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128 pages
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Description

"I was dramatically shaped by my grandmother and my aunts because they convinced me there was always a cookie available. Deep down inside I'm four years old, and I wake up and think out there, there's a cookie. Every morning I'm going, you know, either it can be baked or it's already been bought, but it's in a jar . . . somewhere. . . ." — Newt Gingrich in 1994,

from his Renewing American Civilization Lecture Series

Picking up where its hilarious predecessor left off, this wickedly witty new treasure trove of outbursts, bon mots, and miscalculations draws from every corner of the political arena: foreign affairs, the White House, the scandals, the media, the campaign trail, and more. The laughs come from politicians past and present, including Republican presidential hopefuls Bob ("I don't think I'm mean. I don't throw things at my wife or staff.") Dole and Phil ("I'm carrying so much pork I'm beginning to get trichinosis.") Gramm.

David Olive proves beyond a doubt that oral ineptitude knows no political affiliation, and that even history's most revered politicians could, at times, put foot firmly in mouth.

The great Sir Thomas More once said, "Anyone who deliberately tries to get himself elected to public office is permanently disqualified from holding one." After reading this priceless compendium, we're sure you'll agree. Or perhaps President Clinton's campaign adviser, Paul Begala, put it best: "Politics is show business for ugly people."

"Well, I don't have much job security." — Bill Clinton, on why he still plays the saxophone

"If I want to knock a story off the front page, I just change my hairstyle." — Hillary Clinton

"I understand my critics are fixated and pathologically disoriented, but they are my opponents. Why should I try to correct them?" — Newt Gingrich

"We've never had a president named Bob. And I think it's time." — Bob Dole

"I've got a lot to learn about Washington. Why, yesterday I accidentally spent some of my own money." — Senator Fred Thompson

"Let me win the election and after that you come ask me questions about how I run a government." — Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien

"Last year I was Bambi, this year Stalin. From Disneyland to dictatorship in twelve short months." — British Labor Party Leader Tony Blair
On the Campaign Trail.

The Domestic Front.

Bill Clinton and the Stature Gap.

The Hillary Factor.

The Bobster: Mr.

Dole Goes to Washington.

The Ides of Newt.

Gramm-Standing.

Guru Madness.

Foreign Affairs.

That Whiff of Scandal.

Better Left Unsaid.

Invective and Ridicule.

Media Relations.

Take This Job and Shove It.

Explications.

Post Partum.

Index to Quoted Sources.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 02 mai 2008
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780470346808
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0850€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

More Political Babble
The Dumbest Things Politicians Ever Said
DAVID OLIVE
Illustrated by Barry Blitt

John Wiley Sons, Inc.
New York Chichester Brisbane Toronto Singapore
To Adrian, boy wonder
This text is printed on acid-free paper.
Copyright 1996 by David Olive
Illustrations copyright 1996 by Barry Blitt
Published by John Wiley Sons, Inc.
All rights reserved. Published simultaneously in Canada.
Reproduction or translation of any part of this work beyond that permitted by Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act without the permission of the copyright owner is unlawful. Requests for permission or further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley Sons, Inc.
This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional services. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought.
ISBN 1620457075
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
The world is weary of statesmen whom democracy has degraded into politicians.
B ENJAMIN D ISRAELI
Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments
1 On the Campaign Trail

2 The Domestic Front
The Congressional Circus
Veepdom
Flip-Flop Flaps
The Dismal Science
How s That Again?

3 Bill Clinton and the Stature Gap
The Clinton Watch
The Clinton Crowd Rushes In
4 The Hillary Factor
Powers Behind the Throne: Political Spouses

5 The Bobster: Mr. Dole Goes to Washington

6 The Ides of Newt
Newtisms
A Man with a Mission
On the Clintons
On the Democrats
On the GOP
Media Man
What Others Say About Him
Author, Author!
The Futurist
Master of Predictions
Very Well, I Contradict Myself

