Why Isn’t Chris Christie Derided For Being “Testy”?
Posted in Main Blog (All Posts) on June 16th, 2014 11:08 pm by HL
Why Isn’t Chris Christie Derided For Being “Testy”?
The gaffe police were on vigilant patrol last week, keenly monitoring Hillary Clinton’s book release media tour and pronouncing much of it to be a failure.
The former first lady, senator, and secretary of state sat for a series of lengthy interviews that covered an array of topics, from the Iraq War to transgender rights, and spoke for hours to some the country’s leading journalists during long-form Q&A’s. (So much for the claim that Clinton shields herself away from the news media.)
By setting aside the substance and parsing Clinton’s words in search of stumbles, the press announced Clinton suffered a “rough week” because of two alleged miscues: She spoke accurately about the state of her personal finances in early 2001 when she and her husband Bill Clinton were “broke.” And she pushed back against National Public Radio’s Terry Gross when she repeatedly tried to pigeonhole Clinton on the sensitive and personal issue of gay marriage. (i.e. Hillary got “testy” according to the GOP operatives who circulated the audio and much of the media who reported on it).
Those were the “gaffes” that earned her a mostly thumbs down review from the theater critics who pass as Beltway political pundits and who declared her performance was “rusty”; that Clinton had become “rattled” and emotional, according to Maureen Dowd. (Texas Governor Rick Perry last week likening homosexuality to alcoholism? That wasn’t really treated as a major political gaffe for a possible 2016 candidate.)
Bloomberg’s Albert Hunt summed up the agreed-upon conventional wisdom nicely when he wrote that Clinton suffered a “rough rollout for her new book” because the week contained “gaffes” and “awkward answers.”
Well, at least she didn’t cackle.
Note that the “broke” “gaffe” consisted of Clinton repeating commonly known facts about her at-times precarious finances more than a decade ago; facts that have been reported many times in the press. The Clintons, the New York Times noted on September 19, 1999, “are the least prosperous couple to live in the White House in many years.” The Times noted “the Clintons have slightly more than $1 million in assets, but are still saddled by a $5 million legal debt.” (In 2001, The New Yorker pegged the Clinton’s legal bills at “eleven or twelve million dollars.”)
The press seemed especially judgmental following the NPR interview with Gross who created the false impression that Clinton had stonewalled and dodged over the issue of marriage equality, despite the fact Clinton repeatedly answered Gross’ question. What’s a politician supposed to do when an interviewer repeatedly tries to assign cynical motivations for a policy shift if the politician insists that motivation isn’t accurate? Should the politician simply go along with the allegation or should she push back and clarify, even as the interviewer again and again clings to the same position?
Clinton response was to push back a bit on NPR: “I think you’re reading it very wrong.” And “That’s just flat wrong.”
But apparently she was supposed to roll over. Because by standing up for herself (while never raising her voice), Clinton was breathlessly tagged as combative and unnerved in the wake of a mildly contentious back-and-forth:
Instapundit called her “testy,” as did MSNBC, and New York Magazine does, too, also writing that “Hillary won’t say she evolved on gay marriage.” The Wall Street Journal also picks up the “testy” line, while the New York Daily News prefers “lashes out” in a “tense“ interview. Mediaite says she “snaps” at NPR’s interviewer. Oh, and Politico prefers “testy.”
The media message to Clinton was clear last week: You can’t lose your cool when dealing with the press. You can’t try to intimidate reporters. And you certainly can’t try to bluster them off tough questions. Those are the guidelines established for Clinton if she plans to run to become the country’s first woman president.
Who is allowed to do all those things? Chris Christie, for one.