Wed, Nov 14, 2007 5:09pm ET

Send to a friend Print Version

Ignoring his past smears, NY Times reported that McCain "has studiously avoided personally attacking Mrs. Clinton"

A November 14 New York Times article by Marc Santora about Sen. John McCain's (R-AZ) response, during a campaign event in Hilton Head, South Carolina, to an audience member, who asked, "How do we beat the bitch?" reported that "McCain has studiously avoided personally attacking Mrs. [Hillary Rodham] Clinton, whom he has said he likes." Santora then quoted from a McCain campaign statement: "Mr. McCain has on many occasions expressed his respect for Senator Clinton [D-NY], just as he did when confronted with the question in South Carolina." However, in reporting that "McCain has studiously avoided personally attacking Mrs. Clinton," Santora ignored McCain's previous smears of Clinton, including naming a dummy "Hillary" during another recent campaign appearance in South Carolina and telling a "disgusting" joke in 1998 for which McCain reportedly apologized to President Bill Clinton.

An October 18 Associated Press article reported that while campaigning in South Carolina, McCain "couldn't resist a swipe at Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton." The article noted that during an appearance at the University of South Carolina Upstate nursing school, "McCain took one look at a nursing school's training mannequin and asked if the dummy's name was Hillary." The article quoted McCain as saying, "I was very glad to meet the dummy, named 'Hillary.' " The story, which the AP labeled the "Play of the Day," was picked up by numerous media outlets, including the New York Daily News, The Washington Post, The Kansas City Star, MSNBC.com, the Houston Chronicle, AOL News, ABCNews.com's The Note, Time.com, and The Boston Globe.

And in 1998, while appearing at a Republican fundraiser, McCain reportedly made what New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd called "his disgusting jape": "Why is Chelsea Clinton so ugly? Because her father is Janet Reno."

The November 14 New York Times article in its entirety:

When presidential candidates appear at public forums, passions about the field are often on vivid display. Monday, Senator John McCain received a question from a woman in Hilton Head Island, S.C., that was blunt and harsh.

"How do we beat the bitch?" the woman asked.

Mr. McCain was obviously uncomfortable, trying to deflect the vitriol with humor and offering to give a translation. But he did not condemn the questioner, instead calling it an "excellent question."

He then addressed the question without any apparent doubt as to whom it referred.

"There was a poll yesterday," he said, "that shows me three points ahead of Senator Clinton in a head-to-head matchup. I respect Mrs. Clinton."

The clip began showing on Web sites like Salon.com, the liberal site TPM.com and others, with bloggers asking why Mr. McCain had not taken the questioner to task.

A spokesman for Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton declined to comment on Mr. McCain's response. But some of her advisers said they were surprised that he had not defused the moment more artfully, given the possibility that it might stir sympathy or outrage on Mrs. Clinton's behalf in some quarters.

Some of her allies have accused her male Democratic opponents of ganging up on her in their last televised debate.

Mr. McCain has studiously avoided personally attacking Mrs. Clinton, whom he has said he likes. His campaign said yesterday, "Mr. McCain has on many occasions expressed his respect for Senator Clinton, just as he did when confronted with the question in South Carolina."

—R.D.

Comments (16) Show
 
Post a new comment

You must be a registered user to post and flag comments on this site.

Please log in or sign up to post in this forum.

 
Take Action!

Contact information:

The New York Times
Clark Hoyt, NY Times public editor
public@nytimes.com
(212) 556-7652
Public Editor
The New York Times
620 Eighth Avenue
New York, NY 10018

New York Times
letters@nytimes.com
executive-editor@nytimes.com
managing-editor@nytimes.com

When contacting the media, please be polite and professional. Express your specific concerns regarding that particular news report or commentary, and be sure to indicate exactly what you would like the media outlet to do differently in the future.

Issues / Media Tags Help
Issue:
Government and Elections
Sub-Issue:
2008 Elections
Topic:
John McCain
Network/Outlet:
The New York Times
Personalized Alerts
Show Your Support
Media Matters Action Center - Make a Difference!

Media Matters uses a taxonomy structure to help readers find information on various subjects. You can view all items by issue (the broadest category), view an issue's subissue, and even drill down to a particular topic. You can also look at items according to the related media personality, show/publication and network/publisher.

Social bookmarking sites allow you to save links to interesting items and share them with other users. Some, like Digg.com, also allow you to discuss these items and promote them to wider audiences by "digging" the ones that you like. To start using these services, simply register with the site in question.