Dec 30, 2008 6:20 am US/Eastern
The Caroline Kennedy Firestorm Continues
NY Media Lights Up Senate Hopeful After Latest Tour
NEW YORK (CBS/AP) ―
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Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg waits for the start of the third presidential debate in the David S. Mack Sports and Exhibition Complex at Hofstra University on Oct. 15, 2008 in Hempstead, N.Y.
Win McNamee/Getty Images
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Caroline Kennedy's second act as a Senate hopeful didn't get much better reviews from New York's press than her first.
A New York Daily News columnist said "the wheels of the bandwagon are coming off." New York Post State Editor Fred Dicker already put her on his list of 2008 losers. And The New York Times said "she seemed less like a candidate than an idea of one: eloquent but vague, largely undefined and seemingly determined to remain that way."
Last Friday after weeks of silence, Kennedy agreed to sit down for interviews with The Associated Press and New York City cable TV's NY1. Over the weekend, she scheduled another round of interviews with other news organizations from The New York Times to the Buffalo News. The New York Daily News noted she frequently used the phrase "you know" and "ums" during the interview, which was skewered in political blogs Monday.
"There has been some very rough comments," said Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist College poll, following the series of interviews she provided over the weekend. "I have been surprised," he said. "The welcome mat has not been out from everybody."
Kennedy spokesman Stefan Friedman didn't immediately respond to requests for comment Monday.
It's been three weeks since Kennedy said she was interested in the seat expected to be vacated by Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, President-elect Barack Obama's choice for secretary of state. Two weeks ago, she took a quick upstate tour to talk to mayors, but barely spoke to the press. Critics, including some Democrats, compared her lack of government experience to Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's much-maligned credentials as a Republican candidate for vice president.
She drew criticism from news organizations that she ducked basic questions about issues and wasn't specific about why she wants to be, or should be, New York's junior senator.
In interviews over the weekend, she offered explanations for running that included the 9/11 attacks on Manhattan, where she has lived since the 1960s, Barack Obama's encouragement, and the commitment to public service by her father, President John F. Kennedy, and others in her family.
For some, that was reminiscent of a 1979 interview that helped undo her uncle's presidential campaign. Sen. Edward Kennedy didn't clearly explain why he wanted to be president much beyond citing family history when questioned by CBS newsman Roger Mudd.
Political science Professor Robert McClure of Syracuse University's Maxwell School saw the connection. He was at a dinner party Sunday night with many liberal Democrats, but none supported Kennedy.
"It reminds me over and over again of that episode," he said.
"There wasn't active disgruntlement, either," he said. "But there was no one in that setting who did not feel she was unfairly trading on her name and had given insufficient reason for why she seeks the job."
Kennedy, who has cultivated her privacy as a lawyer, author and advocate for public schools, sought the job after Clinton was nominated by Obama to be secretary of state. She is one of several hopefuls seeking appointment by Gov. David Paterson to the two years remaining on the term.
But Kennedy and the other candidates, most of them elected officials, don't have the benefit of months of open campaigning that Clinton had in the 2000 Senate race.
She turned back challengers and turned around critics who called her a carpetbagger to win two terms after the retirement of Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a well regarded elder statesmen.
She also had Moynihan, who presented Clinton as a candidate during a press conference at his upstate farm. The pair strolled down a country lane, almost as if Moynihan was giving Clinton away at a wedding.
Kennedy has no well-established New York Democrat at her side. Her biggest booster is New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the Democrat-turned-Republican-turned independent.
Without a Moynihan-like patron, her interest in the Senate seat over many others with more experience can be seen as "the pursuit of an entitlement," McClure said.
(© 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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