The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Media -- Dont Quote Me  |  News Features  |  Talking Politics

The incompetence candidate

Tom Reilly stumbles again
By ADAM REILLY  |  August 17, 2006

060818_coke_main
COKE HEAD: Killer Coke’s Ray Rogers at a Deval Patrick event in Southie.
When Martin Lomasney ruled Boston’s West End a century ago, dirty tricks were key to his political success — but so was discretion. “Never write if you can speak,” Lomasney famously counseled; “never speak if you can nod; never nod if you can wink.”

Wise words, these. Just ask Dave Guarino.

Earlier this month, Guarino took over as communications director for the gubernatorial campaign of Tom Reilly, the Democratic attorney general (AG), after previously doing the same job in the AG’s office. Apparently, one of Guarino’s first tasks in his new role was to coordinate with Ray Rogers — head of the New York–based Campaign to Stop Killer Coke — in an effort to discredit Deval Patrick, Reilly’s rival for the Democratic nomination and a former Coca-Cola Company general counsel. On August 3, his first day with the campaign, Guarino outlined a strategy for introducing Rogers to the Boston media and e-mailed it to several other Reilly insiders; this correspondence continued on August 4.

Fast-forward to Saturday, August 12, when hefty chunks of those e-mails made their way into in a damning column by the Boston Globe’s Joan Vennochi. Coupled with Guarino’s attendant denial — “our campaign has had no involvement with [Rogers], that’s the truth” — the excerpts in question undercut Rogers’s ability to turn Patrick’s Coke connection into a campaign issue. They made Guarino look foolish. And they raised fresh doubts about the political talents of Reilly, who’d been enjoying an unblemished summer after a stretch of bad gaffes earlier this year. Now, with the Democratic primary just five weeks away, voters who might have attributed Reilly’s earlier blunders to simple bad luck have new reason to wonder: if the AG gets the nomination, could he make it through the general election without self-destructing? “The idea of Reilly being inept had scabbed over,” says one Democratic consultant. “This scratches the scab.”

Flying low
The good news for Reilly and his supporters is that Killer Coke–gate isn’t getting the level of attention Reilly’s previous errors did. In January — after the Herald reported Reilly’s intercession in the investigation of a crash that killed the daughters of a Reilly-campaign contributor — the Herald ran with the subject, columnists at the Globe weighed in, and TV and radio covered it extensively. When, just a few weeks later, Reilly made the disastrous decision to name Marie St. Fleur as his running mate, that became a huge story as well.

So far, though, the Killer Coke scandal hasn’t driven the news in the same way. On Sunday, August 13, the day after Vennochi’s column ran in the paper, the Globe followed with a slight item that was written by LeMont Calloway, a summer intern, and buried on page B5. That same day, the Herald’s “Pols and Politics” column cited Killer Coke as a sign that Reilly’s candidacy was floundering. On Monday, however, neither the Globe nor the Herald addressed the subject — and while it got some play on talk radio, it had zero presence on TV. On Tuesday, a Globe story (by newly minted State House reporter Cristina Silva) quoted Reilly professing ignorance about Guarino’s plans but adding that Rogers raised “fair questions”; once again, the Herald said nothing.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Ship without a rudder, Reversal of fortune, Kicking and screaming, More more >
  Topics: Talking Politics , Deval Patrick, Frank Phillips, U.S. Government,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
Comments

Today's Event Picks
More Information
Candid camera
The tale of Mary Jean and Paul Pechonis is truly Byzantine (see Dan Kennedy’s write-up in the Ninth Annual Phoenix Muzzle Awards), but here’s the gist: it’s about whether citizens should be able to watch law enforcement behaving badly. Now there’s a new twist in the Jean/Pechonis saga: on August 9, Attorney General Tom Reilly appealed the judge’s injunction that had allowed a videotape of Pechonis being arrested by State Police in his home — which was then searched, allegedly without a warrant — to remain online at Conte2006.com. Should the public be able to see this stuff? (And did we mention that Reilly’s running for governor?) Take a look at YouTube and decide for yourself.
ARTICLES BY ADAM REILLY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   DIFFERENCE OF OPINION  |  November 06, 2009
    It’s been three months since Peter Canellos replaced Renée Loth as editor of the Boston Globe ’s editorial page.
  •   THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING ERNIE  |  October 19, 2009
    Media feuds don’t come any nastier than the metastasizing spat between Boston Herald columnist Howie Carr and one “Ernie Boch III,” the pseudonymous blogger at the liberal Web site Blue Mass. Group. (Note: the blogger is no relation to the car dealer.)
  •   LATTER DAY TAINT  |  October 10, 2009
    Fifteen years ago, Glenn Beck was a small-market DJ with a drinking problem, no friends, and bleak professional prospects. Today, he’s a Fox News superstar averaging 2.4 million viewers, an inexorably successful author, and the leader of a popular movement that condemns government in general and President Barack Obama in particular.
  •   PHILADELPHIA STORY  |  October 01, 2009
    The local-media story line of the moment is the push by Stephen Taylor — Milton resident, Yale media lecturer, and former Boston Globe executive VP — to recapture the paper his family ran for more than a century, a goal he's pursuing with the backing of (among others) his cousin Benjamin Taylor, the former Globe publisher.
  •   MENINO'S JUNKED MAIL  |  September 16, 2009
    Two years ago, when I wrote a column griping about the Boston media's apathy-inducing disinterest in city politics, Boston Globe metro editor Brian McGrory told me his paper had given the lackluster 2007 elections as much coverage as they deserved, but hinted that things would be different in 2009.

 See all articles by: ADAM REILLY

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group