Isn't It Ironic? By MAUREEN DOWD
WASHINGTON
It's funny how things work out sometimes.
The two men running the White House have very different relationships with the press; one is warm and one is frosty.
One's relationship is more JFK, and one's has self-pitying echoes of Nixon.
By all rights, you'd think it would be Joe Biden who would resent journalists for kicking him around for years. It was the press, me included, who reported on the problems that led him to drop out of the 1988 presidential race.
It was the press that delighted in Biden's foot-in-mouth syndrome in 2008 and played up the exacting Barack Obama's occasional chagrin at the über-exuberant Joe as they began their odd-couple partnership.
Yet the vice president is so lacking in any vengeful feelings for past reporting that left him for dead, I sometimes wonder if he's really Irish.
Biden gave a press party at his house recently with a beach theme -- complete with Uzi-size squirt guns and water slides. Journalists came with their families, schmoozed with top White House officials like David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel, and watched a dripping wet vice president walk around with his little grandson. One Obama aide remarked that Biden is "the most beloved person in the White House."
Jon Stewart and bloggers mocked the journalists, suggesting they were too chummy with power. But the picnic was on the record, and good reporters can't be co-opted by some cold French fries. Whenever you see politicians in a relaxed or stressful situation, beyond the usual teleprompter speeches and scripted photo ops, you learn something about those charged with making life and death decisions. You may even pick up some news.
We learned there that Joe Biden has been assigned the press portfolio. This is remarkable, given that it was Obama who was hailed as the charming new JFK, the mesmerizing leader who beguiled an infatuated press, as the "Saturday Night Live" skit went, to plump his pillows.
All of us, every single man, woman, and child on the face of the Earth were born with the same unalienable rights; to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. And, if the governments of the world can't get that through their thick skulls, then, regime change will be necessary.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
TURNING WORMS, Dowd compares THE ONE to a whiny Nixon
You can close your mouth now.
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