Garance Franke-Ruta

Garance Franke-Ruta is a senior editor covering national politics at The Atlantic. More

She was previously national web politics editor at The Washington Post, and has also worked at The American Prospect, The Washington City Paper, The New Republic and National Journal magazines. At The Prospect she won the 2007 Hillman Prize awarded to its group blog, "Tapped."

In 2006, she was fellow at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School in Cambridge, Mass., and in 2007, a summer fellow with The Iowa Independent, based in Des Moines, Iowa.

Garance has lectured at the Kennedy School, the Harvard Art Museums, Williams College, Wellesley College, Brandeis and Georgetown Universities, and taught in Georgetown's Master of Professional Studies in Journalism program. She also has made numerous appearances on national and regional television and radio programs.

Born in the South of France, Garance grew up in San Cristobal de las Casas in Chiapas, Mexico; New York City, New York; and Santa Fe, New Mexico. She has resided in Washington, D.C., since graduating from Harvard in 1997.

Video of the Day: The Best Rick Perry Response Video

One of the most disliked videos in YouTube history provoked a powerful response from two Christian sisters from Charlottesville, Va.

The Republican presidential candidates have faced a surprising number of questions about gay rights in appearances in Iowa and New Hampshire, a large number of them coming from young people (including one shy little eight-year-old).

But perhaps the most moving confrontation is one that has played out on YouTube, as two sisters based in Charlottesville, Va., sat down to record their first video for the site in response to Texas Gov. Rick Perry's Iowa ad disparaging the repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy and openly gay service-members. Released six days ago, that ad, "Strong," has now been viewed over 6 million times on YouTube, where it has received more than 661,000 dislikes and going on 21,000 likes, and spawned a wide array of parodies.

Their response video has not been as widely viewed, though it was tweeted out by Meghan McCain, who is known for her advocacy against homophobia within the Republican Party.

In it, Cali Freeman, 26, a second-year law student at University of Virginia School of Law (and the brunette in the video above), and Ashley Steel, 28, who runs their "photography collaborative" business, offer a Christian comeback to Perry:

We're not ashamed to admit that we're Christians, but we don't think that being in a pew on Sunday is what makes you one.

We know there is something wrong in this country when you can spin the name of Jesus Christ, the living body of love and grace, into a political platform. Especially when this platform demonizes the very people who sacrifice their own lives so that you can have that platform at all.

Rick Perry, you said that you'll end the war on religion. We're waiting for a president who doesn't dilute religion into a mere political constituency, but instead embraces it as a powerful way to bridge the gap of vast differences among our fellow Americans.

Grace is what makes us strong, and will make us strong again because not our country, nor Rick Perry, nor either of us deserve it.

We're gay, we're straight,
we're black, we're white,
we're rich, we're poor,
we're conservative, we're liberal,
we're Christian, we're not
...and Jesus loves the little children.
All the children of the world.

We strive to love you all extravagantly... the way that Jesus loved.

We're sisters, and we approve this message.

Reached by email, the sisters -- neither of whom has ever worked or volunteered for a political candidate, they said -- addressed what moved them to respond: "Our video was intended to address not only Perry's video (which was simply the tipping point for us), but the divisiveness that we feel now permeates throughout our country's entire political climate, from all over the spectrum. We've been disappointed watching both political parties attempt to pit groups of people against each other using the message of Christianity, while we believe that THE most basic message of Jesus Christ is the very opposite."

Will any 2012 political candidate address that desire for national unity -- a desire that also fueled Obama's rise in 2008? So far the evidence is not encouraging.

Bill Clinton Ran Against Gingrich in 1996 in 3 Ads

Building a bridge to the 21st century did not involve the expectation of another chance for Democrats to run against the party of Gingrich in 2012

University of Maryland political science professor Thomas Schaller points us to these Museum of the Moving Image advertisements from 1996 showing incumbent Democrat Bill Clinton running against Newt Gingrich and the "Dole-Gingrich" ticket in three advertisements in 1996, and the Dole-Kemp ticket responding in one that featured the then-Speaker. For those who didn't live through the political fights of the mid-90s, it's hard to recall how extraordinarily toxic Gingrich was on the national scene after the government shut-down at the end of 1995. These ads serve as a reminder -- and also as a bittersweet reminder of what a pre-9/11, pre-Iraq and Afghanistan wars campaign in an era of economic prosperity looked like.

