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Empty victory for a hollow man How Norm Coleman sold his soul for a Senate seat.
Salon.com ^ | Nov. 7, 2002 | By Garrison Keillor

Posted on 11/08/2002 5:13:50 PM PST by AlwaysLurking

Empty victory for a hollow man How Norm Coleman sold his soul for a Senate seat.

http://www.salon.com/politics/feature/2002/11/07/minnesota/index_np.html By Garrison Keillor

Nov. 7, 2002 | Norm Coleman won Minnesota because he was well-financed and well-packaged. Norm is a slick retail campaigner, the grabbiest and touchingest and feelingest politician in Minnesota history, a hugger and baby-kisser, and he's a genuine boomer candidate who reinvents himself at will. The guy is a Brooklyn boy who became a left-wing student radical at Hofstra University with hair down to his shoulders, organized antiwar marches, said vile things about Richard Nixon, etc. Then he came west, went to law school, changed his look, went to work in the attorney general's office in Minnesota. Was elected mayor of St. Paul as a moderate Democrat, then swung comfortably over to the Republican side. There was no dazzling light on the road to Damascus, no soul-searching: Norm switched parties as you'd change sport coats.

Norm is glib. I once organized a dinner at the Minnesota Club to celebrate F. Scott Fitzgerald's birthday and Norm came, at the suggestion of his office, and spoke, at some length and with quite some fervor, about how much Fitzgerald means to all of us in St. Paul, and it was soon clear to anyone who has ever graded 9th grade book reports that the mayor had never read Fitzgerald. Nonetheless, he spoke at great length, with great feeling. Last month, when Bush came to sprinkle water on his campaign, Norm introduced him by saying, "God bless America is a prayer, and I believe that this man is God's answer to that prayer." Same guy.

(Jesse Ventura, of course, wouldn't have been caught dead blathering at an F. Scott Fitzgerald dinner about how proud we are of the Great Whoever-He-Was and his vision and his dream blah-blah-blah, and that was the refreshing thing about Jesse. The sort of unctuous hooey that comes naturally and easily to Norm Coleman Jesse would be ashamed to utter in public. Give the man his due. He spoke English. He didn't open his mouth and emit soap bubbles. He was no suck up. He had more dignity than to kiss the president's shoe.)

Norm got a free ride from the press. St. Paul is a small town and anybody who hangs around the St. Paul Grill knows about Norm's habits. Everyone knows that his family situation is, shall we say, very interesting, but nobody bothered to ask about it, least of all the religious people in the Republican Party. They made their peace with hypocrisy long ago. So this false knight made his way as an all-purpose feel-good candidate, standing for vaguely Republican values, supporting the president.

He was 9 points down to Wellstone when the senator's plane went down. But the tide was swinging toward the president in those last 10 days. And Norm rode the tide. Mondale took a little while to get a campaign going. And Norm finessed Wellstone's death beautifully. The Democrats stood up in raw grief and yelled and shook their fists and offended people. Norm played his violin. He sorrowed well in public, he was expertly nuanced. The mostly negative campaign he ran against Wellstone was forgotten immediately. He backpedalled in the one debate, cruised home a victor. It was a dreadful low moment for the Minnesota voters. To choose Coleman over Walter Mondale is one of those dumb low-rent mistakes, like going to a great steakhouse and ordering the tuna sandwich. But I don't envy someone who's sold his soul. He's condemned to a life of small arrangements. There will be no passion, no joy, no heroism, for him. He is a hollow man. The next six years are not going to be kind to Norm.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

About the writer Garrison Keillor is the creator and host of the nationally syndicated radio show "A Prairie Home Companion," broadcast on more than 500 public radio stations nationwide. For more columns by Keillor, visit his column archive.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: coleman; keillor; minnesota; salon; senate
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To: Go Dub Go; MHGinTN; BibChr; The Big Econ
I'm not trying to be contrary, but I've always wondered why no one around here seemed to care that Norm Coleman was a long haired VietNam war protester (ala Clinton) and was Minnesota chair of Bill Clinton's re-election campaign in 1998. I've seen plenty of other politicians skewered for actions they took long before 1998 -- I don't get it.

Many of the skewered either (a) don't admit to their misdeeds or (b) are still unrepentantly, if disingenuously, mired in their anti-American and/or liberal pasts (Bill Clinton's continued animus for the military comes to mind).

Quite a few of us have made youthful mistakes that rightly earned us the appellation "young and dumb." As a callow youngster who lacked the depth to fathom his parents' conservatism, I voted for McGovern as a first-time voter.

