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At the time, of course, Clinton was hotly engaged in a campaign to increase her margin of victory in her bid for reelection in her New York Senate race. Her triumph was never in question: she faced only token Republican opposition in a heavily Democratic state. But she was desperate to prove that she could win with a big margin in more conservative areas of upstate New York so she could prove to Democrats that she would be viable in similar conservative areas around the country during her presidential bid.
That understandable political aspiration came head to head with New Hampshire children's health in 2005, when the International Paper logging company unveiled a proposal to burn tires at its Ticonderoga paper mill in upstate New York on the border with Vermont. Burning tires to power its operations would save IP money on its electricity bills, but it came with a heavy price.
Burning tires produces massive quantities of mercury, benzene, and other cancer-causing poisons, and prevailing winds would carry those poisons into Vermont, New Hampshire, and the rest of New England. At the time, doctors and public health officials warned that even a very limited tire burn could cause permanent damage to New Englanders' health, especially that of children, whose developing bodies are especially vulnerable to exposure to toxic chemicals. According to the American Lung Association, exposure to burning tires can cut years off someone's life. The dangers were so bad that Vermont's Republican governor, Jim Douglas, took up the cause and launched lawsuits and an extended public campaign to persuade New York not to expose the residents of his state to these deadly risks.
Normally, it's likely that Vermont's efforts along with those of New York environmentalists would succeed in stopping such an outrageous plan. But IP had an ace up its sleeve in Hillary Clinton. The logging company's strategists knew that Clinton would do almost anything to win votes in upstate New York and so they resorted to an old polluter trick: they threatened to close down the plant and fire the workers if they weren't allowed to burn the tires.
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Clinton could have just stayed silent - the permit to allow the tire burn was a state issue. But she went out of her way to help the logging company, actively lobbying the state government to allow the tire burn to go ahead. With Clinton's influence behind them, the logging company had the bipartisan support it needed and New York State approved a two-week test tire burn, as a prelude to a permanent permit.
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But the episode did show that Hillary Clinton is willing to sacrifice even her most cherished value - children's welfare - when she sees even the smallest political advantage in doing so. It's the kind of decision we fear she would make over and over in The White House. In a world where children need all the help they can get, we need someone who will stand up for them even when it's politically tough to do so, and Clinton just isn't meeting that standard.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/glenn-hurowitz/hillary-clintons-toxic-n_b_80260.html