• Posted on Thursday, February 21, 2008

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The Other Women In The Campaign

Cindy McCain totally just had a Hillary Clinton moment.

There she was, wearing that same expression, eyes locked on her husband as he denied having an affair with a different (though, not dissimilar-looking?  ) blond and trashing those who would besmirch his honor, in this case, The New York Times.

We've seen that look before, just as we've all watched this entire drama before, even down to the part where his staff tries to make the woman buzz off. Monica Lewinsky was shipped over to the Pentagon, supposedly Vicki Iseman got a stern talking-to at Union Station.

Instead of from couch in front of a "60 Minutes" camera, the way the Clintons did it back in '92, Mrs. McCain's moment happened in front of a bank of journalists, her every blink and smile setting off a spray of photo flashes and whirring shutters. And this in a week where the GOP frontrunner's wife had already not-so-subtly called out Michelle Obama on her remark about being proud of the U.S.A. for the first time in her adult life. Pardon my French, but this lady's got balls.

Of course it's hardly going to matter at this point whether there was actually a physical relationship, and the same Republicans who a few weeks ago were kvetching about McCain's values are backing him up now. One gets a feeling this won't make it into any of Mike Huckabee's "Saturday Night Live" skits, unless maybe Lorne Michaels doesn't find a decent Obama impersonator in time. After all, John McCain is just a campaign rival; The Media is an enemy.

McCain has clearly and flatly denied an affair, but at this point that's hardly the most interesting question at play. Was the story ready to publish, and did McCain engage "aggressive and angry efforts to stop any and all publication" ? Is this going to be another nail in the coffin of the often-valuable anonymous source? Is this more about "redefining" John McCain as -- of all things -- a stud? Did a looming New Republic story about, in part, why the Times hadn't run the story earlier spur its publication Wednesday night? (And why does it suddenly seem hilarious that Gary Hart was one of McCain's groomsmen when the two were married in 1980?)

As a sex scandal, this thing is hardly lukewarm. There is so far no evidence of an actual sexual relationship, no suggestion of office trysts or cigars or anything more than Iseman bragging around D.C. about having sway with the office of Senator Straight Talk. Is it possible we're all over the whole infidelity thing? Or is there just really no "there" there?

While we're talking about "other women" in this race, let's go there about Chelsea Clinton. No, using the words "pimped out" probably wouldn't have been my choice -- though that does effectively describe the role she's playing in her mother's campaign -- but it was the story about her dissing the kid that really did it for me.

You've heard it by now, about how the former First Daughter was stumping for her mom in Iowa when a 9-year-old journalist for Scholastic News Service approached, asking Chels' "how you think you Father would do as First Man?" In response, the cub reporter got a polite version of Talk To The Hand: "I'm sorry," Clinton said, "but I can't talk to press, and unfortunately that means you, even though I think you're cute."

Set aside, for a second, the fact that the reporter in question had already questioned seven presidential candidates during her coverage of primary campaign before she ran into Chelsea. Set aside the fact that the reporter, one Sydney Rieckhoff of Cedar Rapids, was undaunted and managed to get Clinton to at least pose for a quick photo. Even set aside the fact that Rieckhoff, a classy lady even such a tender age, understood the backhanded compliment Clinton paid her by treating her like the grown-up journalists. The point is why a ridiculous press blackout inexcusably, inexplicably still surrounds the former First Daughter.

There Chelsea is, out making eloquent, if ineffective, speeches for Hillary in Hawai'i, working hard on behalf of a candidate for whom she obviously has genuine passion. Yet, I find myself unable to really respect her because of her refusal to speak to journalists. This is a woman pushing 30 -- do any of us think she hasn't already been asked every possible inappropriate and uncomfortable question about her parents?  It's time for Chelsea Clinton to get over herself.

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WELCOME TO ALT.CAMPAIGN

A poet? A screenplay with fictional endings? Pop culture?

What's all that doing alongside the REAL campaign coverage on a news site?

Well, it's amplifying, we hope. Illuminating. Invigorating.

The feature called "alt.campaign" is an alternative look at the presidential campaign. A world where YouTube and Swift Boats are crowding Tim Russert and George Will deserves some new points of view. When one of the top stories from the real campaign is about an Obama Girl who doesn't have a thing to do with the Obama campaign, you might as well ask a screenwriter to spin out some alternative endings now and then.

We're asking a handful of high-quality observers to make some non-traditional observations for you as this campaign unfolds. Your ideas, reactions, suggestions and opinions are solicited. Help Joe find an angle that needs coverage in our campaign screenplay. Whisper campaign secrets in Amy's always-eager ear. Send us your own video coverage of campaign events, or your own commentary about the unfolding pageant of democracy.

And welcome to alt.campaign.

ABOUT JESSICA HAGY

Jessica Hagy is a cartoonist and writer living in the swinging state of Ohio. At indexed.blogspot.com, she posts charts, graphs, and Venn diagrams drawn on index cards that the make fun of some subjects and sense of others. Her first book will be relased by Penguin's Viking Studio in February. E-mail: jhagy@yahoo.com

ABOUT JOE ACTON

Joe Acton was born and raised in Alaska with a typical upbringing: dodging earthquakes, fishing commercially, flying airplanes, and spending most winters trying to figure how to get the hell out (what, like on "Career Day" they couldn't have mentioned the other 48 states?). Law school finally got him out and the easy weather in Seattle kept him out. Now Zaydoe Films keeps him busy as a writer and director. E-mail: jacton@mcclatchydc.com

ABOUT MARK PAUL

Mark Paul, Senior Scholar at the New America Foundation, caught the political bug early — his first summer job at 15 was with the campaign of a Republican U.S. Senate candidate in Wisconsin — and he has stayed hooked through his career as a journalist, historian, and policy wonk. Formerly a deputy editorial page editor and columnist for the Sacramento Bee, he has served as Deputy Treasurer of the State of California and policy director for the 2006 gubernatorial campaign of Phil Angelides, a Democrat. He lives and writes in Sacramento, Calif. E-mail: mpaul@mcclatchydc.com

ABOUT AMY Z. QUINN

Amy Z. Quinn started out as a "real" journalist, working as an award-winning reporter, editorial writer and columnist for the Asbury Park Press and the Philadelphia Inquirer, before realizing that life as a stay-at-home mom offered better material for about the same pay. Since 2004, she's blogged at her own site, Citizen Mom, and also writes and edits at Phawker.com. She writes from her home in the Philadelphia suburbs.

ABOUT RIVES

Rives is part poet, part storyteller, and all maverick. He favors wordplay, romance, jokes you can't remember, and anecdotes that don't suck. He has appeared on the last four seasons of "HBO's Def Poetry Jam," and he was the 2004 National Poetry Slam champion. Originally trained as a "paper engineer," Rives has designed and written several pop-up books for children. Visit his Web site at Shopliftwindchimes.com.