The BlogThe Barack-Blagojevich Stand Off1:50 PM, Dec 15, 2008
• By MARY KATHARINE HAM
It's been five days since Pres-Elect Barack Obama called for the resignation of indicted Ilinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, and the coiffeured Chicago corruptocrat seems no closer to the door than he did last Wednesday. The call for resignation came through Obama's spokesperson Robert Gibbs one day after the Blagojevich scandal broke, and one day after Obama stated he was "saddened and sobered" by the news, but declined to go much further:
That same day, Obama also said he had "no contact" with Blagojevich. After that it was revealed that Obama did indeed have some contact with Blago at the governor's meeting in Philadelphia, for which there was photographic evidence. His closest adviser David Axelrod had also told a Chicago TV station in November that Obama was talking to the governor about his replacement, but later said he had "misspoken." Obama's claim was downgraded Thursday to "I have never spoken to the governor on this subject," as he was widely criticized for mishandling the response to the scandal. By that time, he had settled on an internal investigation of his team, the results of which may be released this week, but asserted he was sure his team was not at all involved. Today, two sources report that Rahm Emanuel was "dispatched" by the Obama transition team to talk to Blagojevich specifically about Obama's replacement, providing a list of names to Blago advisers:
The Wall Street Journal elaborates:
It doesn't sound like such contacts would have been necessarily out of line for Emanuel, but the creeping proximity of Team Obama's white garment hems to Blagojevich's filth is problematic for Obama politically. This scandal is easy to understand, viscerally disgusting, deals with the seat of Obama himself, and runs counter to everything Obama claimed to stand for as a candidate in its utterly old-school, machine-politics grime. Blagojevich's stubbornness has further complicated matters by casting doubt on Obama's political influence and on the process for naming Obama's predecessor. The Guardian's headline, "Illinois governor ignores Obama's call to resign" can't be pleasing to a fawned-over political figure whose devotees in the press should be in peak fawn right now. |
|