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Obama Snubs Hillary Clinton: "Arrogant Son-of-a Bitch"
by
max blunt
at 02:15PM (CET) on January 30, 2008 | Permanent Link
| Cosmos
So Bush has delivered
his last State of the Union
And what everyone in the House press gallery
is talking about isn't the speec
Rather, it's the snub
Obama refused to make himself available
to greet Hillary Clinton before the speech Because he’s loose on the stump, self-deprecating yet cocky, Obama gets away with appropriating the language of his own deification. He mocks it, but at the same time reinforces it. It’s hard to be humble when your overflow room is overflowing.
There were other moments of self-puffery. At one point, he introduced a volunteer as the chair of “Obamans for—” He caught himself. “Nashuans for Obama.”
However innocently, Obama had just bestowed himself with fame’s highest honor: his very own adjectival form.
Obama’s speaking style, with its preacherly repetitions and rhythms, is nothing new. But the content of his speech—if you stop and actually listen to it—is aggressively vapid.
“This change thing is catching on,” he told people. He’s running, as he always says, because of “what Dr. King called the 'fierce urgency of now'.”
Here’s the closest he came to defining “hope”: It’s “imagining, then working for, then righting for what didn’t seem possible before.”
In other ways, Obama doesn’t act messianic—just cocky. He laughs at his own jokes, a staccato “heh” that sounds naked when spoken into a mic in a large auditorium.
I met one of his staffers in a bar after the South Carolina victory. After several Scotches "Lawrence" started to open up.
"Like all of us, Barack has two sides to him. His public persona is laid-back, cool - I suppose you'd call it - but beneath that affable exterior he's very different.
"When he's tired he's very ratty - that's no surprise. But the side I really can't stand is his petulant, spoiled-brat one. He really seems to believe he's "chosen", which means we - his "hired help" - have no right to question his judgment.
"If he's so full of himself now, imagine what he'll be like if he gets to be president. He really is one arrogant son-of-a-bitch." Radical Left So President Bush has delivered his last State of the Union. And what everyone in the House press gallery is talking about isn't the speech. Rather, it's the snub.
Sen. Barack Obama refused to make himself available to greet Sen. Hillary Clinton before the speech.
When members of the Senate entered the chamber, Obama came in before Clinton. He went out of his way to greet as many House members as possible and walked halfway across the chamber to greet members of the Supreme Court, the president's cabinet, the military joint chiefs.
That made what happened next even more striking. Obama returned to stand by his seat next to Sen. Edward Kennedy who endorsed Obama today in a widely watched event that reverberated across the political world.
As Clinton approached, Kennedy made sure to make eye contact and indicated he wanted to shake her hand. Clinton leaned towards Kennedy over a row of seats and Kennedy leaned in towards her. They shook hands.
Obama stood icily staring at Clinton during this, then turned his back and stepped a few feet away. Kennedy may've wanted to make peace with Clinton but Obama clearly wanted no part of that.
As president, Obama has said he would meet with the U.S.'s enemies without precondition. But making nice with Clinton apparently is another mattter after the increasingly angry fight the two have waged, with charges and countercharges, for the Democratic presidential nomination.
The sense in the press gallery was that Obama didn't cover himself in glory. Someone even used the word "childish." (Not this writer.) Judging by how much conversation there was about this brush off in the press gallery, Americans will be hearing a lot more about this tomorrow and in coming days.
The fact that much of the discussion in the press gallery after Bush's was about the snub is probably an indication of how we journalists and perhaps the nation are already moving past Bush, how the presidential campaign is increasingly crowding out anything Bush has to say .
Not that you could move past him completely. It was, after all, his night to a considerable extent.
When the president entered the packed chamber, once he got through the gauntlet of well wishers and ascended to the podium, he was cheered lustily by Republicans for what seemed like many minutes while he received polite applause from the Democrats. As the noise washed over him, he looked like a man who was really enjoying himself.
As White House aides had indicated in recent days, the speech contained no major new initiatives since the president has just a year left in the White House and he's dealing with a Democratic Congress that's not exactly friendly.
Still, if there was no major news or memorable soundbite, this SOTU was interesting because it was the last featuring this president and because at least two potential successors were sitting there on the Democratic side glowering at him much of the night.
Oh, there were moments when Clinton and Obama stood and politely applauded the president, like when he spoke about the nation owing a debt of gratitude to the military serving so bravely in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But there were many moments when the two leading Democratic presidential candidates sat on their hands, like the rest of their Democratic.colleagues.
And there was at least one instance when Clinton shook her head at the president. It was when he said "...As families have to balance their budget, so should government." The thought bubble above her head seemed to be "Can you believe this guy?"
There was one moment when Bush seemed to take a shot at his predecessor and Sen. Clinton's husband, former President Bill Clinton, who's on the receiving end of a lot of criticism lately. The former president has said repeatedly that he believes the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 unfairly benefit the superwealthy, like himself.
"Others have said they would personally be happy to pay higher taxes. I welcome their enthusiasm, and I am pleased to report that the IRS accepts both checks and money orders," Bush said.
Clinton gave Bush the kind of look Obama had given her a few minutes earlier.
When Bush got into the energy part of his speech, it was noteworthy that when the president mentioned increasing the use of "emissions-free nuclear power" Obama didn't applaud.
He probably didn't want to give Clinton, who has attacked his pro-nuclear energy position (Illinois operates the most nuclear plants in the nation, after all) any more ammunition on that front.
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