Memories of Jay Carney

by: Chris Bowers

Mon Dec 15, 2008 at 19:26


Via Quick Hits, Jay Carney has been chosen to be Joe Biden's communication director. In honor of this event, Rich Perlstein posts a real classic about Carney's first foray into the blogosphere. It's pretty hilarious. Check it out in the extended entry.
Chris Bowers :: Memories of Jay Carney
"Reality Bytes: Bloggers upstage the mainstream press yet again," Feb. 7, 2007

By Rick Perlstein

Chalk up 7:22 a.m. EST on Tuesday, January 23, 2007, as the moment a milestone was passed. On Time's new blog, "Swampland," D.C. Bureau Chief Jay Carney posted a pre-assessment to the State of the Union Address comparing President Bush's political position to Bill Clinton in January of 1995. Like Bush, "President Clinton was in free fall.... His approval ratings were mired in the 30's and seemed unlikely to rise."

Moments later, a writer identfiying himself as "Tom T" pointed out an error in Carney's "nut graf" that would have earned a failing grade for a first-year journalism major: "Clinton's approval rating in January of 2005 was 47 percent. It was not mired in the 30s." At 9:12, the blogger Atrios, also known as Duncan Black, alerted his readers to the gaffe, and they descended on the Time blog like locusts--and, to mix the Biblical metaphor, served Jay Carney's head up on a charger.

They tabulated several more boneheaded errors: Carney wrote that 1995 was Clinton's first State of the Union "with Newt Gingrich and Bob Dole seated behind him as Speaker and Senate Majority Leader"; but, of course, it is the Vice President, not the Senate Majority leader, who sits behind the president. He also wrote of Clinton's "recovery ... during Monica, in 1999"--but, as a commenter reminded him, "Clinton never had to 'recover' from Monica, unless polls in the high 50s and 60s are something you have to recover from."

Then the commenters unraveled the entire foundation of Carney's argument. He had said that, because "Americans reward presidents who, even in the face of enormous distractions, focus on issues that matter to them ... Bush won't spend much time tonight talking about surging troops in Iraq or the Global War on Terror." But, as writers identifying themselves as "jjcomet," "dmbeaster," and "Newton Minnow" pointed out, the issue of greatest concern to the nation "is far and away the war in Iraq, at 48% the only issue in double digits." Another made a similar point, shall we say, more qualitatively: "The Iraq War is a DISTRACTION?? Are you serious? Am I wrong or did he compare the Lewinski scandal to Iraq??? What is the matter with you!?!?"

At which Carney snapped back so churlishly ("the left is as full of unthinking Ditto-heads as Limbaugh-land") that, for a moment, it was hard even to remember--why was it, again, that we were supposed to defer to the authority of newsweeklies (and the mainstream press) in the first place? Carney was rude and wrong. The barbaric yawpers of
the netroots were rude and right.

It appears unlikely that the netroots will have much productive interaction with the Vice-President's office as long as Carney is there. Still, as always, great stuff from the great Rick Perlstein.


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Carney's "moment": (0.00 / 0)
From the Time biography...

Carney was one of a handful of reporters who was on Air Force One with President Bush on Sept. 11, 2001, giving him a rare perspective at an historic moment.

So Carney was there for the "My Pet Goat" moment, and it's a perfect qualification for Joe Biden's press secretary, because Joe Biden has a "My Pet Goat" moment every day.


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