I don’t want to alarm anyone, but it appears that Rudy Giuliani plans to use the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, as some kind of selling point for his presidential campaign. Shocking, I know.
Apparently, this surprising revelation has just reached the New York Post, which reported this morning that Giuliani is apparently starting to use 9/11 to — get this — appeal to Republican voters.
Rudy Giuliani is trumpeting his leadership in the wake of 9/11 in campaign mailings to voters in Iowa and New Hampshire.
In one piece, Giuliani is hailed as “America’s Mayor” who displayed “Strength through Leadership.”
While Giuliani’s supporters have long boasted about his performance after the attacks, he himself had not, until now, mentioned it as prominently.
I suppose it’s possible that the New York Post’s reporters and editors don’t pay close attention to the news, so they really believe that Giuliani has not “prominently” emphasized 9/11 as a campaign selling point.
Perhaps the Post might consider taking a moment to watch this clip collection, from TPMtv producer/editor Ben Craw.
There’s a very good reason Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.) got big laughs a few weeks when he said, “[T]here’s only three things he mentions in a sentence: a noun and a verb and 9/11.”
Of course, given the subject, I’d be remiss if I neglected to mention that Giuliani’s 9/11 record should actually be humiliating to the former mayor, and most of his claims about heroism are completely bogus.
And there are some FDNY members and their families who aren’t going to let this go.
A group of 9/11 firefighters and victims’ family members with eyes on derailing Republican Rudy Giuliani’s presidential campaign is close to a decision on forming an entity that would run issue ads in key early nominating states.
“TV made him a hero, and we’ll use TV to take him down,” New York Fire Chief Jim Riches told ABC News. […]
This Monday, the firefighters and family members are holding a meeting at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire hoping to spread the word about what they say is Giuliani’s “egregious” use of 9/11 for political gain.
The group also is considering additional trips to early presidential primary states Iowa, Florida and South Carolina.
Riches, who lost his firefighter son Jimmy in the World Trade Center’s north tower, said, “We don’t want him running on 9/11 or the bodies of all these dead people or my dead son saying that he did a great job that day.”
Stay tuned.