The Clintons' Southern Strategy
Dick Morris maintained at the time that the Clintons' long-term goal was less South Carolina than in creating a firewall of whites and especially Hispanics in later primaries. In a January interview with the New Yorker, Sergio Bendixen, described somewhat nebulously as a Clinton advisor, explained the campaign's approach thusly:"The Hispanic voter — and I want to say this very carefully — has not shown a lot of willingness or affinity to support black candidates.” Hillary Clinton, given an opportunity to repudiate Bendixen's comment in her Meet the Press appearance, declined to do so.
Today's LA Timesreveals that Bendixen's campaign role is far greater than the New Yorker article suggested:"The Clinton campaign also is devoting millions of dollars to Spanish-language advertising, using messages crafted by Miami-based Latino strategist Sergio Bendixen."
The accuracy of Bendixen's analysis is debatable: while clearly correct in analyzing contemporary Los Angeles or Miami politics, it would seem to have less value in discussing the politics of cities like Denver or Chicago.
Beyond the merits, however, imagine the appropriate outrage that would greet a Republican candidate who spent millions of dollars on a message geared to white voters, crafted by a consultant who stated,"The white voter — and I want to say this very carefully — has not shown a lot of willingness or affinity to support black candidates.”