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Taylor Marsh has been writing on line since 1996, with the archives provided here a representation of that work.

Archive | May, 2009

Dear David Gregory

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Oprah? Seriously, David? She’s your dream guest? For ratings, maybe, and having women on “Meet the Press” would be shocking, because you sorely need a Sunday game changer. But you’ve got bigger problems than worrying about snagging Oprah.

So you knew this was coming, right? The obligatory Tim Russert’s mystique still dogs David Gregory byline. Not to worry, because the trouble isn’t all you.

It’s the format.

It’s the static background.

It’s the 1950′s feel.

NBC has to find the courage to throw it all away and start over in a 21st century setting that also has you doing something besides sitting behind a desk trying to look, sound and be someone you’re not.

I know it’s blasphemy at NBC to consider such a move. Do it anyway. It’s time to exorcise the ghosts of the long and storied ‘Meet the Press’ past.

Oh, and by the way, get a new booker. Someone who doesn’t continually recycle the same blathering faces that we’ve seen over and over and over again, though I’m not sure Oprah is the avenue.

But It’s a new day. It’s your show. Act like it.

Oh, and by the way, Fareed Zakaria has Sect. Gates on for the hour. It’s the only must see hour on these days.

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No Daylight

I wonder how many people are depressed that President Obama and Secretary Clinton are not only getting along, but the boss is showing his game while his Secretary of State is doing a little of that on her own. It wasn’t supposed to be this way according to the black cloud crowd. I still get emails, and a smattering of sore winner comments when I post over at Huffington Post, that Secretary Clinton will be the undoing of President Obama. Hoping ain’t gettin’. Hasn’t happened yet. Though Mark Penn continues to do his utmost in this regard.

As for HRC’s job at State, after a disastrously run campaign, much of it compliments of Mark Penn, but also Clinton’s unwillingness to face the fact and fire the guy, Hillary seems to have learned from her previous primary disasters and is putting those lessons to use:

As a candidate, Mrs. Clinton was criticized for poor management of her campaign. She appears determined not to repeat her mistakes. Mrs. Clinton said she had sought fresh voices; mindful that previous secretaries of state have been criticized for cloistering themselves on the building’s seventh floor, she has made a point of dropping in at its bureaus.

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Meanwhile, Penn continues his rehabilitation tour, delivering a preposterous argument just yesterday over Edwards, Iowa and how things, in his overblown imagination, might have been different if John had done what Elizabeth says he should have and not run. No one wants to rehash this, but Penn refuses to relinquish his delusions, so I’ll bite. Considering the Clinton-Penn partnership had HRC resorting to loaning herself money after being clobbered in Iowa, two things that sent back-to-back shock waves across the political landscape, it’s ridiculous to argue that the presence of Edwards caused such mismanagement. Never mind that they didn’t have a single plan for post super Tuesday and the primaries to come. Yet Clinton remained loyal to Penn. This is not exactly what others have experienced post-primary, though the savvy aren’t surprised. But anyone who’s cleared the year old primary fog and is willing to be honest senses that if Edwards hadn’t been in Iowa Obama would have likely won by a larger margin, not less, though I doubt reality will ever penetrate Mark Penn’s fantasyland. That’s how badly Clinton’s campaign was managed. That she’s not repeating her mistakes at State comes as a huge relief.

But the author of the Times article excerpt above, Mark Landler, does seem shocked that there might be “jockeying” among Obama’s top aides. What, egos around the leader of the free world? Shocking. Insert famous “Casablanca,” with small rewrite, here.

Besides, what’s in it for Clinton if she’s not anything but stellar at State?

Oh, and she’s going to have fun, too.

On a recent afternoon, at Mrs. Clinton’s suggestion, the two moved their meeting outside to a picnic table on the South Lawn, next to a new swing set installed for Mr. Obama’s daughters. “We just had the best time,” she said.

Hillary Clinton is someone you certainly wouldn’t want as an enemy. But as far as loyalty to President Obama, this is the best gig of her life and she’s smart enough to know it and has no intention of hurting herself by blowing it. She’s an adept judge of her surroundings, but most especially her own situation. So if anyone can sense Obama’s high flying performance as president, as well as the reaction from Americans but also the entire world, it’s Hillary Clinton. Obama’s stature is something she has to respect, because he’s proven that in this time and place there’s no one else who can match it. It’s Barack Obama’s time and if anyone knows this it’s Hillary.

There is also reality. Presidents hire, but they can also fire, which applies to everyone in his cabinet, including Secretary Clinton.

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photo via Salon.com

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Imagine Justice Hill

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This is perfect.

Dear Ms. Scovell:

My mother would have warned me against answering your e-mail and participating in the kind of “devilment” you are up to. ( read more)

Brilliantly delicious. Machiavellian.

What’s not to love?

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Culture Break: ‘Brand Obama’

Not since Jacqueline Kennedy redecorated the White House and used it as a showcase for arts and culture, which helped create the Camelot mystique, has a first family so captured popular fascination, first-lady historian Myra Gutin says. – WSJ.Magazine

Besides being drop dead gorgeous, Desirée Glapion Rogers has a job fit for the gods. Social secretary to the Obama administration, Ms. Rogers is profiled in the WSJ Magazine, in an article that is as fascinating as it is revealing. No spoilers her, just read it.

