and executing the nation’s foreign policy. It is a perfect training ground for future presidents and perhaps should once again serve as our presidential incubator; in this regard, Senator Clinton’s appointment, whether or not she currently thinks of herself as looking toward 2016 or not, may serve to put the focus back on a particularly appropriate vision of the office of Secretary of State.
However, we need to recognize that this vision also introduces tensions into the office that do not exist when it is occupied by a Madeleine Albright. Presidential aspirants have their own visions and their own agendas that makes them less likely to work with the current president without significant internal tensions.
When Woodrow Wilson sought to install William Jennings Bryan, his primary rival within the Democratic party, at the State Department, things did not go well, and Bryan soon resigned over a policy dispute with Wilson, significantly raising doubts about the president’s foreign policy within his own party. As many commentators have noted, choosing a “team of rivals” is fraught with risk for the president who may be challenged from within, but if this works, for both Obama and Clinton, it may well suggest a new vision of our oldest cabinet office and the training of future presidents.