Clinton: Democrats Will Respond to Attacks

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The New York Sun

WASHINGTON — President Clinton bemoaned ideologues who describe opponents as “running for office on his or her way to hell” and urged Democrats not to shy from fighting back.

Mr. Clinton, criticizing Republicans weeks before the midterm elections, told an audience at Georgetown University yesterday that intellectual debate should trump partisan rancor and that either-or choices are false.

“Most of us long for politics where we have genuine arguments, vigorous disagreements, but we don’t claim to have the whole truth, and we don’t demonize our opponents, and we work for what’s best for the American people,” he said.

Mr. Clinton, whose wife Senator Clinton, a Democrat of New York, is eyeing a 2008 White House run, spoke at his alma mater to mark the 15th anniversary of his series of speeches there as a then-fledgling presidential candidate.The former president gave notice that Democrats would not be passive victims of attacks.

“This is a contact sport, politics,” he said. “You can’t complain about being attacked. It’s like Yao Ming complaining about being fouled playing basketball.”

Mr. Clinton said he doesn’t see Democrats shying from the debate.

“It’s not that we want a bland, mushy, meaningless politics,” he said.”We like our debate. …We understand that campaigns will be heated and only one side can win. But we want it to be connected somehow to real lives and real people, to aspirations of ordinary Americans to the future of our children and our grandchildren.”

Recently, the former president engaged in a testy exchange with Fox News over his administration’s record on terrorism.

During remarks that were framed as a discussion of the common good, Mr. Clinton decried personal attacks against candidates for perceived lack of faith.

“It’s not about who represents the religious truth and who is basically running for office on his or her way to hell,” Mr. Clinton said.

Mr. Clinton also argued that the GOP has allowed its conservative element to drown out moderate voices.

“The ideological, right-wing element of the Republican Party has been building strength, partly in reaction to things that happened 40 years ago — Barry Goldwater’s defeat, the excess of the ’60s, Ronald Reagan’s election,” he said.


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