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Get your Political Fix with KPBS political correspondent and public affairs director Gloria Penner. All things political are fair game, from closed door decisions at City Hall to presidential press conferences in the West Wing. What's really going on in the strange world of politics?
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This week, as I was reflecting on Friday's grim news that Tim Russert had died and thinking about how nothing is forever and about how will my mother now spend Sunday mornings at 9 o'clock (she adores Russert and Meet the Press, and unfailingly watches the show), Scott McClellan was about to prove me right. Yes, Scott McClellan, the erstwhile presidential press secretary whose recent book about his experiences in that exalted position causes hives to erupt on Bush loyalists.
It seems that Scott McClellan, in his never-ending book tour to promote the tell-all tale, was scheduled to stop by KPBS for a quick interview with These Days host Tom Fudge, and it further seems that the only slot into which the interview would fit was the one I usually fill for a weekly political chat with Tom. But I'm a team-player and although I had reservations about relinquishing my Wednesday gig, I agreed. After all, nothing is forever!
And now I'm having second thoughts and this isn't sour grapes. I'm thinking about McClellan who worked for President Bush for almost three years and who said to the president upon resigning as press secretary, "I have been honored and grateful to be a small part of a terrific and talented team of really good people." And then he wrote his book accusing Bush of self-deception and of selling the Iraq War with a political propaganda campaign rather than the truth. When did McClellan see the light?
And I'm also wondering when that light does go on during a three-year job with a newsworthy boss, whether it's OK to stay on and gather material for a book that's sure to sell.
Roe v. Wade v. Dr. Seuss
Every March 2nd since 1991 when Ted Geisel died, Audrey Geisel has held a birthday celebration for her husband. There’s always a birthday cake and a beguiling Seussian performance by graduate students from the drama department at UCSD. Often, the party is held at the university’s library that bears his name, and outside is a huge Cat in the Hat balloon. There’s no sadness at the birthday event, but joy as we birthday guests recall the pleasure the Dr. Seuss books continue to bring to the world.
Audrey Geisel and I became friends about a year before Ted succumbed to cancer at 87. I’m delighted to be on the guest list for the annual event and attend most of them. This year, however, the seasonal upper respiratory infection hit my household and we were forced to miss the festivities. This was particularly disappointing because the brand new Seuss film, “Horton Hears a Who,” was being prepared to premiere the following weekend, and party conversation was sure to be peppered with speculation about its level of success with the audiences.
And successful the premiere was! At $45.1 million, Horton was the biggest opening of 2008 and now ranks as the fifth-biggest G-rated opening of all time. But all was not smooth at the Hollywood premiere where a group of anti-abortion demonstrators showed up to claim Horton as their ally in the abortion debate. Their argument is based on the famous Horton line: “a person is a person no matter how small.”
For many, those words about a village of Whos, living on a speck on a clover leaf, are about the equality of beings despite stature and status. But the protestors see the phrase as a motto for their movement.
The natural question then centers on whether Ted Geisel made political statements through his children’s books and whether “a person is a person no matter how small” attests to his attitude toward abortion. His wife has opinions on both. And, to put the dispute in chronological context, “Horton Hears a Who” was written in 1954, long before Roe v. Wade and the ensuing debate on abortion.
Political Fix
I've been writing for KPBS Online in the Commentaries section for several months. Today, my dream is realized with my very own blog. I welcome your comments, promise to answer as many of them as I can, and hope Political Fix helps to stimulate your thinking about people and events in the world of politics. Enjoy!
