https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcBblq-QOo4
Kellyanne Conway parlayed her experience as a public opinion pollster to a successful run as a presidential campaign manager.
She’s now a senior adviser to the new president of the United States.
Conway now has become the face and the voice of one of the more remarkable verbal miscues many of us have heard in some time.
She talked this morning about White House press secretary Sean Spicer’s version of a silly story dealing with the size of the crowd at Donald J. Trump’s inaugural. Then she referred to something called Spicer’s “alternative facts.”
“Meet the Press” moderator Chuck Todd then sought to clarify what he heard by responding that there are facts and there are falsehoods.
Thus, a punchline was born.
This business of electing a new president is quite serious, indeed. I don’t intend to beat this horse any deader than it is, but in its way, Conway’s “alternative facts” notion seems to be the perfect metaphor for the discussion that prompted it.
Spicer’s angry rejoinder to the media about their reporting of the crowd size was ridiculous on its face. Then came Conway’s “alternative facts” gaffe.
Conway’s role as senior adviser requires her to speak well of her boss. I get it. Honest, I do. I don’t know what she’s thinking privately, of course, but it seems quite reasonable to believe she might be kicking herself tonight for uttering that silly statement.
Maybe she ought to take a page from former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, the president’s pick to become energy secretary. Perry said this past week he now regrets calling for the elimination of the Department of Energy when he, too, was running for president.
Conway might consider taking a couple of days away from media representatives and then tell them “I regret” providing so much grist for late-night comedians.
I am one American who would accept her contrition.