The Dole-Kemp campaign responded to one of the ads featuring Gingrich:

Mitt Romney's Losing $10,000 Bet at Iowa Debate (Video)

Romney's wager to Perry had Democrats and Republicans falling over themselves to cast him as out-of-touch

Texas Gov. Rick Perry finally turned the tables on Mitt Romney Saturday night in an exchange at the debate in Des Moines that saw the former Massachusetts governor fumble in just the way Perry had previously, after being goaded into a making a fool-hardy remark.

Perry, addressing himself once again to a critique of Romney's health-care policy in Massachusetts, said: "You know, I'm just saying you were for individual mandates my friend."

"You know what, you've raised that before, Rick. And you're still wrong," Romney retorted.

"It was true then. It's true now," Perry replied, laughing.

"10,000 bucks? 10,000 dollar bet?" Romney shot out his hand looking for Perry to take the bait.

Perry laughed again. "I'm not in the bettin' business, but I'll show you the book."

"I've got the book," snipped Romney.

It may have been intended as a figure of speech, but for a candidate who was in his youth photographed with money falling out of his suit, who is known for coming from a plush background and having made an even vaster fortune, and who was not able to name a single instance of material want, ever, when probed on the subject at the debate, it didn't seem so metaphorical. "I didn't grow up poor. And if somebody is looking for someone who's grown up with that background, I'm -- I'm not the person," Romney said at the debate.

But who has $10,000 to bet with -- these days, or any other?

TPM reported the Newt Gingrich's spokesperson R.C. Hammond twisted the knife after the debate, asking in the spin room in Des Moines, "My only question is, did he have the cash in his pocket?"

Democrats who have been prepping for a general election contest against Romney could not contain their glee. After the hashtag #What10Kbuys began trending worldwide within the hour after the debate ended, the Democratic National Committee alerted people to that and started using the tag (the only place it was still trending by next morning, however, was Washington, D.C.). And while the debate was ongoing the Democratic National Committee sent out a release, "Here's What the Average American Family Can Buy with $10,000."

In tonight's Iowa Debate Mitt Romney casually offered a $10,000 bet, after calling a $1,500 tax break for the middle class a band-aid. Mitt Romney may not know what $10,000 means to middle class families, but here's what the average American family can buy with $10,000:

$10,000 Is More Than Four Months Pay For Most Americans (Median Income Was $26,197 in 2010) [Census.gov, accessed 12/10/11]

$10,000 Is More Than The Average Public In-State Four-Year College Tuition ($8,244) [CollegeBoard, accessed 12/10/11]

$10,000 Is Almost Three Times What The Average Family Spends On Groceries In A Year ($3624) [BLS.gov, accessed 12/10/11]

$10,000 Would Cover More Than A Year's Worth Of Mortgage Payments For The Typical American Home Purchased Today ($8,376) [National Association of Realtors, 10/6/11]

The campaign of Jon Huntsman -- who was barred from the debate stage for low polling numbers -- quickly snapped up the 10KBet.com url, though which it will doubtless goad Romney at some time in the future.

The real problem for Romney though is that his foul-up came just as he's begun to lose control of the front-runner narrative he'd established. But perhaps that's the point -- it's possible Romney is simply better in debates as the presumed likely front-runner than as the seemingly permanent understudy to a rotating cast of pugnacious GOP personalities who need to fail before people can settle on him. And that now that he has proved unable to solidify his position, and voting is set to begin in just weeks, the shifting sands on which he finds himself have unsettled him.

Still, a $10,000 bet in Iowa, where the per capita income in 2010 was $38,084?

That he would have said such a thing shows that Romney's lack of on the ground campaigning in the state has really hurt him, if only because it's allowed him to forget the audience he was speaking before.

What to Watch for as You Watch the GOP Debate

It's the first debate without Herman Cain and with New Gingrich surging in polls. Who will be the first to attack?

romneygingrich.reuters.banner.jpg

As you watch the ABC News-Yahoo!-Iowa Republican Party-Des Moines Register debate tonight, here are some dynamics to keep an eye on:

Newtmentum: Can It Be Stopped? Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has shot to the top of every national and state poll that matters, save for in New Hampshire, where he's pulled to within 10 percentage points of Mitt Romney in the latest the NBC News/Marist poll. His rise has been sudden -- and partially dependent on the collapse of Herman Cain's campaign -- and whether or not it has been or will yet be accompanied by a campaign mechanism that can really take advantage of the polling surge, it has made something that's been plain about alternative front-runner Mitt Romney for some time that much more urgently apparent.

