Wolf Blitzer Fawns to Bill Clinton Over Chelsea: 'She Got the Best of Her Mom, the Best of Her Dad'
CNN was called the 'Clinton News Network' during the 90s for a reason. After letting Bill Clinton get away with his ridiculous excuse
for supporting a temporary extension of the Bush tax cuts, Wolf Blitzer
kissed up to the former president by fawning over his daughter Chelsea
in the Thursday interview.
And Blitzer had a sugary introduction ready. "[W]hen we spoke about the
President's daughter, Chelsea, his face lit up with pride," Blitzer
cooed.
Are journalists supposed to sound like next-door neighbors marveling
over how the kids on the block are all grown-up? "I have known her since
she was 13 years old when you guys came to Washington," Blitzer told
Clinton.
Speaking of Chelsea's recent presentation at a Vital Voices event, he
gushed that "I looked at her and I saw in her eyes as I was watching
her, she was very impressive. I saw the best of Bill Clinton and the
best of Hillary Clinton in Chelsea Clinton."
[Video below. Audio here.]
Just this past Monday, The Situation Room had more soft coverage of Clinton as it played a lengthy four-minute clip of him speaking at a Democratic fund raiser from the previous night. Clinton took shots at the Republicans and CNN was simply content to echo his attacks without any scrutiny, chuckling that he "gets away with a lot" now that he is out of office.
A transcript of the segment, which aired on June 7 on The Situation Room at 5:55 p.m. EDT, is as follows:
WOLF BLITZER: My one-on-one interview here in Chicago with the former
president, Bill Clinton, wasn't just all about politics and policy. It
was also a little bit about family and when we spoke about the
President's daughter, Chelsea, his face lit up with pride.
(Video Clip)
BLITZER: Let's talk about the Clinton Global Initiative. This is an
important meeting you're having. You do a lot of work around the world
and now you're doing work here in the United States. And I was intrigued
that Chelsea, your daughter, she is here now too. What do you want her
to do here? What is her role?
BILL CLINTON, former President of the United States: Well, first, she
is an active participant in our foundation activities. She's on a number
of the foundation boards overseeing you know health care. She is very
interested in CGI. She knows a lot about the economy. She has done a lot
of work in it. And so we try to get her involved in all of our things,
and her role is always something that's to discuss between her and our
CGI staff. But she can -- she knows a lot about workforce preparedness.
She knows a lot about saving companies in trouble and reopening them and
you know --
BLITZER: I raise the question because I have known her since she was 13
years old when you guys came to Washington. And last night I was at the
Kennedy Center at the Vital Voices Event which helps women around the
world. And she made a presentation there, and I looked at her and I saw
in her eyes as I was watching her, she was very impressive. I saw the
best of Bill Clinton and the best of Hillary Clinton in Chelsea Clinton.
And you have probably seen that as well. And I wonder if you want to
talk a little bit about that.
CLINTON: Oh, I'm really proud of her. I think she is a fine person, the
most important thing to me. And she is smart, caring, able and
determined. I think she is, you know, terrific but – and I got a great
son-in-law, which is always a good thing, to like your in-laws, you
know. So I want her to do whatever she wants to do, but I am really
grateful now that with this work she is doing, you know on television
and the work she does at NYU and the college – the course she is
teaching at Columbia that she is still willing to be so active in our
foundation activities. She really cares about this stuff and she has
helped me do a lot of work at the Foundation, try to improve the
management you know and just manage our massive growth. It's fun. I am
grateful to her.
BLITZER: She got the best of her mom, the best of her dad –
CLINTON: Yeah she got her father's energy –
BLITZER: She's a good girl.
CLINTON: – and her mother's brains and character. She's – she's something.
-- Matt Hadro is a News Analyst at the Media Research Center