December 29, 2008 - 2:48pm
News

Kirtzman: Caroline and Company Are Blowing It

Veteran New York politics journalist Andrew Kirtzman, who is currently writing a book on the Bernard Madoff scandal, thinks that Caroline Kennedy's public roll-out has been a catastrophe, and that she and her handlers are blowing the behind-the-scenes lobbying effort for Hillary Clinton's Senate seat as well. (Some of her sit-down interviews came out better than others, but her more substantive utterances were partially overshadowed in the secondary coverage by painstaking documentation of a recurring verbal tic.)

Asked for reaction to the Kennedy interviews, Kirtzman emailed the following analysis:

 

The interviews were catastrophic to her cause. They totally undermined one's faith in her.

 

It's becoming clear why the roll-out has been so tentative and low-key: Her communications skills could take months to improve, and she doesn't have that kind of time. It poses a huge problem for Josh Isay and company.

The behind-the-scenes problems are just as bad. Josh must be banging his head against the table as he watches this all devolve into a power struggle between the governor and the mayor, with Shelly Silver throwing gasoline on the fire.

I'd ditch Kennedy's interviews altogether and schedule some policy speeches. They'd be situations she can control, and would go a long way toward restoring the stature that is eroding by the day.

Otherwise, I'd get her working the phones, and have the mayor's people get off of them.

Azi Paybarah can be reached via email at azi.paybarah@politickerny.com.

Comments

kennedy nomination


Andrew is on target but there's more on the political margins than just Caroline's inexperience and miscalculations;

1) Post-congestion pricing, west side arena and two terms of bad vibes, the Mayor should know that his imprint will stimulate considerable pushback on any policy in the face-to-face culture of Albany, let alone a sensitive political appointment;

2) The Bloombergian roll-out utterly failed to recognize that Paterson needed to make this appointment unmolested -- he is weakened out of the gate by the budget and the circumstances of his ascent. The Governor needs to appear in control of something.

3) Isay may have residual cred via Schumer and Lieberman among Dems but in this context, he's the Mayor's apprentice. The Governor, the Speaker, the AG and most of the elected legislature see him as a tool of the elite Mayor and his favored, untested candidate.

4) True or not, the private conversations in the LOB remain fixed in the assumption that this deal is largely about next year's mayoral race.

12/31/08 11:28 am

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