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Poll | 01/07/2009 12:00 am

Who should take Hillary's NY Senate seat?

27 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Patty E
I have no objection to Caroline. There may be others who are equally and/or more qualifed—but to be honest with you—-she is the less ‘political’, and I am just so tired of the politics of ‘you do this for me, and I will do this for you’….I want someone who cares more about this country, than they do about their ‘standing’ in the entitlement parade.
By Patty E on 01/07/2009 12:48 am
Ann Coulter Crazy, Souless, Evil B*tch
Give it to Caroline and tick off the GOP. David Vittner will need a new stack of diapers.
Kay Sara
The best qualified.
By Kay Sara on 01/07/2009 4:48 am
Diana T
I liked Maureen Dowd’s column today. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/07/opinion/07dowd.html
By Diana T on 01/07/2009 2:14 pm
Kay Sara
Thanks, Diana, that was a good article. I am excited about the Cabinet Obama is building with such “heavy hitters” - would like to see ability, brains and integrity rule for all appointments, promotions and elections regardless of name, l”celebruty status” , looks or money. Utopia . ??? . Nepotism and cronism leads to a lot of incompetence and corruption not only in politics but in business as well. For some reason the children of famous people are treated as better than the rest. We should all have to prove ourselves before the accolades and adoration fall from the skies. It is commendable that Caroline would like to serve her country as a Senator. I bet if you canvassed the population hundreds of thousands would like to serve their country as a Senator. I would. Don’t have a chance in hell of getting there though, and I bet I would not mind campaigning as much as Caroline appears to not have the personality for that grueling people engaging and press mongering activity. If Caroline is the best qualified I am all for her. But since I don’t live in NY- it isn’t really my business - NYers shoudl be the ones clamoring for great representation. Times are demanding and it is crucial that grown up action is taken with great courage and intellect which the Congress has demonstrated any abundance of in the last decade.
By Kay Sara on 01/07/2009 3:36 pm
Kay Sara
Oops- I meant to say: Times are demanding and it is crucial that grown up action is taken with great courage and intellect, and unfortunately the Congress has not demonstrated any abundance of any of these qualities in the last decade.
By Kay Sara on 01/07/2009 3:37 pm
Diana T
Besides, which, Kay, it’s an appointment not an election. And, if she proves good or badly, the voters will know what to do. It’s their business and not ours. Right?
By Diana T on 01/07/2009 3:54 pm
shirley adams
Yes lets gets some fresh new blood and ideas in the Senate. Plus she cares about kids and our rights. Go Caroline.
By shirley adams on 01/07/2009 4:49 am
Lucinda Herbert
Fresh new blood? I think I’ve heard that name before? It would be business as usual, frankly. She has not earned it! She was entirely too vague about why she deserved it and did not make me feel that she was remotely current on policies.
By Lucinda Herbert on 01/07/2009 7:33 am
Sam Mirando
Caroline needs more seasoning in the political arena. By all accounts, you know, she’s, like, a hopeless speaker. And, like, if you can’t, you know, say what you mean without, like, fumbling for words all the time, you might, like, you know, not actually have a very clear idea of what it is that, like, you want to say, you know.
By Sam Mirando on 01/07/2009 6:35 am
f p
Sam, it’s amazing how that can quickly change—I’ve seen beginning teachers stumble all over themselves with parents yet within a few short weeks they’re speaking like pros. It’s all a matter of experience.
By f p on 01/07/2009 9:03 am
Ms. Dee
Barbara Walters. Why not?
By Ms. Dee on 01/07/2009 7:53 am
f p
I’d prefer Gilda.