There is something about Romney -- whether it is his historic stances, his Mormon faith, or his straight-laced persona -- that just does not give Republican primary voters a fire in the belly for him. Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty had the same problem. It was obvious from the start and in the end it cost Pawlenty, because looking good on paper is just not enough to win a political contest in the absence of a certain kind of mysterious chemistry between candidate and electorate.

Gingrich's positions, and personal and professional history, would seem by every rational accounting to be likely to give today's Republican primary voters pause, yet they appear to be flocking to him based on his solid debate performances and intangible personal characteristics, combined with whatever it is about Romney that has failed to catch their fancy, or repelled them.

With Cain out of the race -- and out of the debates for the first time all fall -- Huntsman sidelined (and not even eligible to attend this debate, so thin is his support), Rick Perry continuing to make embarrassing flubs, Michele Bachmann a non-factor other than through her occasional very well-thought-through attacks, Rick Santorum failing to catch on despite his shoe-leather efforts and Paul a factor in the first two states to cast ballots only -- Gingrich will continue to ride high unless an argument can be made against him personally that undermines his appeal as a human being, and not just as a policymaker.

Newt vs. Romney. Romney and Gingrich will stand side-by-side at the debate, a format that makes highly personal attacks more difficult, or at the very least more awkward. But the path that Romney seemed to lay out in his meeting the with Des Moines Register editorial board on Friday -- in which he raised and dismissed Gingrich's moon colony proposal and his ideas about space mirrors -- suggests that the former Massachusetts governor gets that he's going to need to fight Gingrich on personality ground as much as anywhere else. After all, Romney has agreed with enough of Gingrich's policy proposals -- such as the health-care mandate idea Romney said earlier in the cycle he snagged from Gingrich -- that the policy fights will be the harder ones, even if they do wind up tussling over who supports Paul Ryan's plan to radically alter Medicare more and the like.

Instead of just going after the GOP leader who retook the House and has been building Republican Party ties around the country for the more than a decade since he left office, Romney can also fight against the guy who kept a snake in his bathtub (an American archetype, and frequently encountered in high school at the very least), is thrice-married (and to a hair-debate-inspiring, Tiffany's diamond-wearing French horn player who was his mistress, no less), and obsessed with zoos, moon colonies, space mirrors and putting your kids to work cleaning toilets.

It will be interesting to see which Gingrich Romney addresses himself to.

Snippy Mitt. It will also be interesting to see which Romney shows up. While he demonstrated all fall that he is an excellent debater, in recent weeks, Romney has also appeared peevish and snippy at times. It's the time of the contest when everyone is a bit tired -- and about to get even more so -- but it's the first real chink in Romney's armor to become apparent. If Snippy Mitt shows up, as he did in a late November interview with Brett Baier on Fox News -- he will draw the attention experienced candidate Mitt would like to see focused on someone else's foibles.

Ron Paul, True Believer. Texas Rep. Ron Paul has already made it very clear in a biting advertisement calling Gingrich a "serial hypocrite" that he has no patience for Gingrich's many positions or emergence as a Washington macher. Paul also has a much better ground game in Iowa than he did last cycle or than most of the other candidates, and he has never pulled a punch. The Gingrich-Paul dynamic will be worth keeping an eye on. He could turn out to be Gingrich's fiercest critic.

Image credit: CHRIS KEANE / Reuters

Video of the Day: Perry Thinks There Are 8 Supreme Court Justices

Or else he misspoke when addressing the Des Moines Register editorial board in Iowa earlier today:

He also had some trouble recalling Justice Sonia Sotomayor's name:

Lest you think this is just the liberals at Think Progress making a big deal of this, there's this take from the AP, which means the story has been fed out to newspapers around the country:

Presidential contender Rick Perry said there are eight Supreme Court justices, not nine, and flubbed Justice Sonia Sotomayor's (SOHN'-ya soh-toh-my-YOR') name in an editorial board meeting at The Des Moines Register.

Perry met with the board Friday. He struggled for six seconds to come up with Sotomayor's name, then initially called the justice "Montemayor." A member of the newspaper's editorial board helped him out with the correct name.

He went on to criticize "eight unelected and frankly unaccountable judges." Nine justices sit on the Supreme Court. They are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate.

Similar gaffes have plagued Perry. On Thursday in South Carolina, he corrected himself after saying the U.S. is at war in Iran instead of Iraq.

Of course, neither of these moments seems wildly out of the ordinary for regular extemporaneous human speech in a small group setting. But they are made much more notable in light of Perry's history of flubbing practiced set-pieces on national television.

