Matthews claimed that Southerners "know Rudy [Giuliani] was a hero"
On the March 1 edition of MSNBC's Hardball, host Chris Matthews again touted former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani (R) as a "hero," saying that Southerners "can't spell his name necessarily, but they know Rudy was a hero." Matthews also praised Giuliani as "the one tough cop who was standing on the beat when we got hit last time and stood up and took it." Later in the program, Matthews again noted that Sen. Barack Obama's (D-IL) "middle name is Hussein." As Media Matters has noted, Matthews was apparently the first to publicly mention Obama's middle name as politically significant, doing so on the November 7, 2006, edition of Hardball.
Matthews and other media figures have demonstrated a pattern of uncritically hyping Giuliani as a hero while ignoring allegations that Giuliani was responsible for terrorism-related failures before, during, and after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, as Media Matters for America has documented.
Additionally, MSNBC contributor Mike Barnicle said that Giuliani has "enormous appeal coast to coast because of who he is and what his life and his career represents," adding: "People want to be safe in this country. They want to be secure in this country. They want to have strength in their leadership." Barnicle claimed that Giuliani "represents all of those."
During a subsequent segment, while discussing the presidential candidacies of Giuliani and Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), Matthews said that "neither one of those guys is riding on the Bush bus" and "[n]either one of them look like Bushies." However, on the February 19 edition of Hardball, Newsweek's Howard Fineman told Matthews that "[t]he McCain people are following the George W. Bush playbook to the extent they possibly can," and explained that McCain was using the "same donors, the same issues, the same attitudes all the way down the line." At the time, Matthews appeared to agree, saying, "[I]t is now Senator John 'McBush.' "
From the March 1 edition of MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews:
MATTHEWS: Do we want a kind of a Michael -- a nitroglycerine pill, something to really shake up the world and say, "Hey, look we're alive, we've got this hot new president and we're going to take you guys -- by the way his name is -- middle name is Hussein. Get used to it." You know, we can have a guy with a third-world background to some extent. We've got a young guy here, or we've got Rudy Giuliani, the one tough cop who was standing on the beat when we got hit last time and stood up and took it.
[...]
MATTHEWS: Now look at that Southern number. We know that Giuliani would be powerful in the ethnic Northeast. But look at the South. I have been saying this for two years now. He's got strength in the South. They can't spell his name necessarily, but they know Rudy was a hero -- Mike Barnicle.
BARNICLE: Well, yeah, but what happens with the delegates to the Republican convention? I mean, you know, how does he get by them?
He has enormous strength, enormous appeal coast to coast because of who he is and what his life and his career represents. Not just September 11. He took on this myth of New York City, this crime-ridden New York City, and he made it safer than it had ever been before. People want to be safe in this country. They want to be secure in this country. They want to have strength in their leadership. He represents all of those.
[...]
MICHAEL SMERCONISH (radio host): Well, it tells me that Rudy is on a roll. And I think that Rudy is on a roll because he's playing well in the suburbs. As a matter of fact, an hour ago, I interviewed him, Chris, because -- you're talking a lot about polls tonight -- a Pennsylvania poll just came out that showed that despite the fact that 50 percent of Pennsylvanians think the president is doing a poor job, Pennsylvanians are prepared today to vote for either Rudy or McCain against Barack Obama or [Sen.] Hillary [Rodham Clinton (D-NY)].
And I think the reason why is they're both perceived as being moderate on social issues. And that's a dramatic step from where the Republicans have been. Typically, at this stage, they're trying to placate the evangelicals and the conservatives and --
MATTHEWS: Well, neither one of those guys is riding on the Bush bus.
SMERCONISH: Well, that's exactly --
MATTHEWS: Neither one of them look like Bushies.
From the February 19 edition of MSNBC's Hardball:
FINEMAN: The McCain people are following the George W. Bush playbook to the extent they possibly can. The same donors, the same issues, the same attitudes all the way down the line. And it is so ironic given where McCain was seven years ago.
MATTHEWS: So it is now Senator John "McBush."
FINEMAN: That is one way to put it, yes.