Norm Coleman simply grew up, something that can't be said of Keillor, Moyers, and Clinton. For a man whose conscience rightly tells him that unborn children are unmistakably children, the rigidly pro-abortion Democrat Party could not continue to be a home.

261 posted on 11/14/2002 3:19:41 AM PST by rhema
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To: AlwaysLurking
These criticisms don't rise to the level of serious, it's his personal and/or private business and the only thing that counts is that he helps give the Republicans a majority.

Learned the democRATS' party line pretty good, finally get to use it.

262 posted on 11/14/2002 3:48:56 AM PST by RWG
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To: rhema
This appeared in the Nov. 14th Minneapolis Star Tribune. It was in the column written by C.J. (sort of a local Liz Smith, I guess you'd call her) .......


Back at ya, Keillor

Garrison Keillor is catching flak for his Salon.com attack on Sen.-elect Norm Coleman. "Norm got a free ride from the press," Keillor writes of the "slick retail campaigner, the grabbiest and touchingest and feelingest politician in Minnesota history." Keillor goes on to talk in code about Coleman's personal life. "Amazing he didn't write this back when Coleman was a Democrat," reads one message posted on Salon.com. It's even more amazing when you recall that Keillor was so protective of his personal life that he moved from St. Paul to New York City and then out of the country. Admittedly, he's come a long way since then. In March, Keillor penned a piece about his Ramsey Hill manse for Traditional Home mag, which included a photo of him and his daughter. The Coleman attack seems like unequal treatment to those who can't recall Keillor picking apart President Bill Clinton's bad behavior. We do, however, vividly recall Keillor's ex-wife Ulla Skaerved's open letter to Keillor that took exception to his yarns suggesting they were together: "The truth is that the marriage ended two years ago when you moved in with another woman." Keillor probably is right when he says, "The next six years are not going to be kind to Norm." Media from NYC and DC, I predict, will show no mercy for the zone of privacy desired by Norm and his actor-model wife, Laurie Coleman. Until then, right-leaning radio show host Jason Lewis, of KSTP-AM, has this advice: "If you're going to make innuendo and rumor, as Keillor did in the column, you go ahead and make the charge. . . . And if you can't, shut up."

They heard, ignored
263 posted on 11/14/2002 7:12:39 AM PST by Gunder
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To: AlwaysLurking
bump
264 posted on 11/14/2002 7:14:19 AM PST by VOA
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To: Nick Danger
Is That "Nick Danger-Third Eye" ?
265 posted on 11/14/2002 8:27:23 PM PST by tcwlsn
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To: Bloody Sam Roberts
Hey
Lets Not Be Fools
This Man Colman Was A Huge Supporter And Confidant Of CLINTON
And His Campaign Chair

Not To Mention a New York Liberal

The Only Thing Republican About This Phony Is His Elephant
Lapel Pin..........................

266 posted on 11/15/2002 5:22:30 AM PST by Rainbow
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To: AlwaysLurking
Norm Coleman-- bush's little tool.
http://www.bushboy.com
267 posted on 11/17/2002 9:59:48 PM PST by MnEagle444
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To: AlwaysLurking
I know that this is a conservative forum, so what I'm about to say is going to anger some of you, but here goes.

I live in Minnesota. I work in St. Paul. Stories about Norm's improprieties are common, if not legend. I never really cared about them until I was in a bar called Club Ashe and saw Mr. Coleman there. A nice young woman with us was approached by the now senator-elect Coleman and propositioned. She, of course refused, but Coleman didn't take the rebuff well and grabbed her and tried to force her to leave with him.

My friend and I forced him to leave her alone and escorted Norm out of the club.

Why didn't the press pursue these types of stories? I don't know. Why is it such a problem when Clinton has sexual misconducts and people like Coleman, Gingrich, and Guiliani (sp?) get the free public perception ride?

Don't be hypocrites. A slimball is a slimeball.
268 posted on 11/18/2002 6:59:28 PM PST by Minneapolis
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To: Heff
I attended Hofstra at the same time as Norm Coleman and knew him fairly well. He WAS a leftist, but was never really willing to follow through on anything difficult (like real student activism) as he was always afraid that if he got arrested, it would hinder his future plans to be a lawyer and politician. Frankly, we all used to laugh at that, as it was obvious that reputation was more important to him than values.
269 posted on 11/20/2002 7:44:00 AM PST by ladydem
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