If senators are going to use a terrorist attack to grandstand in vain over a nomination which hasn’t yet been offered, the very least they can do is do it in person. Such was the case today, when Susan Rice, the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, met with several of the Republicans in the Senate who have been critical of her recently.
Among those with whom Rice met today were Senators John McCain, Lindsey Graham, and Kelly Ayotte, the same band who called a November 14 presser to criticize Rice’s comments on the Benghazi attacks, missing a confidential briefing on those same Benghazi attacks in order to do so. That sideshow, along with McCain later snipping at a reporter who dared ask him about the missed briefing, should have officially ended the “taking them seriously” portion of this episode.
But being that her prospective new job as Secretary of State would involve quite a bit of diplomacy, perhaps Rice wanted to engage her critics in person, and that’s why she requested meetings with them today. Perhaps she wanted the satisfaction of making those Republicans speak their criticism to her face, or of seeing them soften their critiques in person.
But could today’s meeting actually be helping bring Rice closer to the position McCain, in particular, seeks to deny her?
We may never know what happened behind closed doors today, but once out of them, Rice’s Republican hecklers were right back at it after the meeting. Graham said he was “more disturbed now than I was before” about Rice, and McCain didn’t appear to be changed at all. McCain told the Cable blog at Foreign Policy that Rice “clearly stated she was wrong when she made her original statements on the attack,” and he called on Rice to repeat that admission publicly.
He added, at the press conference:
We are significantly troubled by many of the answers we got and some that we didn’t get concerning evidence that was overwhelming leading up to the attack on our consulate,” McCain said. “It is clear that the information that she gave the American people was incorrect when she said it was a spontaneous demonstration triggered by a hateful video. It was not and there was compelling evidence at the time that it was certainly not the case.
That quote is why I have to agree more than ever with Melissa calling this charade “infuriating” on Sunday. I noted this morning in my write-up about this that Brandeis University professor Anita Hill said this may be about mere politics. Here’s what she said on the show:
In reality, what it is, I think, is this pushback on what we saw in the (2012) election with a powerful coalition of people of color, of women–led by single women, of course. In fact, it is a coalition that is shifting the political landscape. And frankly, people like John McCain–who have really benefited from what the landscape was like before, are sort of on the outs, and on the fringe.
Author Rebecca Traister followed up Hill’s point by noting that what she deemed coded language which McCain and others are employing in their criticisms, including calling Rice’s response to the Benghazi attacks “not very bright,” is so incorrect that the question of why they’re using it is a valid one.








