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Tina Fey (born May 18, 1970) is an American writer, comedienne, and actress. She is the current head writer of Saturday Night Live.
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IssuesReporting on efforts to woo Clinton voters, LA Times , CNN quoted McCain flack praising Clinton -- but not his prior smears
In recent Web
posts, Los Angeles Times
blogger Andrew Malcolm and CNN.com's
Rebecca Sinderbrand reported that Sen. John McCain's campaign is reaching out to Sen.
Hillary Clinton's supporters, quoting McCain deputy communications
director Michael Goldfarb's statements
in a blog post that "there is a genuine
affection for her here at McCain HQ" and that Clinton is an "impressive
candidate" who "inspired a generation of women." But neither
writer noted that before joining the McCain campaign, Goldfarb regularly
engaged in the kind of personal smears that McCain has denounced. In his prior capacity as
online editor of The
Weekly Standard, from which he is on leave,
Goldfarb described Clinton as a "shameless panderer" who
"lie[s]" "more than most" politicians, mustered
"faux outrage" that came off as "pathetic whining" about
her treatment from the media, and said of Clinton's "3 a.m." ad about the economy: "[D]oes
anyone think Clinton wouldn't bite off the heads of at least three staffers if
her much needed beauty sleep was disturbed by a middle of the night phone call
about the economy?"
Nor did either outlet mention McCain's own history of distorting Clinton's record on
issues such as health care, taxes, the environment, and housing, and of making
personal attacks against Clinton and her family.
Before joining the McCain campaign:
Goldfarb wrote in an April
21 post that Pennsylvania Gov.
Ed "Rendell has always been a shameless panderer, as is the candidate he
has endorsed in the Democratic primary [Clinton]."
He later added that Sen. Barack "Obama is to be held to a higher standard
because unlike Hillary, Obama is not
a shameless panderer."Writing about Clinton's 3 a.m.
ad on the economy on April 2, Goldfarb asked: "[D]oes anyone think Clinton wouldn't bite off
the heads of at least three staffers if her much needed beauty sleep was
disturbed by a middle of the night phone call about the economy?"Goldfarb responded on March
7 to former Obama adviser Samantha Power's statement that Clinton "is a
monster" by asserting: "First off, tell us something we don't
know."In a February 27 post about the
February 26 Democratic debate, Goldfarb
wrote of Clinton's reference to a February 23 Saturday Night Live sketch: "The
faux outrage she mustered over what she and [SNL
host and former head writer] Tina Fey
perceive as unfair treatment came off as pathetic whining."On March 31, Goldfarb linked to a
"must-read" column that day by
Slate.com's
Christopher Hitchens, which asserted that "[t]he punishment visited on
Sen. Hillary Clinton for her flagrant, hysterical, repetitive, pathological
lying about her visit to Bosnia should be much heavier than it has yet been and
should be exacted for much more than just the lying itself. ... [S]he has rivaled, if not indeed surpassed, the disbarred
and perjured hack who is her husband and tutor." Goldfarb wrote in
response to Hitchens' "must-read" column: "Hitchens is
outraged, and eloquently so as always
-- it's
definitely worth reading through. Still, I'm surprised that anyone can be
surprised by the Clinton's
lies anymore. Frankly, I find them rather comforting in comparison to Obama's
new kind of politics, which best I can tell seems to be the same old politics
in a new self-righteous package. All politicians lie, and the Clintons more than most. I can't imagine that
voters haven't already internalized this reality -- which
is why I tend to think the explanation for Hillary's plummeting poll numbers
must lie elsewhere. [Weekly Standard
contributor] Samantha [Sault] says it's the whining,
which is as good an explanation as any."In a March 29 post titled
"On Hillary Clinton and Sandwiches," Goldfarb wrote that the
"front page story on Hillary Clinton in today's [Wall Street] Journal includes this gem:
'Heather Arnet, a Clinton supporter who runs a Pittsburgh organization
that lobbies for more women on public commissions and corporate boards,
recently surveyed the Internet and found more than 50 anti-Hillary Clinton
sites on Facebook. One of them, entitled 'Hillary Clinton Stop Running
for President and Make Me a Sandwich,'
had more than 38,000 members.' "
Goldfarb wrote that "it looks to me (just clicking through a few pages)
like 40 percent or more of the group is female -- it's
certainly not all 'guys.' And most of the members [of the group],
male and female, are probably Obama supporters. After all, Republicans want
Hillary to keep running ... and make us a
sandwich."
