by Quinn Wonderling
Republican National Committee chair Reince Priebus is facing backlash for his questionable comments on Face the Nation Sunday, comparing President Obama to the captain of the Costa Concordia, the huge cruise liner that crashed in Tuscany killing at least 17 passengers.
On Morning Joe Tuesday, Mika Brzezinski expressed contempt at the remarks. Priebus said that by traveling and campaigning, the president is “our own little Captain Schettino,” shirking his duties and “abandoning the ship here in the United States.”
Mika Brzezinski sounded off:
[It’s] irresponsible and despicable. That was absolutely wrong. You all screwed up in a big way. You all sat around in a room and said, “Oooh! This would be so cool to say. Hahaha.” You slapped your knees and then you went on the air and then you spit that out, you vomited it out and you made a fool of yourself… This was gutter politics, a bad parallel, a stupid mistake.
DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz agreed with Brzezinski, noting Priebus’ lack of respect for Obama was overshadowed only by his apparent lack of sensitivity for victims of the tragedy.
“When he was given an opportunity to walk it back, he doubled down,” Wasserman Schultz said of unrepentant Priebus. “We’re talking about families who still have loved ones missing, we’re talking about victims who died.”
Wasserman Schultz released a statement yesterday calling on Preibus to apologize.
“It’s the politics of contempt,” added Chris Matthews.
Priebus defended his analogy on Fox News Monday, saying criticism of his comments was “political gamesmanship” and that he made “an analogy of leadership.”
Francesco Schettino was Costa Concordia’s captain, currently charged with multiple manslaughter and abandoning ship. After deviating from the ship’s route and crashing into a reef, Schettino claims he accidentally tripped and fell into a life boat. He refused to reboard the ship despite orders from the Italian Coast Guard.
Brzezinski’s comments echo what the panel said during Monday’s show about Priebus’ analogy.









