RE: Axelrod

Just wanted to follow-up on this original note. As you may have seen, Ax tweeted this a short while ago: >..Smart of @HillaryClinton to be counseling with @benensonj. He was brilliant, essential player in @BarackObama wins! He called me last night to give us a heads up that O'Malley and Webb have both asked to speak at his institute. We got into a conversation about his public comments. He assured me that he is 100 percent supportive of HRC and that she will be the nominee and understands that we might be frustrated with what he has said. I sense that he is disappointed that we have talked to everyone else in Obama world except for him and I assured him that HRC would be in touch soon. I think we are now in a good place with him but she needs to call him and I conveyed that to her. Will try to get it done this week. We had discussed the utility of reaching out to David Axelrod, but Is he on HRC's - or anyone's - call sheet? I hate to reward bad behavior, but this seems like one headache we could easily neutralize. Axelrod on Hillary: 'Ready for What?' By Peter Sullivan December 16, 2014 The Hill David Axelrod, a former adviser to President Obama, said Tuesday that Hillary Clinton needs to establish a rationale for her presidential candidacy, saying when he hears "Ready for Hillary," he thinks, "Ready for what?" "What happened in 2008 was that Hillary's candidacy got out in front of any rationale for it, and the danger is that that's happening again," Axelrod, who was a top adviser to Barack Obama's come-from-behind win over Clinton in 2008, said on MSNBC's "Morning Joe." "You hear Ready for Hillary; it's like, 'Ready for what?' " Axelrod said Clinton could be using the time before she announces her candidacy to decide the answer to that question. "Now Hillary's task is to define what it is that she's running for and running about," Axelrod said. "And what would the future look like under another President Clinton, and I suspect that's what she's taking her time working through now, but she has to answer that question." Liberal groups have been pushing forward with an effort to convince Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) to challenge Clinton from the left on economic issues. MoveOn.org, one of the groups, announced Monday that it has passed 100,000 signatures on its "Run Warren Run" petition. Warren insists she is not running but always phrases the denial in the present tense, which some see as leaving the door open. Asked if there is an opening for Warren, Axelrod said, "I suppose there is." "My suspicion is that what she's doing is trying to influence how Hillary frames her candidacy and the issues she focuses on," Axelrod said. "I think Elizabeth is very sincere about her concerns about what's happening in the American economy, and Hillary hasn't yet said what exactly her program will be, what she's running on. I think Elizabeth knows she's got maximum leverage by still being in the conversation." Many of Axelrod's fellow Obama campaign alumni are now working for Clinton's campaign-in-waiting in some capacity. Jim Messina, Obama's 2012 campaign manager, for example, signed on as co-chairman of the pro-Clinton super-PAC Priorities USA. Two more top campaign aides, Mitch Stewart and Jeremy Bird, have joined Ready for Hillary.