Rick Perry's Viral Video Fail

Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry on Wednesday released a new campaign advertisement, "Strong," highlighting the Texas governor's faith and asking why gays can serve openly in the U.S. armed forces but "our kids can't openly celebrate Christmas or pray in school."

Intended for a Western Iowa audience of religious conservatives and evangelicals -- the only people who matter to the GOP candidates for the next month -- the ad ran into an inherent audience problem when posted on YouTube with the like/dislike buttons enabled. The apparently more pro-gay rights audience online quickly seized on the spot to register its dislike of Perry's message.

By Thursday morning, the ad had received more than 137,000 dislikes to just over 3,000 likes. By any metric, that's a video that's gone viral -- as an epic fail.

dislikingperry.jpg

The gay Republican group Log Cabin Republicans released a statement condemning the spot -- "Governor Perry is running to be Commander-in-Chief, not Theocrat-in-Chief," said R. Clarke Cooper, the group's executive director -- but perhaps a more effective riposte came in the form of the Tumblr "Rick Perry's Unpopular Opinions." The satirical site turned Perry's walk in the ad into a meme and added other statements it considers equally culturally out of it, such as "Katy Perry is better than Lady Gaga" and "Friday is a fantastic song," to the image of him walking.

The Top 10 Politics Stories of 2011

Atlantic writers survey the biggest stories on their beats See full coverage
The only thing predictable about the political landscape in 2011 was the size of the stories. It was a year of intense emotions and bitter feuds. Congress stalemated over and over on routine budgetary matters, creating a crisis environment. Occupy Wall Street launched, camping in parks around the country and facing pepper spray and batons in chaotic street protests that raised serious questions about the militarization of post-9/11 police forces. Anthony Weiner resigned after a sexting scandal. David Wu stepped down, too, and Herman Cain improbably became a presidential primary front-runner before withdrawing in the face of adultery charges. America finally got Osama bin Laden, killing him in a daring raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan. But Obama's support continued to decline. And while the year got off to a bad start when Arizona Rep. Gabby Giffords was shot point-blank in the head on Jan. 8 at a Tucson Safeway, her courage in the face of injury and astonishing partial recovery provided an inspiring, bittersweet coda to the year when she sat for a television interview in November. A look back at the year that was:

Too Much Violence and Pepper Spray at the OWS Protests: The Videos and Pictures

The dousing of seated, non-violent students with a chemical agent at U.C. Davis should provoke a call for restraint. These images show their experience is not unique.

pepper.banner.jpg

Police dressed in riot gear at U.C. Davis on Friday afternoon used pepper spray to clear seated protesters from the university quad where they had set up a small Occupy encampment, pro-actively and repeatedly dousing the passively-resisting students with a chemical agent designed to cause pain and suffering in order to make it easier to remove them.

It is hard to look at this kind of attack and think this is how we do things in America.

And yet it is all too American. America has a very long history of protests that meet with excessive or violent response, most vividly recorded in the second half of the 20th century. It is a common fantasy among people born in the years since the great protests movements -- and even some not so great ones -- that they would have stood on the bold side of history had they been alive at the time and been called to make a choice. But the truth is that American protest movements in real time -- and especially in their early days -- often appear controversial, politically difficult, out-of-the-mainstream, and dangerous. And they are met with fear.

Even decades later, acts of protest can be the subject of heated debate and lead people to question (as well as celebrate) the moral standing of those who put their bodies on the line during moments of historic tumult -- as Sen. John Kerry, Vietnam veteran and former anti-Vietnam protester, learned during his presidential bid in 2004.

This sort of dynamic holds for pretty much any group that aims to upend the existing social order using direct action, because few resort to such tactics if they think they have other, easier ways to petition for redress of grievances or could be heard as loudly through existing channels of expression. The Tea Party movement, for example, has held many protests but with few exceptions has stopped short of civil disobedience, finding early on that its members were by and large not willing to face arrest and that it could gain power relatively quickly through the political system by backing challengers in Republican primaries and allying with experienced party operatives. The Occupy movement is both very new and rather diffuse so far, and appears less interested in gaining power than making power uncomfortable and raising far-reaching questions and public awareness.

Just over two months old, it has succeed in changing the terms of the national debate about income inequality in this country with shocking rapidity. And whether it flames out in a rash of alienating and chaotic street clashes or builds into a goal-oriented and sustainable force in American life -- sustainable as any protest movement, that is, which is to say not very -- it's clear it has already made one of the most significant interventions into the national debate on economic equality in years.

