WATERLOO, Iowa, Dec. 19, 2007
The Magic & Bill Show
Washington Post: Basketball Great, Former President Provide A Charisma Assist To Hillary In Iowa
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Play CBS Video Video Magic On The Trail "CBS News RAW": Magic Johnson joins Hillary and Bill Clinton for an unscheduled campaign stop at a Hy-Vee supermarket in Des Moines, Iowa.
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Former president Bill Clinton campaigns with basketball player Earvin "Magic" Johnson on behalf of his wife, Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y,, at Davenport Central High School in Davenport, Iowa, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2007. (AP)
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Photo Essay Hillary Clinton A look at a life and career full of firsts.
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Photo Essay Clinton's 8 Years The former president's travels abroad, and triumphs and troubles at home.
Moments before Bill Clinton and Magic Johnson, the former president and the former point guard, are supposed to take the stage here in the small, no-frills gymnasium of the local Boys & Girls Club, you see it from behind a purple curtain. It's a pouf of white hair bouncing up and down, up and down. Whether it's a hop or a jump is beside the point. What it is, is this: Bill Clinton getting revved up to stump for his wife. It's Bill Clinton . . . getting pumped.
"Oh yeah, he was getting ready," Johnson, who led the Los Angeles Lakers to five NBA championships, explains later. "He was just getting fired up. We both got fired up. He was just jumping, getting ready."
In the frantic rush to the Jan. 3 caucuses in Iowa, the Surrogate-in-Chief has not been making headlines for being psyched up. No, the buzz is that he's meddling, annoyed and angry as the sheen of inevitability has worn off Hillary Clinton's campaign, with everyone bracing for a bare-knuckles contest whose fate might not be decided until the final hours. There have been reports of Bill Clinton, who once joked easily with "The Daily Show's" Jon Stewart about a limited role in the campaign and presidency, seizing control from top campaign advisers and aides. During a recent appearance on "Charlie Rose," he lashed out at the media for not examining Barack Obama's campaign with the same attention to detail they've given his wife's. Sitting in the darkness of the set, Clinton seemed, well, bitter.
It hasn't helped that Oprah Winfrey and Obama have become the most popular performing duo since George Michael and that other guy in Wham!
Enter Magic Johnson. Heck, in the 1980 Finals, Magic was called on to replace an ailing Kareem Abdul-Jabbar at center -- scoring 42 points and seven assists to win the series from Philadelphia. Who else would you call upon to guard Oprah?
"I applaud her efforts and what she's doing for Barack," Johnson says. "I don't know whether I'm supposed to be the answer to Oprah, but we just love our candidates."
But why him, here and now?
"I'm a businessman," Johnson says. "I think people know that, recognize that. I helped Bloomberg, helped in his reelection. I helped Antonio [Villaraigosa] become the mayor of Los Angeles. Why I'm here? I'm involved in politics and I want the best for this country."
Remember something about the Clintons: They're winners and Hillary Clinton wants to win. She wants to win because she has the best experience, the best vision. Bill Clinton wants her to win, and he's supporting her.
Magic JohnsonWhat's missing? Try kids. You might have expected that an event at the Boys & Girls Club would feature hundreds of screaming children running around singing Hillary victory songs. Except for a few young ones, it was a crowd, of Hillary supporters in the latter stages of life. A large number of them were members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, a union that has endorsed Clinton.
"Look at the crowd here," says Dhirendra Vajpeyi, a 61-year-old political science professor at the University of Northern Iowa. "It's older than Obama's. I talk to my students and they have real reservations about Hillary and her sincerity. They don't have a good feeling."
Among the few younglings are 11-year-old Justice Smith and his 14-year-old-brother, Marcus. Sitting in the stands, Marcus says he came to see Clinton for reasons he doesn't know. Justice is here for Magic, he says, having seen him perform in NBA reruns.
"He's pretty cool," Justice says, clutching a basketball. "He doesn't like to think he's the best like LeBron James."
Well behind schedule, the main attractions are introduced to the crowd. They are an odd pair: the exhausted-looking Clinton wearing a sweater, black jeans and cowboy boots, and Johnson, who towers over his counterpart, dressed in black. Yet both men have suffered public moral lapses only to find redemption. When Johnson disclosed he was HIV-positive, it brought to light his private misdeeds, but in time he became an advocate for AIDS research and health. Likewise Clinton weathered the storm of the Lewinsky scandal and impeachment and has become involved in humanitarian causes.
