Yes, she did. And no, we're not that naive. But we did expect her to fulfill at least some promise of helping the upstate economy, which hasn't happened.wco81 wrote:She really promised 200k jobs? And you guys believed a Senator would deliver that? I can see a governor offering tax incentives to bring businesses to the state but there would have to be a lot of deals like that.
All of that vast experience as First Lady, I guess.wco81 wrote:How is she going to promise such things when she was going to be a rookie Senator in the minority party of the Senate and House?
Very few high-tech sectors upstate, another one of her failed promises.wco81 wrote:What kind of a high-tech sector is there upstate? Usually high-tech corridors cluster around universities with strong science and engineering programs. You can't just will them into existence and you can't create them from scratch within a Senate term.
It was pretty automatic, mainly due to her last name and her weak competition. She also benefited in 2006 from the backlash against Congressional Republicans due to the unpopular Bush Administration.wco81 wrote:If she was selling such unattainable goals, her winning the Senate seat, especially as a carpet-bagger, must not have been too automatic as you suggest.
Also, upstate concerns never have made or broken a candidate, since nearly all candidates for major political positions in New York (governor, U.S. Senate) are from downstate, where the political power, machinery and most importantly, money, reside.
The prevailing opinion among most of the anti-Hillary camp upstate, of which I am clearly a member, is that her most highly visible Senate work and committee appointments did little to help upstate N.Y. but did a lot to enhance her viability as a Presidential candidate.
She has served or is serving on the Budget, Armed Services, Environment, Health/Education, Labor and Pensions, Aging and Security in Europe committees. If you look at that participation as a whole, it ticks nearly all of the boxes a Presidential candidate from the Senate uses to defend their experience against attacks from rival candidates.
Add Hillary's voice: "Due to my work on the (Fill in Blank) Committee, I have worked for a balanced Federal budget. I have supported and worked on military issues. I'm keenly tuned into the health care and education crises in this country. I'm a strong supporter of organized labor. I'm working hard to preserve Social Security. I understand how a secure Europe can be a barrier against terrorism here at home."
Pretty clever. Pretty contrived. Very Clintonesque.
Take care,
PK