Which brings us back to the video of what happened at U.C. Davis yesterday: Non-violent students passively resisting both university and police directives to clear the area were subjected to acts of brutality that cannot be morally justified by any accounting of the facts on the ground. The raw video of yesterday's pepper-spray incident has rightfully gone viral since hitting the web last night. It is appalling:

Here's the same incident videotaped from a different perspective:

Junior faculty member Nathan Brown, an assistant professor of English at Davis, says what actually happened was even worse than what's shown on the videos, and has called on U.C. Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi to resign -- a call that has since last night become a petition. His description:

Without any provocation whatsoever, other than the bodies of these students sitting where they were on the ground, with their arms linked, police pepper-sprayed students. Students remained on the ground, now writhing in pain, with their arms linked.

What happened next?

Police used batons to try to push the students apart. Those they could separate, they arrested, kneeling on their bodies and pushing their heads into the ground. Those they could not separate, they pepper-sprayed directly in the face, holding these students as they did so. When students covered their eyes with their clothing, police forced open their mouths and pepper-sprayed down their throats. Several of these students were hospitalized. Others are seriously injured. One of them, forty-five minutes after being pepper-sprayed down his throat, was still coughing up blood.

As Will Wilkinson tweeted last night of the pepper-spray wielding officer identified as Lt. John Pike, "It ought to be possible to sue the pants off this guy and win."

The U.C. Davis police department has, not surprisingly, defended its actions. Ten students were arrested -- eight men and to women -- and about a dozen others were sprayed, according to the Davis Enterprise.

* * *

The nearest I got to Zuccotti Park before it was cleared earlier this week was passing it in a cab one night in New York; it appeared a small and forlorn collection of tents in what was by late October a very cold rain. Visiting McPherson Square in Washington, D.C., for the first time with Atlantic contributor Tina Dupuy earlier this month, I met union members and teenage college students trying to put their Habermas into action and create of a new public square in the form of Occupy DC. It seemed kind of sweetly literal -- building tents as a physical attempt at a structural transformation of the public sphere? -- and largely harmless to anyone but the protesters, because grungy and jerry-rigged and relatively defenseless against the elements or potential criminals. But since McPherson normally is a bit of a dead space in the city -- there are some residential buildings near it, but it's mainly surrounded by office-workers who clear out on evenings and weekends -- it didn't seem to be bothering anyone.

Perhaps Washington's still-intact Occupy encampment has been treated more gently than those in other cities because protests in the nation's capital are as routine and unremarkable as are the city's frequent rains. Between the easy co-existence with protests here, and the fact that the Occupy encampments and demonstrations across the country have been covered as much as regional stories as a national one, it's easy to have missed the truly shocking number of violent confrontations that have taken place as the anti-Wall Street movement has extended its reach.

Last night's video should serve as a wake-up call. Below are some of the other dramatic moments in the ongoing confrontations between Occupy protesters and police. Taken together, they paint a disturbing portrait that should at a bare minimum call into question the standards and practices police officers around the nation have developed for deploying pepper spray, which has only become a universal policing tool within the past 20 years. And they raise real questions about whether disproportionate police responses to the movement's intentional acts of civil disobedience have in some cases increased social disorder rather than restored calm.

Portland, pepper spray:

portlandpepper.banner.jpg

Seattle, pepper spray: Seattlepepper.banner.jpg

Berkeley, batons:

Oakland, tear gas (Scott Olsen video):

Oakland, rubber bullets:

Oakland, tear gas:

Oakland, tear gas:

Oakland, batons:

Oakland, tear gas:

New York, pepper spray:

Denver, pepper spray:

See also:

  • James Fallows: "Pepper-Spray Brutality at UC Davis."
  • Alexis Madrigal: "Why I Feel Bad for the Pepper-Spraying Policeman, Lt. John Pike."
  • James Fallows: "The Moral Power of an Image: UC Davis Reactions."
  • Ta-Nehisi Coates: "The Cops We Deserve."
  • Ta-Nehisi Coates: "'Standard Police Procedure'."
  • Cain's 404 Page Makes an Anti-Obama Statement

    The presidential hopeful doesn't waste a page on his website, using his not found error message page to serve a message of a different kind:

    cains404.banner.jpg

    Image credit: HermanCain.com

    Best of the Web

    21-Year-Old Charged With Trying to Assassinate Obama

    Mayor Bloomberg on Occupy Wall Street: 'The Final Decision to Act Was Mine and Mine Alone'

    New York's billionaire mayor on ordering the park where the movement started cleared of tents and sleeping bags

    zuccotti.banner.jpg

    Overnight, the encampment at Zuccotti Park in lower Manhattan that sparked a national movement highlighting income inequality in America was uprooted by the New York City Police Department.