But once onstage the two seem to draw energy from each other. Clinton begins with a short introduction of Johnson, who lays out why he wants a Clinton presidency. Among other reasons: She's the best person to restore our relationships with people abroad.
When Clinton takes the microphone again, he seems as if he's never going to stop. He recalls his wife's early career helping impoverished children and the Arkansas school system. He talks about her work in the Senate and on global warming. Doing that thing that Bill Clinton does, he transforms his wife from the safe choice into the crusader of what's been good in America and what can be good going forward.
"You will never, ever have a better chance to vote for a better agent of change," he says, the subtext of Obama bubbling up through the floorboards.
Afterward, sitting in a crowded office surrounded by items he has to autograph, Johnson says, "Remember something about the Clintons: They're winners and Hillary Clinton wants to win. She wants to win because she has the best experience, the best vision. Bill Clinton wants her to win, and he's supporting her."
Staff writer Anne E. Kornblut and staff researcher Rena Kirsch contributed to this report.
© 2007 The Washington Post Company
- I don''t agree with Magic''s candidate choice but I certainly respect any American, celebrity or not, who''s willing to travel halfway across the country and give up their time to support the person they believe in.
Whether it''s Magic or Oprah or Chuck Norris or the many campaign volunteers of the different campaigns, they all deserve respect for putting their actions where their convictions are and not just sitting in front of a computer and venting like all of us. - Reply to this comment
- I hope Magic realizes that if the cleaners couldn''t properly clean a Blue Dress, a black outfit may be even tougher!
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- Posted by RowdyTexan2 at 02:28 PM : Dec 19, 2007
You are so right they fear Clinton because he was is one of the most popular Presidents in US history rank 3rd or 4th. Furthermore, he was elected by the majority twice not appointed by the supreme court.
And of course they should be afraid because if she does a better job then say Bush boy it will prove that they have done nothing and may not see power for 100 years. Remember they tasted power and don''t want to let go but of course their time came and went because they abused the power that was given to them. - Reply to this comment
- Hillary has no character of her own, so she has to rely on others for assistance. This is caused by Singleplaneriatic Syndrome. It is a terrible affliction, and the American people need to be educated on it''s dreadful effects.
Signs that you may be afflicted with Singleplaneriatic Syndrome:
1. An irritating, droning voice.
2. Thinking that you are the obvious selection for anything.
3. Calling your weaknesses as strengths.
4. Claiming positive traits/strengths that you actually do not have.
What makes this affliction so troubling is that people''s natural insticts are to help to hide it from the person afflicted, thus denying that person treatment that is desperately required.
The person suffering from Singleplaneriatic Syndrome should be forced to look at themselves for what the afflication has done to them. In most cases, the sheer terror of realizing that their character is gone would be incentive enough for people to seek treatment.
In severe cases, even this will not suffice. After years of not receiveing treatment, these people will continue for the rest of their lives without character.
So, please send money to the Society to Eradicate Singleplaneriatic Syndrome today. A person without character is a terrible thing.
Hillary has refused to be our poster child, as her being in the final stages of this malidy makes it imposible for her to ever be cured, thus she refuses to beleive that she is without character. - Reply to this comment
- Don''t quit your day job, Magic. Your ''winners'' are the biggest losers around.
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- Hitlery is more of a fascist warmongering neocon than many republicans are.
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- RowdyTexan2 Pace yourself, son...you''re gonna stroke out before the fun really starts if you''re not careful.
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- Maybe Clinton and Obama should team up. THAT would be an interesting campaign for progress.
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Wow, I''ve never noticed this before, but when Bill Clinton stands next to Magic Johnson, you can really see the resemblance.
Bill Clinton really was the first black president!!
Sorry Obama.- Reply to this comment
- "but George Sr was never ever seen publically speaking on the campaign trail for George Jr. "
Bull! The whole family was out promoting this jackarse. Sr Bush spoke in my town!
The articles the last two days, are already the republicans gearing up like vultures, they don''t want to have to run against Hillary, and they''re running scared because Bill was a hugely succeful president and part of her support group.
They''re scared they won''t be able to put over another fake election and they need to run against somebody not prepared, not experienced enuff, not powerful enuff...
Go Hillary! - Reply to this comment
- Well, while the Republicans spew hate this group is moving forward. Go Hillary!!
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- Great stuff. Magic knows the best when he sees it.
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- Obama 08
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