From the questionable contributions by foreign governments to the Clinton Foundation to her reckless handling of classified material in emails as secretary of state, it seems there is always something smoldering behind the scenes with Clinton. And from the time she entered the political arena as Bill Clinton’s first lady, the air has never quite been clear.

In a way, those scandals and near scandals seem related to a second problem with Clinton: Her willingness to be inconsistent when it is in her political interest. In other words, she’ll flip-flop regardless of principle. Take as an example her position on the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement. She was for it, until Bernie Sanders started picking up votes by demagoguing the issue as a job killer. Then she was against it. During the Democratic National Convention, Terry McAuliffe, a long-time Clinton family pal, said he expected her to be for it again if she was elected. When that didn’t go over well, he said he meant she would renegotiate the deal to make it better, but that wasn’t any more popular, so the Clinton people insisted that she was still against it, just like she always was, except for when she was for it.