From Malcolm's June 11 Los Angeles Times post:
And then a week ago this morning it
became clear the Democratic party was forcing Clinton to end her bid. Saturday Obama went
golfing. Clinton and her family dressed as if
for a funeral and went to thank their supporters with a
grateful speech and on paper a hearty, full endorsement of Obama.
But something was missing. Not one
word in the speech about the Republican nominee that Obama must now confront
for the White House.
As she was speaking, the McCain
campaign's new website blog, The McCain
Report, posted a special tribute to the losing Democratic
candidate, familiarly headlined "Hillary Out," something the Obama
campaign didn't fully match for two days.
"Sen. Clinton has really grown
on us," McCain blogger Michael Goldfarb wrote. "She ran an
impressive campaign ... an impressive candidate ... inspired a generation of women ... Sen. Clinton also didn't mention John McCain once
during her speech. This came as something of a surprise over here, and a
pleasant one at that. But it's clear that John McCain and Hillary Clinton
respect each other -- and there is a genuine affection for her here at McCain
HQ."
The blog post included a photo of
McCain and Clinton together on a ship in the Arctic
during one of their several journeys as members of the Senate Armed Services
Committee. These things do not happen on official campaign websites
spontaneously or by accident. Nor does the enemy get accidentally omitted from
a major speech.
So The Ticket called a bunch of
people who know both McCain and Clinton. It's true, they confirmed, there is a
special friendship between them. And it apparently started in January of 2001,
when Clinton became
the first former first lady elected to public office and walked into the U.S.
Senate.
It has always been a gentlemen's
club, if not always populated by gentlemen. And the warmth toward Clinton was missing.
Until McCain walked up and heartily welcomed the newcomer and showed her
around. "They really hit it off," said one friend.
From Sinderbrand's June 9 CNN.com story:
The numbers haven't gone unnoticed
at McCain campaign headquarters in Arlington,
Virginia. In the days since Obama
effectively claimed the Democratic nomination, the senator from Arizona's campaign has aggressively reached out to Clinton supporters --
women and blue-collar voters who were the strongest supporters of her
presidential bid.
A few hours after her speech --
which was free of attacks on Obama's fall opponent -- McCain aide Michael
Goldfarb wrote on the campaign's official blog that "there is a genuine
affection for her here at McCain HQ. During her speech there was no small
amount of pleading with the TV: 'Don't do it, you can still win!' "
"Sen. Clinton has really grown
on us over here in Crystal
City over the past few
months," wrote Goldfarb, calling her an "impressive candidate"
who "inspired a generation of women" but "fell victim to a vast
left-wing conspiracy that resented her generally centrist foreign policy
views."
And one of the first posts on the
newly launched blog was a video of Abba's "Take a Chance on Me" under
the headline, "Take a Chance on McCain." Wrote Goldfarb:
"Attention disaffected Hillary supporters, John McCain is a huge Abba fan.
Seriously.''
McCain's maverick reputation has
always translated into significant support from independent voters, but the
diminished appeal of the GOP brand this year may translate into a weaker showing.
Despite emotions still raw from the bruising Democratic primary, an appeal to Clinton voters could be a
tough sell for the Republican.
But McCain and his campaign have
made bold moves in recent weeks to distance the senator from President Bush and
the Republican Party, and redirect the focus to his independent image --
essential in his effort to reach disaffected Clinton voters.
[...]
In his election night address,
McCain had taken a swipe at the press -- directly echoing continuing complaints
from some of Clinton's
strongest supporters that she had received unfair treatment from the press
during her White House run. "Sen. Clinton has earned great respect for her
tenacity and courage," he said. "The media often overlooked how
compassionately she spoke to the concerns and dreams of millions of Americans
and she deserves a lot more appreciation than she sometimes receives."
Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut -- who has taken on increasingly high profile
campaign roles on McCain's behalf -- announced Thursday that he was heading a
new grass-roots organization, Citizens for McCain, with a direct appeal to Clinton's disappointed
supporters.
[...]
In 2004, despite similar anger from
supporters of unsuccessful presidential candidate Howard Dean, 8 percent of
Democrats supported Bush over Sen. John Kerry.
And on most major issues, McCain's
positions are completely at odds with those of the Democratic working class and
women voters he's hoping to reach: in favor of the Iraq war and Bush's tax cuts,
against abortion rights and health care policies favored by many Democrats.
Obama advisers say they think the
passion of the primary season will soon fade, and the party will unite around
the senator from Illinois.
But they've moved quickly to cement party unity: Last week, a thank you message
-- and a plea for visitors to "show your support" for Clinton -- appeared on
Obama's Web site.
Published: Thu, 12 Jun 2008 02:08:25 GMT - Source: Mediamatters.Org - Read the article
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