The statement
Clinton

"In New York, when she ran for reelection, she carried 58 of our 62 counties. George Bush had won 40 counties in New York just two years earlier."

Hillary Clinton on Wednesday, September 5th, 2007 in a comment by husband Bill Clinton on Larry King Live.

But N.Y. numbers may not be meaningful elsewhere

True

In a recent TV interview, former president Bill Clinton boasted about his wife's vote counts when she ran for re-election. "In New York, when she ran for reelection, she carried 58 of our 62 counties. George Bush had won 40 counties in New York just two years earlier," he said.

He is suggesting Sen. Hillary Clinton's strong reelection showing in Republican-leaning counties in 2006 means she can win nationwide, a key question facing her candidacy.

It is true that she carried 58 out of 62 New York counties, and that President George Bush had won 40 counties in New York just two years before.

In the interview, the former president delved further into the numbers from the 2006 race, in which she beat Republican John Spencer by more than 2 to 1. "In the counties that President Bush won, she got a reelection margin of about 60 percent, which means some -- a lot of Republicans and conservative independents voted for her, because they know her now, and they like her, and they saw her in action working for them," he said.

That's not far off the mark from what pollsters say about the reasons for Hillary Clinton's strong showing in her 2006 reelection. Joe Lenski, executive vice president of Edison Media Research, says she gained 18 percentage points among independent voters from 2000 to 2006 -- even better than her 15-point gain among moderates.

But he and others also attribute the increase to the fact that Mrs. Clinton was a well-known incumbent with a weak Republican challenger. And she also had the advantage of a national wave, fueled by the unpopularity of President Bush and the Republican-led Congress, that propelled Democrats nationwide in 2006 and helped them regain control of the U.S. House and U.S. Senate.

Mrs. Clinton may not be able to count on moving independents elsewhere. A recent Pew Research Center poll found that 47-percent of independents nationally view her unfavorably.

Advertisement
Bookmark this
About this statement

Sources: New York State Board of Elections, New York Election Results November 7, 2006

Voter News Service, 2000 exit poll

Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International, 2006 exit poll

Interview with Joe Lenski, executive vice president of Edison Media Research

Interview with Michael McDonald, associate professor of public policy at George Mason University

Interview with Lee Miringoff, Marist Poll Director

Pew Research Center, Clinton and Giuliani’s Contrasting Images, August 23, 2007

Written by: Lissa August
Researched by: Lissa August
Edited by: Scott Montgomery

Articles about this statement:
Bill on Hillary: She can win anywhere

Contribute

No, we don’t want to take your money. But we are more than willing to listen if you know of any facts or story ideas for the Truth-O-Meter. truthometer@politifact.com

PolitiFact.com

PolitiFact is a project of the St. Petersburg Times and Congressional Quarterly to help you find the truth in the presidential campaign. Every day, reporters and researchers from the Times and CQ will analyze the candidates' speeches, TV ads and interviews and determine whether the claims are accurate. >> More

Logos
Sorting out the truth in politics
Browse
Candidates

Search PolitiFact via Google

Feeds

Get PolitiFact:

Advertisement