By f p on 01/07/2009 9:01 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Sweet on Caroline By MAUREEN DOWD Published: January 6, 2009 WASHINGTON Ask not, you know, what your country can, like, do for you. Ask what you, um, can, you know, do for your country. After a lifetime of shying away from the public spotlight, Caroline Kennedy asked herself what she could do for her country. Her soft-spoken answer — to follow her father and two uncles and serve in the Senate — got her ripped to shreds in the, you know, press. I know about “you knows.” I use that verbal crutch myself, a bad habit that develops from shyness and reticence about public speaking. I always thought that Caroline and her brother, John, had special magic capital in America because of their heartbreaking roles in the Kennedy House of Atreus. Joe Kennedy, the wily patriarch of the clan, had pioneered the use of Hollywood glamour in pursuit of Washington power. With his glossy pop-culture political magazine, George, John reversed that equation, using his stature as an American political prince to persuade Salma Hayek to pose on the cover of his magazine. I wrote a column once saying that it seemed like a frivolous use of his time. I thought he should run for office and employ his special clout to make life better for Americans. He died before he had the chance. So I found it bizarre that when Caroline offered to use her magic capital — and friendship with Barack Obama — to help take care of New York in this time of economic distress, she was blasted by a howl of “How dare she?” People are suddenly awfully choosy about who gets to go to the former home of Jesse Helms, Strom Thurmond and Robert Torricelli. Although Americans still have enough British in their genes to be drawn to dynasties, W. has no doubt soured the country on scions. And the camps of the other two New York dynasties — the Clintons (still bitter about Caroline’s endorsement of Obama) and the Cuomos (who’d like that Senate seat for Andrew) — have certainly done their best to undermine Caroline. Congress, which abdicated its oversight role as the Bush crew wrecked the globe and the economy, desperately needs fresh faces and new perspectives, an infusion of class, intelligence and guts. People complain that the 51-year-old Harvard and Columbia Law School grad and author is not a glib, professional pol who knows how to artfully market herself, and is someone who hasn’t spent her life glad-handing, backstabbing and logrolling. I say, thank God. The press whines that she doesn’t have a pat answer about why she wants the job. I’ve interviewed a score of men running for president; not one had a good answer for why he wanted it. Robert Duffy, the mayor of Rochester, complained that when the would-be senator visited the Democratic headquarters there recently, she did not respond to pictures in a conference room of her father, mother, brother and herself as a little girl. Isn’t it creepy to expect her to emote on cue? Isn’t it more authentic to want to keep some of your most private feelings to yourself? I know Caroline Kennedy. She’s smart, cultivated, serious and unpretentious. The Senate, shamefully sparse on profiles in courage during Dick Cheney’s reign of terror, would be lucky to get her. And believe me, she talks a whole lot better than the former junior senator from New York, Al D’Amato, who once wailed that he was “up to my earballs” in some mess, and another time complained to me that those “little Jappies” bring over boats full of cars and then take the boats back empty. Anyhow, it isn’t how you say it. It’s what you say. Hillary Clinton is a great talker, but she never stood up in the Senate to lead a crusade against any Republican horror show, from Terri Schiavo to the Bush administration’s dishonest push to war. Sitting in the Senate gallery on Tuesday as senators were sworn in by Dick Cheney, I saw plenty of lawmakers who had benefited from family. Two Udalls were being sworn in, under the watchful eye of Stewart Udall. Mark Begich, the new senator from Alaska, is the son of a former Alaska congressman. The classy Bob Casey of Pennsylvania, son of the late Gov. Robert Casey, was there in a festive pink tie. John McCain, whose wife’s money and Arizona pull made his Senate election possible, looked on with a smile. Hillary, whose husband paved the way for her to join this club and run for president, chatted with colleagues. Jay Rockefeller wandered about, as did Chris Dodd, son of Senator Thomas Dodd. And Teddy Kennedy, walking with a cane, worked the room with his old brio. It isn’t what your name is. It’s what you do with it. Or, in the case of W., don’t.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 01/07/2009 9:26 am
Nanny hasSeven
Thanks, Phyllis, for Maureen Dowd’s take on the situation. Not being from New York, I have much less of a vested interest in who the Governor of that state appoints. I liked the idea of President Kennedy’s daughter finally throwing her hat in the ring. I’m originally from Massachusetts, and grew up with the name “Kennedy” discussed frequently in our home. My parents came from Brookline, where the Kennedy’s lived, and traveled in the same circles with a few of Joe & Rose Kennedy’s older children. The idea of the only remaining child of John & Jaqueline Kennedy carrying on in the family tradition intrigued me. I say give her a chance. The interview she did obviously did not serve her well, but I also don’t think we saw the real Caroline Kennedy in that interview. She’s just getting started. She is not a seasoned politician, even if she knows how the system works. If the people of NY don’t want to keep her then they can vote her out in 2010. But let’s see what she can do, let’s take a chance, like we did with her father, like we did with Barak Obama. We may be really pleasantly surprised.
By Nanny hasSeven on 01/07/2009 10:16 am