7 Gramm-Standing

8 Guru Madness

9 Foreign Affairs

10 That Whiff of Scandal
Speaking of Sex...
And Now a Word from My Sponsors...

11 Better Left Unsaid
Career-Eliminating Comments
Politically Incorrect

12 Invective and Ridicule

13 Media Relations
Beat the Press
Shouts from the Peanut Gallery

14 Take This Job and Shove It
15 Explications
16 Post Partum
Index to Quoted Sources
Preface
Politics is always in season, but never more so than in the run-up to a presidential election. This is when boastful and apocalyptic rhetoric floods the airwaves, and when coffee shop talk and the deliberations of earnest editorial writers alike turn on the hyperbole and hypocrisy of candidates whose shortcomings, real and perceived, are assessed with an even greater sense of urgency than usual.
This book is intended as a tour of all the important campaign stops, and of what happens between campaigns besides.
Thomas Jefferson said, Whenever a man has cast a longing eye on offices, a rottenness begins in his conduct. His assessment, if broadened to include inanity along with rottenness, is borne out in Chapter 1 , On the Campaign Trail, where Texas gubernatorial candidate George W. Bush invites voters to Read my ears -echoing his father s Read my lips, no new taxes pledge; Virginia senator Charles Robb accuses his opponent Oliver North of being in bed with the Ayatollah; and obscure presidential candidate Lamar Alexander hopes someday to be as famous as Kato Kaelin, star witness in the O.J. Simpson trial.
In Chapter 2 , The Domestic Front, a president fond of naps, Calvin Coolidge, rouses himself periodically to ask, Is the country still here? Ronald Reagan asserts that you can tell a lot about a man by the color of jelly beans he eats. California governor Pete Wilson threatens, good-naturedly, to kneecap anyone who doesn t like what he has to say. North Carolina senator Jesse Helms threatens to sing Dixie to the first African-American member of the United States Senate. And Senator Howell Heflin of Alabama vows never again to accidentally bring his wife s panties to the office in place of a handkerchief.
At center stage, meanwhile, the political superstars of the day vie for attention. Bill Clinton brushes up on his hog-calling skills, faults himself for being an Eisenhower Republican, insists that McDonald s fare isn t necessarily junk food, and confesses that I made my lowest grade in conduct, because I talked too much in school and the teachers were always telling me to stop. His humble sidekick, Al Gore, insists that the proper title for addressing the vice president is Your Adequacy, but complains when Congressman Joe Kennedy attracts more admirers than he does at a public event, calling out, Hey lady, what about me?
If Bill Clinton, fighting his problem with the stature gap, knows that I ve got to be more like John Wayne and prays for divine intervention at every opportunity, Bob Dole knows that he is utterly capable of governing. He s certain of his qualifications to be president because, as he says, There has never been a president named Bob, and the time for that has surely arrived. In contrast to the rumored spats between Bill and Hillary, Dole says, I don t think I m mean. ... I don t throw things at my wife or the staff. He worries about the fate of the nation in the hands of his rivals, observing about publicity hound Phil Gramm, for instance, that everybody says the most dangerous place in the Capitol is between Phil and a TV camera. Dole despairs that so many candidates for office trade on their supposed lives of youthful deprivation: I listen to all these politicians. They were all born in a log cabin. Give me a break.
Newt Gingrich s sense of self-importance also is beyond measurable limits, and is even more baldly stated. I have an enormous personal ambition, he has admitted. I want to shift the entire planet. And I m doing. ... it I represent real power. Gingrich believes people like me are what stand between us and Auschwitz and that overthrowing the Democrats in Congress was a great victory for the nation because Democrats get up every morning knowing that to survive they need to do only two things: They lie regularly and they cheat. Newt is a futurist who anticipates the day when people aboard space shuttles-the DC-3s of the future-will fly out to the Hiltons and Marriotts of the solar system ; and he s a pragmatist who understands that victory is the avoidance of being crushed. He can t help it if his critics are fixated and pathologically disoriented. Gingrich does fret, though, that if he doesn t start exercising soon, he will be starring in a movie called The Last Couch Potato.
A man of remarkably numerous contradictions, even by the standards of modern public life, Gingrich is both a moderate and essentially a revolutionary ; not a strong believer in religion and a man who has a vision of an America in which a belief in the Creator is once again at the center of defining being an American ; a man who feels that Democrats are the enemy of normal Americans and also insists that every Republican has much to learn from studying what Democrats did right -notably the New Deal and racial integration.
Political life is full of things Better Left Unsaid ( Chapter 11 ), Invective and Ridicule ( Chapter 12 ), and Explications ( Chapter 15 ), all of which reveal the true beliefs of political figures-and the political process-more fully than any press release or stump speech. Media Relations ( Chapter 13 ) also bear out the essential love-hate relationship between politicians and the people. Avoid this crowd like the plague, Barbara Bush, pointing at a group of reporters, wisely counseled Hillary Clinton. In a faux angry moment, Al Gore unbraided David Letterman for his frequent Clinton put-downs: That s the president of the United States you re talking about, pinhead. Uncharitable impressions are in no short supply on the other side as well. He reminds every American woman of her first husband, columnist Art Buchwald said of George Bush. He ate everything but the drapes, an astonished Tom Brokaw reported after a Bill Clinton luncheon at the White House with television news anchors. He s a man who does like to put it down. President Clinton, it seems, is able to win the media s respect for only a few moments at a time. He s turned the corner, mastered the job, bridged the stature gap, Newsweek said of Clinton s work in securing passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Until next week.
Happily, humor sometimes intrudes on the harsh machinations of political life. Unlike the president, New Jersey governor Christine Todd Whitman said of her experiences with marijuana, I inhaled. And then I threw up. An Indiana newspaper editor greets reports of a new Dan Quayle visitor center in his town by concluding, I suppose it would be a little more interesting than an Ed McMahon museum. Bill Clinton favors a jogging T-shirt that reads, Why yes, I am a rocket scientist, and an admiring Gingrich allows that Clinton would make a good frat president, somebody who d be fun to have a beer with.
As the trumpets once again sound, calling fearless candidates to the arena to strut before a skeptical audience of voters, we re reminded of La Rochefoucauld s observation: It is easier to appear worthy of a position one does not hold, than of the office which one fills. On that basis, one supposes, we should be charitable as we watch the show, thankful that our own character and track records are not on trial. Still, it s fair to wonder, after contemplating the bizarre comments to which political leaders are so often given, if Thomas More was on to something good when he set down a law in his Utopia that stipulated, Anyone who deliberately tries to get himself elected to a public office is permanently disqualified from holding one.
For all their failings, our leaders probably deserve our sympathy, if not always our respect. On close inspection, we find some talented leaders among the mere attenti

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