    On Monday morning, Michael Bloomberg -- who, it should probably be noted, is also a billionaire and hence part of the 1 percent the Occupy Wall Street movement was protesting, in addition to being mayor of New York -- took sole responsibility for the action he said he ordered at the behest of Brookfield Properties, which owns the park, and out of concern for the health and safety of protestors and the neighborhood as the encampment neared its two-month anniversary.

    "Make no mistake, the final decision to act was mine and mine alone," Bloomberg said in a morning news conference at City Hall.

    "Protesters have had two months to occupy the park with tents and sleeping bags. Now they will have to occupy the space with the power of their arguments," Bloomberg said.

    The action was taken "at Brookfield's request" in response to the "health and fire safety" risk the collection of tents and sleeping bags in the park posed, the mayor said, as well as reports of criminal activity in the park. "Inaction was not an option. We could not wait for someone in the park to get killed or to injure another protestor before taking action," he said.

    The park would be reopened to protestors, but not to tents and sleeping bags, some time later today, he said, pending results of an 11:30 a.m. hearing on the restraining order against enforcement of new rules in the park issued by a New York judge at 8 a.m. A picture, above, taken at the park Tuesday morning, showed it swept clean and barricaded.

    "There is no ambiguity in the law here. The First Amendment protect speech, it does not protect tents and sleeping bags," the mayor said.

    Protestors were massing Tuesday morning in Foley Square, just north of City Hall, for a march against the decision to clear the park, and a new Twitter feed sprang up for Occupy Foley Square.

    See also at The Atlantic Wire:

  • "Mayor Bloomberg Explains Occupy Wall Street Eviction and Around 200 arrests"
  • "Judge (Temporarily) Reopens Zuccotti Park"
  • "The NYPD Emptied Zuccotti Park in the Middle of the Night"

    Image credit: Jim Brady/Instagram

  • Gabby Giffords: The ABC Interview

    Well, if you could watch that without getting verklempt, I don't know about you. As Ari Berman tweeted as Diane Sawyer's ABC special report on Rep. Gabby Giffords, Democrat of Arizona, and her husband Mark Kelly, aired, "Gabby Giffords should be Time's person of the year."

    In case you missed it on ABC last night, here are the clips (titles and captions are ABC's):

    Gabrielle Giffords Fights for her Life: The early days of Congresswoman Giffords' recovery filled with ups and downs.

    video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

    Gabby and Mark Bonded by Dedication and Love: Husband and family lead the charge to help Gabrielle Giffords recover.

    video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

    How Music Is Helping Gabrielle Giffords Heal: Music became an integral part of the rehabilitation process for Giffords.

    video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

    Gabrielle Giffords 10 Months Later Giffords shares her own thoughts on her remarkable recovery and road ahead.

    video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

    No Limits to Gabrielle Giffords' Recovery: Doctors and family agree Giffords has no boundaries to her recovery.

    video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

    Gabrielle Giffords: Will She Return to Congress? Focused on recovery, the congresswoman says she will return.

    video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

    Best of the Web

    'Top Ten Rick Perry Excuses' on Letterman

    Best of the Web

    Perry Staying 'in the Fight'

    Best of the Web

    Rick Santorum Sponsored Honor for Accused PSU Coach Jerry Sandusky

    Rick Perry Tries to Fundraise Off His 'Oops' Moment

    Really. Or apologize. Or something. Whatever the email below is that arrived in my inbox at 2:31 a.m., it's clear that Gov. Rick Perry's team is well aware of the perception problem their man created for himself during the CNBC debate in Michigan last night. And not yet clear on what, if anything, they can do about it.

    perry.jpg

    The campaign also quickly threw up a poll on its website asking supporters the same question:

    perryweb.jpg

    'Oops.' Rick Perry's Incredible Brain-Freeze Moment (Video)

    In one of the most painful debate moments this year, if not ever, the Texas governor could not recall, even with prompting, which agency he wanted to eliminate

    Updated 10:31 p.m.

    The most striking thing about this moment, beyond the fact that it happened at all, is that it was a totally unprompted fail, much like Perry's earlier botched attack on Mitt Romney for changing his positions. No one asked Perry to list the agencies he wanted to do away with, or was attacking him directly. He brought up a line himself, a point he wanted to make. And then he just got scrambled.

