In a summer packed with books critical of Hillary Clinton, the latest (until a new one on Benghazi comes out next month), is told from the perspective of Secret Service agents who have worked for the former first lady and — according to the book — did not enjoy the experience.
“The First Family Detail,” written by conservative journalist and author Ronald Kessler, contains juicy tidbits about Bill Clinton’s alleged assignations and Vice President Joe Biden’s reported skinny dipping that have been excerpted for maximum impact ahead of its release date — but Clinton defenders are not amused, and they’re hitting back hard and early to undermine the book and its author.
Media Matters, the media watchdog group founded by Clinton foe-cum-defender David Brock, accused Kessler of self-plagiarism Monday, pointing to 13 stories he recycles from his other books and repeats using identical or nearly identical language.
For instance, on page 164 of his new book, Kessler writes, “In contrast to Hillary, since leaving the White House, Bill Clinton is ‘very friendly to the agents,’ says one agent. ‘I think he realized once he’s out of office, we’re pretty much all he’s got, and he does treat the guys really well.’”
In 2010, Kessler wrote another book on the agency called, “In the President’s Secret Service.” On page 170 of that book, Kessler wrote, “In contrast to Hillary, since leaving the White House, Bill Clinton is ‘very friendly to the agents,’ says one agent. ‘I think he realizes once he’s out of office, we’re pretty much all he’s got, and he does treat the guys really well.’”
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The new book also repeats stories about Clinton’s curt interactions with an electrician, a White House household staffer, police officers, and a Secret Service agent accompanying the family on vacation on Martha’s Vineyard, among others. A visit to a 4-H club during Clinton’s Senate campaign also gets reprised, as does a story about Bill Clinton making Air Force One wait on the tarmac while he got a haircut.
From a 2011 book on the FBI, Kessler borrows a story about how Clinton had “a standing rule that no one spoke to her” during transit, and another about the first lady’s relationship with Vince Foster, who committed suicide while working as a lawyer in the Clinton White House.
The message from Clinton’s defenders: There’s nothing new under the sun about the former first family.
“Kessler’s cut-and-paste job is another example of the desperate tactics the cottage industry of anti-Clinton books are willing to take. He recycled old news, added more anonymous sources, and repackaged it as a new,” Media Matters President Bradley Beychok told msnbc.









