Newark, NJ mayor Cory Booker had a little fun last week with his state’s governor, Chris Christie, in a web skit. Booker, who recently suffered minor burns when he rushed into a burning building and helped save his neighbor’s life, is depicted more or less as a political Superman: solving any number of problems from fires, flat tires, cats in trees, and replacement guitars for Bruce Springsteen. It offers a few chuckles, but the skit comes off like something Funny or Die rejected — but it gets good at the end. At least, interesting.
The skit ends, oddly, with Booker (acting as if he’s) fielding a call from Mitt Romney, who is asking him to be his VP candidate. After having “gotten” every issue up until then, the Republican Christie steps in, takes the phone from Booker, and says, “I got this.” What I’m not sure they meant to imply is that Romney’s candidacy is the latest emergency Booker is asked to rectify. That’s actually funny, considering that Booker, on NBC’s “Meet the Press” yesterday, addressed one of the most problematic aspects of Romney’s record in a way that one wouldn’t expect from an Obama campaign surrogate.
The roundtable discussion had turned to the stinging new Obama ads criticizing Romney’s record at Bain Capital (TPM’s Pema Levy offers a good write-up here). Unprovoked, the Newark mayor said:
“As far as that stuff, I have to just say from a very personal level, I’m not about to sit here and indict private equity. To me, it’s just this–we’re getting to a ridiculous point in America, especially that I know. I live in a state where pension funds, unions and other people are investing in companies like Bain Capital. If you look at the totality of Bain Capital’s record, it ain’t–they’ve done a lot to support businesses, to grow businesses, And this, to me, I’m very uncomfortable with.”
In a YouTube comment (embedded above) posted later on Sunday afternoon, Booker walked the comment back, and undermined his earlier sentiment, not only claiming that the Bain Capital attack was fair game, but also endorsing the message behind the Obama ads. That came a little late, as it was evident this morning that he’d opened the door for people like Harold Ford, Jr. to step through, and keep wide open:
“I would not have backed off the comments if I were Mayor Booker,” [Harold] Ford, a Democrat, said on msnbc’s “Morning Joe.” “The substance of his comments on ‘Meet the Press,’ I agree with the core of it. I would not have backed them out… private equity’s not a bad thing. As a matter of fact, private equity is a good thing in many, many instances.”
Two points to make here. First, whether or not the attack is a viable one (CNBC’s Jim Cramer predicted at the roundtable that it “sticks”), it is one thing to allege that the ads were critical of private equity — the very business practice seems to be a target of the ads. But it’s not that simple. Romney is not simply applying for another job, in another field, with Bain Capital as a stain on his resumé. Romney is asking Americans to give him a job so that he might create more jobs, when his private-business record indicates that he is skilled in doing the exact opposite.
To the extent that it helps the President for the media to discuss Bain Capital for another day, and not the economy, Booker may have actually done the Obama campaign a favor. But it’s the second issue, what Booker went on to say on “Meet the Press,” that is even more problematic.
He piled onto the private-equity comment by saying:
…this kind of stuff is nauseating to me on both sides. It’s nauseating to the American public. Enough is enough. Stop attacking private equity, stop attacking Jeremiah Wright.
Steve Benen thinks Booker, as a surrogate, will be “riding the bench for a while” after this, and I’m inclined to agree. Adam Serwer gets it right correct in Mother Jones today:








