Hillary Clinton Gets a Taste of What Could Be a Painful 2016
Hillary Clinton's Tax Proposal: The Experts Weigh In · The Fiscal Times

The ink was barely dry on the editorial cartoons, columns and commentary celebrating the end of the political year of 2015 when voters got their first taste of what’s likely in store for them in 2016. To anybody who’s been paying attention, it’s not exactly a spoiler to note that things are probably going to get worse.

Many pundits were relieved to consign last year to the dustbin, as it brought with it Donald Trump’s presidential candidacy and a general coarsening of the national dialogue about issues from immigration to terrorism to race relations. But whomever the Republicans eventually nominate, this year is going to be ugly, because there is a Clinton running for president. Because when Clintons run for office, conspiracy, scandal and prurience inevitably follow.

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That’s not to say that Hillary Clinton herself will necessarily inject any of those elements into the race. (Beyond the extent to which she already has, that is, via her inexplicable decision to use a private email account while serving as secretary of state.) It is simply meant to point out that where the Clintons are concerned, there is a large and vocal element of the Republican Party that simply cannot resist the temptation to dive headfirst into the rabbit hole of Bill and Hillary Clinton’s past and then come to the surface screaming bloody murder (sometimes literally) about what they think they found there.

In a New Hampshire town meeting on Sunday, a state legislator named Katherine Prudhomme O’Brien demonstrated what we can likely expect to see a lot of in the coming year.

When Clinton paused to take questions from the crowd, O’Brien began haranguing the candidate with questions about former president Bill Clinton’s decades-old infidelities. Her point was to paint Clinton as a hypocrite for claiming to support women’s rights and for launching an anti-sexual assault campaign while, according to O’Brien, her husband still faces unsettled questions about alleged sexual assaults.

O’Brien, who was very close to Clinton when she began shouting questions at her, was herself shouted down by Clinton supporters. After the event, she told reporters “I asked her how in the world she can say that Juanita Broderick and Kathleen Wiley are lying when she has no idea who Juanita Broderick is," O'Brien said, according to CNN, referring to women who have accused the former president of sexual assault and to another attempt she had made to question the candidate.

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