I’ve seen the polls, watched the debates, and read the fundraising reports. Rudy Giuliani, for reasons that continue to escape me, is at or near the front of the Republican presidential field, based almost entirely on the belief the former mayor is strong on counter-terrorism policy based on the events of Sept. 11.
About a month ago, Wayne Barrett published a devastating piece on the Village Voice on Giuliani and the “five big lies” surrounding his performance on 9/11. The entire piece, if read, would effectively end Giuliani’s presidential ambitions.
Of course, Barrett’s piece was published in August, where it was likely to be missed. What’s more, not everyone reads the Village Voice (indeed, not everyone reads). Hitting some of the same points in video is more likely to have an effect.
A filmmaker who was behind documentaries that bashed Rupert Murdoch and Wal-Mart is now focusing on Rudy Giuliani, creating an “online viral video campaign” about the presidential candidate timed to coincide with the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attack.
Robert Greenwald on Thursday launched the first of four short videos about Sept. 11 and the Republican former mayor. The others are planned to launch throughout the month.
The videos attack Giuliani by saying he failed to prepare New York City for a major disaster, he ignored sick ground zero workers after the terrorist attack and he profited financially from his association with the tragedy after leaving office in 2001.
“We want to use this forum to reach people and show and tell and say, ‘Look here are some truths that we want you to know,'” Greenwald told The Associated Press. The video blitz has an accompanying web site, therealrudy.org.
The Giuliani campaign blasted Greenwald as “a conspiracy theorist” who is “disconnected from reality.” But therein lies the rub: smearing Greenwald isn’t going to help. The video doesn’t include Greenwald’s opinions; they include the perspectives of Giuliani’s former emergency director.
Take a couple of minutes to watch this:
Giuliani’s gang can go after Greenwald every day, but it doesn’t much matter. When Giuliani’s former emergency director explains that the former mayor is telling a “flat-out lie,” the filmmaker who got the footage is beside the point.
Right now, Republican voters perceive Giuliani as someone who held some impressive press conferences on 9/11, which somehow translates to “leadership” abilities. But it’s only a matter of time. Giuliani’s decisions should be a national scandal that not only force him from the presidential race, but may even shame him permanently.
Inevitably, this is going to become a part of this campaign, and when it does, it’s going to be ugly.