Shoot Me Now
by digby
Contentious exchanges between White House press secretaries and members of the media have been fairly commonplace during the past few presidential administrations.
However, the one that took place Wednesday between White House press secretary Robert Gibbs and April Ryan of American Urban Radio, in which Gibbs essentially compared Ryan to a petulant child, is among the most heated (and entertaining) in recent memory.
The testy exchange was sparked by Ryan’s insistent questioning of White House social secretary Desiree Rogers’ role at the recent state dinner, which has been in the headlines because of the fallout from Tareq and Michaele Salahi’s “party crashing.”
Ryan claimed that there have been whispers around Washington insinuating that Rogers had overstepped the traditional role of her title at the event to become the “belle of the ball,” thus “overshadowing the first lady.” Frustrated by Ryan’s tabloid-y line of questioning, Gibbs instructed her to “calm down” and to take a deep breath,” adding “I do this with my son and that’s what happens.”
The fatuous gasbags were all atwitter yesterday that the White House is “stonewalling” to protect their “old Chicago pal” Desiree Rogers, the white house social secretary. As I said the other day, this is rapidly turning into a “travelgate” type Village scandal and someone is going to have to go down, preferably one who falls under the auspices of Michelle Obama, who has clearly made some kind of social error.
Just as Travelgate was about Hillary Clinton failing to respect the social pecking order by installing old Arkansas friends in a job in which the press had a personal stake, (Ryan’s comments about “overshadowing” notwithstanding) I’m pretty sure this is about Michele and “her pal” somehow not respecting the pecking order and failing to understand just how sacrosanct are the invitation lists to the White House. (You’ll recall that Michelle had a press avail the day of the state dinner and mentioned that she regretted not being able to invite everyone, which I thought was rather odd at the time.)
The lesson has long been clear. You do not mess with the Village tabbies. They have far more power than you might think.
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