Archive for the ‘Q & A’ Category
Q & A, Views on News • January 12th, 2009
The long goodbye
by Chris Lato
With his final presidential news conference, George W. Bush has offered a listing of his mistakes as well as a defense of his actions.
Will the belated self-criticism matter to his enemies? Of course not. I’ve often thought President Bush made a tactical error by not willing to own up to his administration’s clear mistakes sooner and offering correctives. He is a ‘stay the course’ guy, occasionally to his detriment.
2008 Primaries, Q & A, Speeches, Views on News • October 1st, 2008
The Ifill-Obama connection
by Chris Lato
This is a good example of why the right doesn’t trust the mainstream media.
The book is called “The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama.” Its author is Gwen Ifill – who is also the moderator for Thursday’s night’s vice-presidential debate.
Granted, the McCain camp went along with the selection of Ifill to moderate this high-stakes debate, the only one featuring the two running mates. They claim they didn’t know about Ifill’s book, to be released on Inauguration Day and is said to feature glowing passages about Obama.
Promotions, Q & A, public relations • March 31st, 2008
Stepping into the lion’s den
by Chris Lato
Fellow Wispundit Karl Robe tipped me off to a fascinating interview segment on WISN-AM’s morning program today with state Sen. Lena Taylor, who’s looking to unseat incumbent Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker in tomorrow’s election.
It’s painful but worth a listen. (Scroll down to hour two, part two – it aired today). Things go downhill quickly due to a confrontational host who tries to step on Taylor’s answers, and Taylor swinging away, basically accusing the host of reading off the Walker campaign’s talking points.
Who thought this was a good idea? Obviously Taylor’s campaign was approached to appear on the program in the interests of providing equal time to both candidates. In general, WISN listeners are not part of Sen. Taylor’s support base, to put it charitably.
But most importantly, I took nothing away from the interview. What is the point of Lena Taylor running for this office? What does she want to do? What is her vision for Milwaukee County? I have no idea. Sen. Taylor had a prime opportunity to potentially connect with a group that normally wouldn’t be in her camp, and instead she took the bait and went rabid by trying to out-yell the host. If that was a voter’s first impression of Lena Taylor…not good.
I’m of the mindset that one should rarely, if ever, turn down media opportunities. Just about any mainstream media opportunity presents a potentially positive and even valuable outcome for a campaign…IF you are properly prepared for the appearance. If I was Sen. Taylor’s campaign advisor, I definitely would have told her to appear on WISN. And I would have advised her to handle herself in the exact opposite fashion, and extensively rehearsed her for that appearance.
Would she have listened? I don’t know, as I don’t know Sen. Taylor and how well she might have responded to media coaching. I can say that if she does pay for a media coach, that coach ought to refund her money.
Back in the day, I used to book media appearances for a top Wisconsin Republican who never looked forward to appearing on Wisconsin Public Radio programs, saying it was akin to stepping into the lion’s den. However, he recognized the value of taking on one’s ‘enemies’ head-on, not shying away from the challenge of confrontational callers who disagree vehemently with you.
Be disciplined, on-message, assertive when you need to be, clear-headed, and don’t let anyone bait you into losing your cool. If you are well-prepared in advance and feel secure in your answers, you should be able to handle yourself and get out of the lion’s den in one piece.
Leadership, Messaging, Q & A, Views on News • March 7th, 2008
Voter ID prompts partisan scuffle
by Chris Lato
You have to see it to believe it. A news conference at the state capitol rapidly degenerates into something approaching a cage match. Watch the video – it’s worth it.
The merits of requiring photo ID to vote in Wisconsin are subject to debate (I am squarely in the pro-photo ID camp). Looking past the partisan wrangling that is presenting the ID issue from going before the voters as a referendum question, I was struck by how quickly things fell apart at the news conference itself. The Senate Republicans were shanghaied, and quickly lost control of their message by failing to take the steps necessary to control those in attendance. They called a news conference in an open part of the capitol. Some Democrats showed up and basically took over. It really doesn’t look great for anyone.
I have seen these news conference hijackings happen before. It’s bad form, but depending on the venue you select to host a news event, you leave yourself open to shenanigans. Suddenly, the story becomes about the fight, not the issue. The message is lost in the jumble.
more »
Recent Comments:
- Matt: No one says roll over. What we say is have some manners. You might want to stop with the hangings in effigy and...
- Greg: “Gov. Doyle may be stinging from the criticism of the tax credits…” The governor wasn’t...
- Todd Lohenry: Hey, Chris! How about cross posting on http://rightsideofwisconsin.co m? See...
- dan: I think history will show Bush to be both worse and better than how we view him. As documents become...
- Clay Simchick: Scott, I asked for the same report you are offering to Chris, yet your response to my request was to...
Browse by Topic
- 2008 Primaries (112)
- Branding Politix (47)
- Creative (26)
- Events (11)
- Fundraising (8)
- Global Concerns (4)
- Grass Roots Organization (18)
- Leadership (57)
- Messaging (85)
- Promotions (12)
- public relations (53)
- Q & A (4)
- Report from the Field (4)
- Research & Ideas (4)
- Speeches (20)
- Strategic Blueprints (34)
- Uncategorized (5)
- Views on News (166)
- wispundits (32)
Learning Center
Recent Headlines
Monthly Archives
Browse by Tag
-
Al Gore
Barack Obama
Bill Clinton
Brett Favre
Clinton
CNN
Congress
Democrats
DNC
economy
election
Gableman
GOP
Gov. Doyle
Governor Doyle
healthcare
Hillary Clinton
Huckabee
Iraq
Jim Doyle
Joe Biden
John McCain
Journal Sentinel
Legislature
McCain
Milwaukee
Milwaukee County
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
New York Times
Obama
politics
President Bush
President Obama
public relations
Republicans
Russ Feingold
Sarah Palin
Scott Walker
Supreme Court
taxes
vice president
Wisconsin
Wisconsin Legislature
Wisconsin Public Radio
Wisconsin Supreme Court
Blogroll
Talk Back
Loading ...