He could get the south, not because he's a hero, but because he married his second cousin. In South Carolina and Kentucky, if he married his first cousin, he would fit right in.
I dunno, Monkey, I think he might have had it the first time he married one of his cousins.
I guess marrying the second cousin's always good insurance.
We kid the South. ;oD
Mathews conveniently left out the fact that recent polls that not only Southerners, but all voters, are not aware of Rudy's stances on pro-gay, anti-gun issues. In other words, Giuliani's popularity is almost certain to go down once voters are made aware of this.
Barely one in five Republicans knew that he supports abortion rights and civil unions for same-sex couples, the USA TODAY poll found. Nearly as many thought he was "pro-life" as said he was "pro-choice."
From the USA Today
Good point, Truthseeker, but I hope you're not betting the future of the country, either way, on Repubs getting informed before they vote..
Wait, does anybody have any connections to the "liberal print media" in the South? Cuz if you could get them to start "accidentally" spelling his name "Jewliani"...
Once the talking heads pen their story line, they got to stick with it. The story du jour is Rudy's a hero, never made a mis-step and everybody loves him. You got to really leave them alone - it's hard sticking to the script as it is. Confusing the talking heads with facts and reality makes it even tougher on the poor souls.
that is funny, Mathews mentions Giuliani and only gets four hits here. Five with my insightfull commentary hahahahaha
MATTHEWS: Southerners "can't spell his name necessarily, but they know Rudy was a hero."
Kinda implies that Southerners are too dumb to spell (or don't read; otherwise they would know how Giuliani's name is spelled in print.) but that Southerners respond on a more primtive, instinctive level and make simplistic judgments about what they see on TV. Pretty insulting stereotype of Southermers...
Well, as a native Southerner who, as a teenager, bought into all that Charlie Daniels crap...I can tell you that the Troglodyte factor is considerably higher in the South than elsewhere. After all, we're just one generation removed from people who firehosed civil rights marchers.
But that was in the day when everyone was a Democrat. Now that there are lots and lots of Republicans and the Democrats no longer run the show the KKK and racist bigots no longer set the tone.
From a Southern view or at least a hillbilly one...
Matthews is horribly insulting and so are some of the comments and assumptions on the board.
First, and it is time that we quit kidding ourselves as Democrats, liberals, progressives, or whatever Giuliani is going to be seen by a number of people in a favorable light because of his actions on and immediately after 9-11. Especially, considering Bush's dazed look when told and the amazing lack of leadership from the adminstration since. I hope Giuliani get the GOP nod and that a moderate gets the Democratic one. It would be nice to see two sane, relatively speaking, have a chance. I think it would bode well for the country that extremists would be shut out. And by that I don't mean people with ideas or values just those that have started to believe in their own "direct line to God" hype too much -- left or right. It is time the center had a bit more say.
Chris Matthews is in free fall over his flip flopping on his man as a Presidential choice. Poor St. Mc Cain can't win due to his espousal of the Bush Doctrine and discarding of the "Straight Talk Express". So, enter " Daddy Giuliani" a superman crime fighter and terrorist killer. Never mind that the very personal traits that he condemns in Democrats, and other Republicans are found to be strong and desirable in his new best friend. The problem is that we don't need another authoritarian leader. We've been to hell already.
It's way too early to tell but my intuition tells me that the early season front runners will falter and a dark horse will prevail... both parties. Obama is the one I think has the most likely staying power and watch for John Edwards to gain strength. The Republicans? Don't know, except they may be have a much bigger dilema because the whole party may have to be re-defined.
I think you're right. Will the Religious Right continue to pull the GOP in the direction of ignorance and bigotry? As far as I'm concerned, the Republican party is the one that's lost its way...it probably started with Nixon, but definitely worsened under Reagan. The only reasons they've been winning national elections lately is because they have the unity inherent in fanaticism and they have more money than God, which has enabled them to gobble up the free press and turn it into their own private propaganda machine.
As a Southerner I'd like to invite Matthews to kiss my grits.