Giuliani pushes back on ISG scoop

Following up on an earlier item, Newsday reports today that Rudy Giuliani was a member of the Iraq Study Group, but he blew off the panel — and was ultimately forced to resign — because he apparently preferred to spend more time delivering lucrative private speeches. After Giuliani skipped a series of important ISG meetings, James Baker gave him an ultimatum: do the work or quit. Giuliani chose the latter.

This afternoon, the Giuliani campaign, apparently aware of the potential damage a story like this can do, started pushing back.

“Once again, the paper wrote a story with little regard to the facts,” the Giuliani campaign said. “The facts are these – as someone considered a potential presidential candidate, the Mayor didn’t want the group’s work to become a political football. That, coupled with time constraints, led to his decision.”

That may sound like a fairly coherent explanation, but given what we know, it’s almost certainly false. Giuliani wasn’t worried about the appearance of impropriety; he simply decided to put his speaking gigs ahead of the most pressing foreign policy crisis facing the United States today.

Giuliani failed to show up for a pair of two-day sessions that occurred during his tenure, the sources said – and both times, they conflicted with paid public appearances shown on his recent financial disclosure. Giuliani quit the group during his busiest stretch in 2006, when he gave 20 speeches in a single month that brought in $1.7 million. […]

Giuliani’s campaign said that the former New York mayor did participate in Iraq Study Group activities but refused Newsday’s repeated requests to explain how.

In fact, Team Giuliani’s defense is so easily debunked, I’m surprised they’d put it out there.

Consider a quick timeline of events:

* The ISG panel appointed on March 15, 2006.

* The first ISG plenary session was on April 11. Giuliani didn’t show up; he was giving a $100,000 speech in Atlanta, and was helping Ralph Reed raise campaign funds.

* The second ISG plenary session was on May 18. Giuliani didn’t show up; he was giving a speech in South Korea for $200,000.

* Giuliani resigned on May 24.

If Giuliani was worried in mid-May that his participation with the ISG may politicize its mission, why did he commit to the panel in mid-March?

Look, this isn’t complicated. James Baker’s policy assistant who helped run the ISG went on the record saying that Giuliani’s attendance was important, he didn’t attend, so he was offered a choice to quit. He took it.

Giuliani may be embarrassed about this now — he should be — but his campaign will have to do better than the “political football” defense. Maybe he can just admit that he placed a higher value on giving lucrative speeches to private clients?

Now we get to what Giuliani is really all about..$$$$$$$$$

  • Let me see if I can get this sorted out…what was the particular reason Rudy was asked to be an ISG member? Was it his experience on 9/11, was it as a former mayor of a major city, what was it? And did those who put together the group members not have any inkling that Rudy was contemplating a run for president? One would think that this would already have been considered by the time Rudy was formally asked to be a member.

    And how dumb is Rudy that he didn’t see an opportunity to really build his knowledge and credibility on Middle East issues in general and Iraq in particular, which would be a huge plus for him as a presidential contender?

    What I think we now know for sure about Rudy is the money will always win. And I suspect that this will not be the last instance we hear about where Rudy chose his love of money over principles.

  • I agree TR. Every Democrat, from now until election day, should mention this. And they shouldn’t just point it out. They should react with anger and disgust. Then they should mention the firefighters from New York, who aren’t very happy with Il Duce.

  • “Thank God that George Bush is our president”

    Couldn’t anyone who wanted simply destroy Giuliani by playing this
    sound bite again and again?

    “Thank God that George Bush is our president, and thank God that Dick Cheney, a man with his experience and his knowledge and his strength and his background, is our vice president.”-Rudolph Giuliani August 30, 2004

  • How can a speech Rudy gives in Korea for $200K not be considered a bribe?

  • In fact, Team Giuliani’s defense is so easily debunked, I’m surprised they’d put it out there.

    Of course they’d put it out there! They assume Joe Public isn’t going to do the research to challenge it. They are also betting that if the MSM does bring it up, it will be buried in between Paris and Lindsey updates and won’t even get a second glance from the viewing audience.

  • The ISG probaby thought he was appropriate as a participant because he was the mayor of the city where the biggest terrorist attack in modern history occurred and was the mayor when it happened, and therefore had as good a bird’s eye view as anybody of what that kind of unprecedented attack can mean for a major modern city’s resources, people, infrastructure, response capabilities, etc. Little did they know he was just an airhead and wasn’t that engaged in 9/11’s cleanup except for making sure that how it was handled redounded to his own personal and selfish benefit.

  • I’m sure a lot of people found Giuliani’s presence reassuring at the time but they weren’t paying enough attention to what he was actually doing and wasn’t.

  • The free ride for Herr Rudy continues, I couldn’t find any mention of it in the prominent spots of the big papers this morning. I suppose we should seek solace in the fact that the inevitable meltdown is going to happen in front of a much larger audience than a lightweight normally gets.

    And if the meltdown doesn’t change anything, if, like Bush’s absolutely frightening performance in the first Bush-Kerry debate, it means nothing, then it’s obviously time to either pack the bags for another Country, or to take up Arms and take this Country back from the Crackers before they blow up the World right before our eyes.

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