ThinkProgress picks up on McConnell spokesman’s lies, cites BlueGrassRoots work
Matt Gunterman October 16th, 2007
Congratulations to Joe Sonka of BlueGrassRoots and also Team DitchMitchKY. His breakdown of Don Stewart’s lie-filled letter to the editor in today’s Courier-Journal got commended over at ThinkProgress.
Yep, it’s the scandal that keeps on giving.
Like McConnell protégé J. Scott Jennings, who recently resigned in scandal-plagued disgrace from what was Karl Rove’s office, Don Stewart was weaned at Sen. Mitch McConnell’s teet of political corruption.
There is no honor among these, however, and one has to ask how long it will be before McConnell throws Stewart under the bus. It seems to be a favored strategy of prominent Republicans these days.
McConnell Aide Admits He Pushed Baseless Smears, But Lies About His Supposed ‘Skepticism’Last week, ThinkProgress reported that Don Stewart, the communications director for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), had sent an e-mail to reporters encouraging them to cover the right-wing campaign to smear 12-year old Graeme Frost and his family. In the e-mail, Stewart claimed that research by conservative bloggers proved that Democrats did a bad job “vetting this family.”
Stewart acknowledged yesterday in an interview with the Louisville Courier-Journal that he “pointed out” the smear campaign to reporters. Stewart comically asserts that he “raised skepticism as to the content” of the right-wing bloggers’ research:
He explained yesterday that such e-mails are “part of regular conversation with reporters.”
“I pointed out something that had been in the blogs for a couple of days and had been of increasing interest, but I also raised skepticism as to the content,” Stewart said.
Though Stewart did eventually send subsequent e-mails to reporters, telling them “there’s no story there” and that “the family is legit,” his initial e-mail was anything but skeptical. In fact, he trumpeted the bloggers’ unfounded smears and used them to attack Democrats:
Bloggers have done a little digging and turned up that the Dad owns his own business (and the building it’s in), seems to have some commercial rental income and Graeme and a sister go to a private school that, according to its website, costs about $20k a year for each kid despite the news profiles reporting a family income of only $45k for the Frosts. Could the Dems really have done that bad of a job vetting this family?
The only “skepticism” Stewart showed in his original email was a veiled partisan attack that came in the form of a question. He never “vetted” the research he was propagating to reporters.
As Greg Sargent notes, “when Michelle Malkin pointed her finger at the Frosts and started howling, McConnell’s staff immediately joined in the fun — that is, until they realized that they had a big dud on their hands.”
UPDATE: Stewart also wrote a letter to the editor today further muddling his role in smearing of the Frost family. BluegrassRoots debunks it here.
- Graeme Frost , Mitch McConnell , SCHIP
- Comments(2)
It’s just too perfect. The underlying story of the injured 12-year old who speaks up for SCHIP, the right wing attacks on the kid from Michele Malkin, FreeRepublic.com, Rush Limbaugh, and the involvement of a public employee/GOP hack spreading the vicious lies on a U.S. Senate computer from the office of the Republican floor leader.
It gives us a rare chance to explore the desperation of these guys, their willingness to use lies, government resources and the right wing echo chamber to attack anybody who disagrees with them.
Good job, gentlemen!