    Here's video of the exchange everyone's talking about:

    Perry: "It's three agencies of government when I get there that are gone: Commerce, Education and the, uh, what's the third one there, let's see... "

    Ron Paul: "Five, you have five."

    Perry: "Oh, five, okay, so Commerce, Education and the ... uh ... uh."

    Moderator John Harwood: "EPA?"

    Perry: "EPA, there you go."

    Harwood: "Seriously, is EPA the one you were talking about?"

    Perry: "No sir, no sir. We were talking about agencies of government. EPA needs to be rebuilt. No doubt about that."

    Harwood: "But you can't name the third one?"

    Perry: "The third agency of government I would do away with, the Education, the uh, Commerce. Let's see. I can't. The third one I can't. Sorry. Oops."

    Later in the debate he remembered the answer he meant to give: "And by the way, that was the Department of Energy I was reaching for earlier," he said.

    And after the debate, he took the unusual step of appearing in the debate spin room, where he told reporters, "I'm sure glad I had my boots on because I sure stepped in it out there."

    The general rule of such appearances is that successful debate performers and leading candidates send surrogates to the spin room, while trailing candidates and those who did poorly show up themselves.

    It was Perry's first post-debate appearance in a spin room since he declared for the presidency.

    Meanwhile, the Obama re-election campaign and the Democratic National Committee sent out a slew of press releases attacking comments made by Romney, who increasingly looks like the likely GOP nominee.

    Playing Dirty: The Cloak-and-Dagger World of Opposition Research

    Many have speculated about the possible role of an opposing campaign in revelations about GOP presidential candidate Herman Cain's sexual harassment settlements while head of the National Restaurant Association in the late 1990s. Former Atlantic senior editor Josh Green's June 2004 feature story on the rise of opposition research, "Playing Dirty," dug into the history of the practice:

    Attempting to define a political opponent as something less than presidential is a hallowed American tradition. Two centuries ago, in attacks that echo in Republican characterizations of John Kerry, Federalist opponents assailed Thomas Jefferson with what amounted to the charge that he--a free-thinking deist who sympathized with the French Revolution--was in fact a godless Francophile bent on destroying the institution of marriage. Andrew Jackson's marriage to a woman he wrongly believed to be divorced, Grover Cleveland's illegitimate child, and Teddy Roosevelt's alleged drunkenness were all pushed by opponents during nasty presidential campaigns.

    After Watergate and Nixon's dirty tricks, carrying out surreptitious attacks, even those based on the truth, took on a measure of risk. During the 1987 race for the Democratic nomination Michael Dukakis's campaign manager, John Sasso, and his political director, Paul Tully, slipped to several media outlets a videotape that showed an opponent, Senator Joseph Biden, delivering a speech partially plagiarized from the British Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock. This prompted further scrutiny, and subsequent revelations of plagiarism and academic exaggeration drove Biden from the race. When it was learned that his campaign had supplied the damaging tape, Dukakis felt compelled to call a news conference and later fired his aides.

    In the years since, standards governing the pursuit and dissemination of such material have steadily diminished. Today not only do campaigns commonly distribute videotapes and other damaging information about opponents but "trackers" with video cameras follow enemy candidates for the explicit purpose of capturing embarrassing moments. Had Sasso and Tully plied their trade a bit later, they would be high-priced consultants with guest slots on Crossfire.

    Oppo lore includes legendary "hits" brought off both before and after the Biden scandal, and many more that are less well known because the agents remained covert. In 1984, for example, Michael Bayer, the RNC research director, was digging into the vice-presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro's past and obtained a list of properties owned by Ferraro and her husband. On a hunch Bayer, a former military intelligence officer, sent a photographer to take pictures of one warehouse loading area. He discovered that one tenant was a pornography distributor--a fact that soon made its way into The Washington Post. In the 1992 Senate race in California, Bob Mulholland, a state Democratic Party official, learned that the Republicans' morality-and-values candidate, Bruce Herschensohn, frequented a Sunset Boulevard strip club. Four days before what looked to be a close election, Mulholland confronted Herschensohn at a campaign event waving a poster-size photo of the club and its marquee: LIVE NUDE--GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRLS. Last July, Representative Darrell Issa, who launched the campaign to recall the California governor Gray Davis, was revealed in a front-page San Francisco Chronicle story to have been arrested twice in the early 1970s, for weapons charges and auto theft--a story that was the handiwork of Davis researchers. And although no one has yet proved it to be so, an article of faith among Republicans (and some Democrats) is that the revelation on the eve of the 2000 election that George W. Bush was once arrested for drunk driving was a particularly devious plant by the Gore campaign. "You can't Botox your record these days," Comstock says. "You can't hope anymore that no one will go in and look."

