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558 pages, Kindle Edition
First published April 18, 2017
Hillary’s actions…—setting up the private email server, putting her name on the Clinton Foundation, and giving speeches to Wall Street banks in a time of rising populism—hamstrung her own chances so badly that she couldn’t recover. She was unable to prove to many voters that she was running for the presidency because she had a vision for the country rather than visions of power. And she couldn’t cast herself as anything but a lifelong insider when so much of the country had lost faith in its institutions and yearned for a fresh approach to governance. All of it fed a narrative of dynastic privilege that was woefully out of touch with the sentiment of the American electorate.Speaking in late May of 2017, in California, Clinton said, "I never said I was a perfect candidate, and I certainly have never said I ran perfect campaigns-- but I don't know who is, or did. Were there things we could have done differently? You could say that about any campaign. I take responsibility for every decision I made, but that's not why I lost."
“We lost because of Clinton Inc.,” one close friend and adviser lamented. “The reality is Clinton Inc. was great for her for years and she had all the institutional benefits. But it was an albatross around the campaign."
In the postmortem, Hillary and her aides identified dozens of reasons she had lost: low African American turnout in some key areas; a boost in the white vote for Trump in suburbs, small towns, and rural areas; misogyny; the Comey letters; and the Russians ... From Hillary's perspective, external forces created a perfect storm that wiped her out.
A nation of Democrats sat in stunned silence. They hadn't been warned. Hillary hadn't been warned. Even her pollsters had been in the dark, sidelined in favor of an analytics team that insisted she was poised to win.
High above Times Square, disbelief stifled the once-boisterous room. It fell quiet. A new reality took hold: Short of a divine reprieve, Hillary was going to lose. Donald Trump would be president. "No one saw this coming."
"It's not my job anymore to do this," she said, her voice growing more forceful as Chelsea nodded in agreement. "Other people will criticize him. That's their job. I have done it. I just lost, and that is that," she continued. "That was my last race."
Hillary told them she wanted to strike a new balance. She had come to the conclusion that her supporters needed to hear a message of inclusiveness in the face of Trump's victory ... The speech wouldn't be an enumeration of every subset of the country that Trump had offended or threatened during the course of the campaign. It would be more subtle than that. But, as one of her aides described it, the tone would be "graciously critical."
Hillary wanted another significant change. In one of the margins, she had drawn a circle with a cross beneath it — the symbol for women. She said she wanted to say something about the glass ceiling — that it would someday be shattered.