by Fred Barnes
Hillary Clinton sounds like Paul Ryan on the economy. She says she’s for
"strong growth, fair growth, and long-term growth." She would abandon
the slow-growth economics of President Obama and return us to those
wonderful days in the 1990s when husband Bill was in charge. This is a
different Hillary Clinton from the one we've seen in debates with Bernie
Sanders, her socialist rival for the Democratic presidential
nomination. It's the centrist-at-heart Clinton whom conservatives and
Republicans eager for an acceptable alternative to Donald Trump can vote
for.
Hillary Clinton sounds like Paul Ryan on the economy. She says she’s for
"strong growth, fair growth, and long-term growth." She would abandon
the slow-growth economics of President Obama and return us to those
wonderful days in the 1990s when husband Bill was in charge. This is a
different Hillary Clinton from the one we've seen in debates with Bernie
Sanders, her socialist rival for the Democratic presidential
nomination. It's the centrist-at-heart Clinton whom conservatives and
Republicans eager for an acceptable alternative to Donald Trump can vote
for.
An element of the Hillary myth is that she's on the same wavelength as
her husband. She's not. He cut the capital gains rate from 28 percent to
20 percent, sparking the economic boom of his second term. He fought
hard to enact the North American Free Trade Agreement. She attacks NAFTA
and opposes the new Pacific trade treaty she once championed as the
"gold standard" of free trade. Bill Clinton pushed through welfare
reform that dramatically reduced poverty and welfare dependency. She
would expand welfare with a new subsidy for child care and much more.
And rather than defend his 1994 crime bill, she apologizes for it.
Read the rest here:
The Hillary Myth | The Weekly Standard
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