'Fever has broken,' says Hillary Clinton, after Democrat election wins

One year after Donald Trump’s election, defeated candidate gets rapturous reception in Wisconsin where she paid high price after not campaigning

Hillary Clinton – ‘the best way to show personal resilience is to get up and the best way to show political resilience is to win elections’.
Hillary Clinton – ‘the best way to show personal resilience is to get up and the best way to show political resilience is to win elections’. Photograph: Matt Rourke/AP

Hillary Clinton has hailed Democratic victories in elections this week as proof that “the fever has broken” and the fightback against Donald Trump has begun.

The defeated presidential candidate was speaking to nearly 2,500 people at Milwaukee’s Riverside Theater on Thursday, exactly a year after she delivered her concession speech to tearful supporters in New York.

Praising an outpouring of activism and engagement in the resistance to Trump over the past 12 months, Clinton said: “And just this week we saw what a difference that can make because in elections across America – hope beat hate, right?” The audience erupted in cheers.

Democrats swept to victory in governor, state legislative, county and mayors’ races across the country on Tuesday. Clinton claimed that voters sent a clear message: “The fever has broken. America’s not going to put up with the kind of political machinations that emanate from this administration and their allies in Congress. We’re going to chart a different course.”

She cited the wins of Danica Roem, the first openly transgender person elected and seated in a state legislature, over a social conservative, and Chris Hurst, whose girlfriend was shot dead on live television, over a rival backed by the powerful National Rifle Association. “You know what? Despite the NRA’s best efforts, he won in Virginia.”

Clinton continued: “So, this was a resounding affirmation of the values we share and, as of Tuesday night, we are one step closer to an America that is kinder, fairer, more equal, where we embrace the fact that our diversity is a strength not a weakness, where we keep striving for progress and for a more perfect union.”

The 70-year-old praised a huge grassroots organisational effort that involved volunteers knocking on thousands of doors. “And none of that would have happened if people had got so discouraged that they decided to give up and leave politics to the dark forces that have been in the ascendancy over the last years in states like Wisconsin and now in Washington.

“So we should celebrate those wins but we cannot let up for one minute because, as you know, right here in this state, there are some critically important elections on the horizon. The best way to show personal resilience is to get up and the best way to show political resilience is to win elections.”

Critics might be tempted to say Clinton’s visit to Wisconsin was too little, too late. She infamously did not campaign here during the general election and became the first Democratic presidential candidate to lose the state since 1984. Along with Michigan and Pennsylvania it proved decisive.

She did not address the issue directly during a 65-minute conversation with actor Bradley Whitford, who hails from Wisconsin. But when she walked on stage to a standing ovation and deafening cheers and screams that lasted 78 seconds, her opening line got a laugh: “Well, I should have come back to Wisconsin sooner.”

Clinton added: “I couldn’t think of any place I’d rather be than right here to start the year after the year I just had. This year’s been kind of hard, for obvious reasons. It’s not an anniversary I’ve been looking forward to, but it felt really good on Tuesday. It bodes well if we all stay focused for what’s ahead of us and there’s nowhere I’d rather be than here with all of you.”

In her book she suggests that voter suppression in Wisconsin – which some experts say wiped out tens of thousands of votes – was more significant than her failure to hold rallies. On Thursday she described it as a civil rights issue and said: “There is no better example of an attempt to rig an election than the massive voter suppression we experienced here in Milwaukee … Wisconsites who desperately wanted to vote were turned away at the polls despite having all kinds of identification.”

The former secretary of state also attacked Trump for handing China the initiative in renewable energy and for stating, during his visit to Beijing, that he gives China “great credit” for taking advantage of the US on trade. “That is not the right answer.” She predicted that the Chinese president would run rings around Trump. “I know Xi Jinping,” she said. “I know Xi Jinping is sitting there thinking, ‘Man, this is going to be easier than I thought.’”

In contrast to her sombre tone at the New Yorker hotel a year ago, Clinton bantered with Whitford, best known for playing White House deputy chief of staff Josh Lyman in The West Wing and a Barack Obama supporter with a dark secret in the horror comedy Get Out. “I have no idea what he’s going to say or what he’s going to ask,” she said. “I don’t know if it’s going to be West Wing or Get Out.”

Whitford gushed over his interviewee – “I just want to say I love you” – offered a Bill Clinton impression unlikely to trouble Tim Watters and failed to question her over former Democratic National Committee chairwoman Donna Brazile’s explosive new book.

But the actor did deliver some memorable lines about Trump including “You’re running against a guy whose language is the verbal equivalent of a chimpanzee” and “It’s like having a pilot who’s never flown a plane before – and thinks planes are stupid.” And watching the press deal with Trump is, Whitford said, “like a bunch of professors giving an oral exam to a professional wrestler”.