Unlike previous administrations, which have kept the East and West Wings separate, Rogers and her five-person staff are a vital part of its political operation, according to a White House aide. Every morning at 8:15 a.m., Rogers strides from the East to West Wing, where she attends a meeting with Mr. Obama’s chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, top Obama aide David Axelrod and other senior White House officials. Letitia Baldrige, social secretary to Mrs. Kennedy, says the policy makers in the West Wing “always wanted to take over the social events” during the Kennedy administration. She says she advised Rogers “to fight back tooth and nail.”

It’s here I must insert a bit of reality. Mrs. Kennedy and Letitia Baldrige fought constantly, with the first lady continually going AWOL when Baldrige believed she should be on duty. Like when Jack was navigating the Cuban Missile Crisis, and Jackie was off fox hunting. (A scene which made it into my 2005 one woman show.) Ms. Baldrige didn’t have the access or the respect that Ms. Rogers obviously has accumulated over the many years she has known the Obamas.

On the opposite side of this story we have a tacky attempt to take down Mrs. Obama, which because of Ms. Rogers’ work will not catch wind, except in wingnut quarters, of course.

The case of the expensive shoes.

Any woman who has ever balanced fashion desires knows one thing. Sometimes you have to choose where your money goes. Of course, Mrs. Obama can buy whatever she wants any time she wants. But considering she’s been seen in off the rack threads from the start, this latest story will bring a collective yawn. But it isn’t surprising to me at all to see this purchase by the First Lady. It’s a classic fashion imperative: great shoes, expensive shoes, even.

As any former beauty queen knows, you can be seen in an inexpensive outfit, but the shoes simply cannot be cheap. It was the first advice I got, which happened to come from a man in the pageant syndicate, when I was 13 years-old and trying to find a way to accumulate enough money to put myself through college. It’s also the law of women’s fashion. You can rarely tell the cost of an outfit, especially worn by a woman as pedigreed as Mrs. Obama, but also as slim and fit, which goes a long way to helping you get away with anything. But cheap shoes can be seen a mile away.

Ms. Rogers’ Obama brand magic has been solidified, so attacking the First Lady’s hot French sneakers is just an attack by the mob who can’t seem to land an insult that will stick. Just wait until someone makes a knock off; they’ll sell like inauguration tickets.

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Just In Time for the AIPAC Conference

–updated–

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The espionage case against Steven J. Rosen and Keith Weissman is being dropped. Nice timing, since the AIPAC Policy Conference is meeting May 3-5. So it looks like the nightmare is over for the Chas Freeman swiftboating contingent. Via JTA:

Prosecutors asked a judge to drop charges against two ex-AIPAC staffers accused of passing along classified information.

In a statement Friday, the acting U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia said restrictions on the government’s case imposed by Judge T.S. Ellis III made conviction unlikely.

“Given the diminished likelihood the government will prevail at trial under the additional intent requirements imposed by the court and the inevitable disclosure of classified information that would occur at any trial in this matter, we have asked the court to dismiss the indictment,” Dana Boente said.

The motion all but guarantees a dismissal. …

I expect the Jane Harman brouhaha will now go puff!. WP has more.

UPDATE: …and right on cue, Jeffrey Goldberg takes a shot:

It’s a sad day for the Walts and Mearsheimers of the world, who believe that AIPAC is a treasonous organization, and it’s a sad day for AIPAC too, because it abandoned the two men to the fates when it should have stood by them. More to come.

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Wasn’t Condolezza Rice Shoe Shopping at the Time?

Ms. Rice should have waited before pontificating. The cat’s out of the bag.

The worst national security adviser in U.S. history now opines that Abu Ghraib was wrong, but stunningly, Condollezza Rice expects us now to believe that it was also “not policy.”

“…Unless you were there, in a position of responsibility after September 11th, you cannot possibly imagine the dilemmas you face in trying to protect Americans. … If you were in a position of authority and watched American’s jump out of 82nd story buildings… ” – Condollezza Rice

I believe Ms. Rice was shoe shopping at the time.

Oh, and as to torture, the president said we wouldn’t do anything illegal. So, if we did it, well, it wasn’t illegal.

“Nazi German never attacked the homeland of the United States. … We didn’t torture anybody here either. … We did not torture anyone. … … [...] The president instructed us that nothing we would do would be outside of our obligations, legal obligations against under the Convention Against Torture …and by the way, I didn’t authorize anything. I conveyed the authorization of the Administration to the Agency that they had policy authorization, subject to the Justice Department’s clearance. That’s what I did. … ” – Condollezza Rice

Who’s going to tell Condi she needs a lawyer? You know, just to be on the safe side. (And can we please stop using the term “homeland”?)

But is it any wonder that when Ms. Rice came into office she was more than willing to demote Richard Clarke and the position he held as terrorism czar, which was at the cabinet level in the Clinton administration, then refuse to listen to the man until it was too late? “Bin Laden Determined to Attack Inside U.S.” was just another PDB. The summer that had the CIA’s hair on fire, just another summer.

How this woman continued to fail upwards is the story of her boss as well, but also of the entire Bush Administration.

Now the question is whether the Obama administration has the spine to clean up after them and close this chapter once and for all.

What Robert Byrd said (h/t Lake Lady “In the News”).

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