Planet Clinton
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

The big surprise of President Clinton’s Global Initiative Conference at the Sheraton Hotel in New York last weekend was how strangely calming it was. You would expect to emerge begging for mercy from a three-day talkathon on the world’s most intractable problems emceed by history’s most garrulous president – especially if you were a survivor of one of his book tour gigs.
To be sure, Mr. Clinton, the big intellectual show-off, had never been less than brilliant on his feet, but he never knew when to stop. And all that promiscuous lateral thinking ended up sucking the air out of the room. We got so tired of his lack of discipline that by 2000 we thought we were ready for a presidency that operated by assertion. Five years later we see what that’s brought.
Maybe it’s the effect of his brush with death. He’s pared himself down to the essentials, symbolized by the slimmed physique and the paternal reading glasses. His style was always inclusive even when he was on the attack. But now you feel he’s shed the psychic baggage of the impeachment years and with it the toxic rock and roll of his constantly roiling reputation.
The new, honed Clinton on the rostrum made sure that any earnest hand-wringing grappled with the raw brutality of irreconcilables. He even saw to it that the panels he moderated actually ran on time.
Every session began with a stroll to the podium to announce a bigbucks pledge for some imaginative initiative ($1.25 billion by the weekend’s close).
“Now here’s something else in my hot little hand,” the former prez would say, dangling his glasses with his best “doggone” smile. “My old friend Carlos Slim Helu here has just said he’s willing to develop a cell phone network for Gaza and link it to Jordan’s network! Why, thanks, Carlos. Come up here and be recognized.” A big hand for Carlos, who turns out to be the richest man in Latin America.
This wasn’t just the usual F.O.B.s from Park Avenue and Hollywood (though there were plenty of those cruising around).With so many world policy chiefs present – Prime Minister Blair, King Abdullah II of Jordan, Secretary of State Rice, President Mbeki of South Africa, and even Gerry Adams – the conference was a tour d’horizon of Mr. Clinton’s life, and head, since the White House. (So that’s what he’s been doing on all those far-flung speaking gigs: scarfing down public policy from the global minibar.)
He is the first to figure out how to leverage a post-presidency like this. President Carter’s version has been about the power of example. Mr. Clinton’s is about the power of power. He’s been everywhere, met everyone (my favorite Clintonian aside: “As someone who went to Nigeria to plead for the life of a woman condemned under Sharia law, I thank you for doing this.”). Now he’s putting those connections to work for something bigger than the next campaign.
Welcome to Planet Clinton, an interconnected world that’s a solar system and a wormhole away from Bush Country. Here, Shimon Peres and Oprah Winfrey are just members of the audience. Barbra Streisand looks like any peppy matron taking an extension course. Brad Pitt’s staccato hair and Angelina’s duvet lips (sighted in the audience of Jeffrey Sachs’s poverty panel) are reduced to a responsible human scale. Wandering out of a kitchen exit I found myself in a milling informal think tank with the former president expounding to the two guys who founded Google and a sprightly “Planet of the Apes” figure who turned out to be Mick Jagger.
Unlike Davos and other high-octane gabfests, however, Mr. Clinton’s conference wasn’t just about elephant bumping. For every VIP there was some earnest activist or NGO leader or intellectual who’s caught his eye.
Mr. Clinton seems to have found his role as facilitator in chief, urging us to give up our deadly national passivity and start thinking things through for ourselves. Commandeering the role of government through civic action suddenly feels like a very empowering notion – the alternative being to find oneself stranded in a flood waving a shirt from a rooftop.
It’s an indicator of how the mood has changed that it was Vice President Gore who brought down the house. His Category 5 tirade on the impending calamity of unaddressed climate change electrified the lunch crowd. Who knew this Gore existed?
The answer is: He didn’t. Like Mr. Clinton, Mr. Gore has been liberated by cauterized rage at what has happened to the country in the past five years.
The White House doesn’t seem to realize it yet, but we are entering a post-spin era in public life. The shift has long been under way in the business world, propelled by the Enron catastrophe and the collapse of the dot-com bubble. Process, not perception, is king in boardrooms today. After so much corporate malfeasance, it all got too dire to put up with fake CEOs anymore.
Now after the Iraq debacle, the ballooning deficit, and the aftermath of Katrina, Americans are pining for grounded leaders in public office, too – leaders who have moral conviction, yes, but also the gnarly, dexterous ability to think things through.
The irony is that no one would have believed that Mr. Clinton – the king of spin, who went out under a cloud of indecency five years ago – could climb back to such credibility. Monica is fading, and he’s backlit now by his disciplined handling of the economy, the unsought comparisons of how well FEMA used to perform under his watch, and the enlightened nature of his global activism.
A weird reputational exchange has taken place between Mr. Clinton and President Bush. After so much dishonest reasoning, it’s the vaunted “CEO president” who begins to look like the callow, fumbling adolescent. And it’s the sexually incontinent, burger-gulping, late-night-gabbing Bubba who is emerging as a great CEO of America.
“We are so arrogant because we are obsessed with the present,” he told his guests at the conference’s end. “I’ve reached an age now where it doesn’t matter whatever happens to me. I just don’t want anybody to die before their time anymore.”
On Mr. Clinton’s face these days is a look of wry, judicious knowingness. It’s the look of political wisdom, and it imparts to his conference’s departing crowd something like serenity.