Is White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan out of a job?
The last time McClellan gave an on-the-record press briefing from the White House press podium was 19 days ago. <em>PR Week</em> recently
speculated that McClellan was on his way out, based on scuttlebutt among the White House press corps.
Some liberals may cheer McClellan's departure, but JABBS would never endorse killing the messenger. It's akin to demanding a sports writer be fired because the home team stunk this year. McClellan is that sports writer, and this administration most certainly stinks.
If McClellan has been dumped, it won't be a victory for those battling the Bush spin machine. When McClellan offered garbage to the media, it was because he was provided garbage by the Bush Administration. When his answers lacked logic, it was because the higher-ups couldn't provide him with any logic.
In a recent example, McClellan
told reporters that President Bush never told Palestinian leaders that God told him to invade Afghanistan and Iraq. In disputing statements made for a BBC series by Palestinian Prime Minister Abu Mazen and Foreign Minister Nabil Shaath, McClellan
admitted he "didn't travel on that trip," when Bush allegedly made the comments.
Was McClellan lying about Bush? JABBS can't say. But logically, McClellan's statement made no sense. He was only parroting what some higher-up told him to say.
Certainly, there's a laundry list of questionable McClellan statements. He
contradicted himself regarding commenting on the investigation into the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame, and appears to have lied when he said conclusively in 2003 that Vice President Cheney's Chief of Staff, Lewis "Scooter" Libby, was "not involved" in the leak. He
contradicted Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, about whether a flawed
Newsweek article incited violence in Afghanistan. He
pretended not to know that U.S. troops in Tikrit had been coached prior to a teleconference with President Bush, even after the coaching had been caught on tape. After Hurricane Katrina, he
obfuscated, rather than answer the question: "Scott, does the President retain confidence in his FEMA Director and Secretary of Homeland Security?"
But in each of these cases, it's easy to argue that McClellan was just parroting the administration's official message of the day.
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If McClellan is dumped, the final straw may have been his
written statement attacking a troop withdrawal plan authored by Rep. John Murtha (D-PA). McClellan said Murtha was “endorsing the policy positions of Michael Moore and the extreme liberal wing of the Democratic party.”
But even here, was McClellan speaking on his own behalf? Probably not. Did what McClellan say look bad, leading to comparisons to vicious attacks made by Bush cronies in 2000 against another Vietnam War veteran, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)? Absolutely. Soon thereafter, both President Bush and Vice President Cheney
read the tradewinds, and backed away from McClellan's comments in an effort to "quell a backlash."
By doing so, they killed their messenger. But no doubt, if McClellan's career really is over, they'll have no trouble finding a replacement.
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This item first appeared at
Journalists Against Bush's B.S.