WELCOME to the debut of “The Truth Is!”, a blog of reporting and commentary that aims to be informative, thoughtful and provocative. At least initially, the blog will have a strong heartland flavor by virtue of the connection of a number of us to Cowles family journalism. I am former editor of the Des Moines Register’s opinion pages. Another contributor, Michael Gartner, is former editor of the paper; he later served as president of NBC News. Another former Register editor who has agreed to contribute, Geneva Overholser, is director of the University of Southern California’s Annenberg school of journalism. Followers of the blog will have access also to the work of Herbert Strentz of Des Moines, a close Register and other newspaper watcher who once headed Drake University’s journalism school. Bill Leonard, a longtime Register editorial writer, will add insights.

“The Truth Is!” will be supervised by my daughter, Marcia Wolff, a communications lawyer for 20 years with Arnold and Porter (Washington, D.C.). Invaluable technical assistance in assembling and maintaining the blog is provided by my grandsons Julian Cranberg, a college first-year, and Daniel Wolff, a high school senior.

If you detect a whiff of nepotism in this operation, so be it. All of it is strictly a labor of love. —Gil Cranberg

Friday, January 10, 2014

Gilbert Cranberg: CHRISTIE’S BLAME THE STAFF STRATEGY

No need to count the ballots, this year’s award for injured innocence goes by acclamation to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie for the blame he heaped on his staff in connection with the traffic chaos that endangered lives and inconvenienced thousands in a four-day gridlock deliberately engineered by Christie’s administration. So much contrition is being voiced by Christie that there’s enough left over to apply to next year’s award. And for the year after that.

Christie dug himself into a hole initially by ridiculing and mocking concern for victims of the traffic mess. He thought better of the strategy after callous e-mails by his staff surfaced chortling that it was time for traffic tie-ups in Fort Lee, NJ. Christie’s strategy of distancing himself from the incident by blaming stupidity and incompetence on his staff invites the question: Who put those incompetents on his payroll? You can bet that Christie’s rivals for the Republican presidential nomination will be asking variants of that question all the way up to the GOP nominating convention. And if they don’t, the Democrats surely will.

My guess is that Christie’s presidential hopes are doomed, done in as much by the blame-the-staff strategy as anything. Voters dislike incompetence, but they also prize loyalty. By turning so viciously on his staff he is inviting voters to wonder about the character of a person who would save his own political skin at the expense of the little people under him.

As problematic as anything was his gratuitous cruelty to a young woman staffer with whom he said he could no longer bear to be in the same room.

The staffers whose necks are now in a noose mistakenly thought they were doing Christie a favor. It turns out the favor was to voters at large who now know more about Christie than they ever expected.

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