    It is perhaps not surprising that oppo research is among the more reviled professions, its practitioners held in about the same regard as spammers and ivory smugglers. This breeds defensiveness and a tendency for researchers to invoke a variation of the NRA claim that guns don't kill people, people kill people. Lehane says, "One of the greatest misperceptions is that opposition research is going out and finding stuff that's not already in the public domain. But the reality is that most of the stuff that really ends up having an impact is stuff that's out there in the public record." Two years ago a Democratic researcher named Jason Stanford was moved to write an article in the trade journal Campaigns & Elections that was as notable for its impassioned defense of his vocation as for his candid admission that rather than admit to her son's line of work, his own mother tells people he's a used-car dealer.

    The proliferation of cable television and talk radio, the advent of the twenty-four-hour-a-day news cycle, and the growth of the Internet have all increased the demand for political news and pushed the boundary of what is acceptable. Both parties now disseminate daily e-mails with headings such as "Sen. John Kerry's Hypocrisy, Vol. 1, Issue 10" and "Bush White House: Home of the Whopper," which contain quotations, links, audio, and even video of what is often accurately judged to be damaging or compromising information. Contrary to the popular impression that campaigns traffic mainly in sleaze and rumor (though this occurs too), these e-mails are almost always scrupulously sourced from the public record. The goal is not to spread untruths but to have journalists repeat a selective--and often deeply misleading--version of the truth. "We become a conduit," Comstock says. "We do the legwork for the reporter. Obviously, in doing it we tell a story from the Republican side."

    Campaigns have become highly sophisticated at using such material to maximum effect. "It's a lot like a trial," Comstock explains. "The candidate gives you what you have to work with. You're piecing things together that tell a larger story." Lehane agrees that the first step is choosing a negative storyline to push and laying the groundwork by talking it up to beat reporters and editors. "The second step," he says, "is to catalogue a variety of stories you have that support this. You begin by planting some smaller stories so that you build a foundation or basis for the larger story you're going to want to have hitting in the fall."

    Especially in a presidential election "you have to plant a lot of the seeds in the spring and the summer so that you can capitalize on it," Lehane says. "If you have a big story that's going to hit in the middle of September, middle of October, what you really want to do is build several things that come off of the story so that it's not just a one-day hit. If the story runs on the front page of a major paper, you also want to set it up so that it hits some of the television morning shows, and from there you want to have surrogates [friendly talking heads] out the next day, so that you get a second hit. On the third day, ideally, you have some additional information you've been holding back that you can feed into it [to prompt] another round of stories. On the fourth or fifth day you try to hold your candidate back from saying anything, so that eventually, when he does say something about the issue, you get another round of stories. If you do it effectively, you can basically wipe out a guy's entire week--he'll spend the entire week responding to a story that showed up on a Monday." In the heat of the campaign season each week is critical. Not only can a well-orchestrated hit knock an opponent off stride, it can solidify an impression that the many voters just tuning in to the election will carry into the voting booth.

    Implicit in this process is the news media's cooperation in carrying out the work of campaign operatives--usually without disclosing that fact to readers and viewers. If gathering opposition research is a science, disseminating it is very much an art.

    Continue reading "Playing Dirty."

    Quote of the Day: Herman Cain Is This Close to the Koch Brothers

    "I am the Koch brothers' brother from another mother."
    --Herman Cain, speaking to the Americans for Prosperity Defending the American Dream conference in Washington, D.C., Friday. For more on his relationship with the Koches, see this The New York Times story today.

    Herman Cain Breaks Into Song at the National Press Club (Video)

    Closing out his remarks at the National Press Club today, Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain sang a version of the gospel song "He Looked Beyond My Fault And Saw My Need": The man may not be likely to become president, but he is one heck of a performer -- you've got to give him that. Via Business Insider.

    The Biggest Story in Photos

    2013 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest

    Subscribe Now

    SAVE 65%! 10 issues JUST $2.45 PER COPY

    Newsletters

    Sign up to receive our free newsletters

    (sample)

    (sample)

    (sample)

    (sample)

    (sample)

    (sample)