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Thursday, June 19, 2008
Robert Novak :: Townhall.com Columnist
My Friend and My Source
by Robert Novak
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WASHINGTON, D.C. -- A 26-year-old political operative from Buffalo on Daniel Patrick Moynihan's staff in 1977 was overshadowed by the all-star cast accompanying the newly elected senator to Washington. Not for the last time, Timothy J. Russert surpassed famous contemporaries. His first noteworthy feat was saving Moynihan from sure defeat for re-election, enabling an illustrious 24-year Senate career.

Moynihan was in the Senate on a fluke, because multiple competitors divided New York's prevailing liberal vote in the 1976 Democratic primary. His Senate staff was dominated by glittering neo-conservatives, but young Russert deftly convinced Moynihan he must move left to survive. The neocons all departed Moynihan and the Democratic Party, but Russert stayed and became his principal adviser.

Russert from the start also was an extraordinary source for me. The careful preparation that became his journalistic trademark was obvious in our conversations, when he always had something for my column -- most of it about Moynihan's adversaries. He was superb in "oppo" -- research about the opposition. That skill propelled him to the top of television interviewers.

Early in 1982, over drinks in a Manhattan restaurant, Tim pulled from his briefcase accurate derogatory information about Republican Rep. Bruce Caputo, who was planning to run against Moynihan. That finished Caputo.

Russert left Moynihan for Gov. Mario Cuomo in hopes of making him president, a goal much clearer to him than it was to the governor. The peculiar pro-Cuomo slant of this column could be attributed to Russert. He arranged a secret dinner at an obscure waterfront steakhouse for me with Andrew Cuomo, now attorney general of New York, but then his father's reclusive, enormously influential young adviser.

Russert went to NBC as a New York-based executive, but soon got back to Washington as the network's bureau chief. He was concerned, he told me, by the decline of "Meet the Press" under distinguished TV journalists following Lawrence Spivak's retirement as moderator in 1975, and requested my ideas in writing. Whittaker Chambers in 1952 said the program was "fun for the boys but death for the frogs," and I wrote Russert saying that softer questioning had become too much fun for the frogs. He agreed.

When he first took a seat on the "Meet the Press" panel with no on-camera experience, Russert asked me whether there was anything improper about that. There wasn't. He became moderator and gradually eliminated the questioning panel. It was a master stroke, soon copied by the other Sunday interview shows. Continued...

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About The Author
Robert Novak (1931-2009) was a syndicated columnist and editor of the Evans-Novak Political Report.
 
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I am sick of the coverage of Russert,
a man who could not hide his liberal bias and sympathies. Read Debbie Schulssel on this. To me, his show was "Meet the Depressed".

"The Prince of Darkness"
I'm in the process of reading Novak's "The Prince of Darkness", and I'm a bit surprised to find that I'm enjoying it!

Why am I surprised? Because I thought that it would be full of uninteresting/unimportant trivia. Yes - there is plenty of trivia in the book (e.g. the personality conflicts between the panelists on The McLaughlin Report, the drinking habits of Novak and his colleagues).

However, there is plenty of history in this book. Unless you are the type of person who remembers every primary and every national election from the early 1960s to the present, you will feel like you are getting a ringside seat as you watch history unfold.

Some of the anecdotes show how some journalists become part of the news. The Valerie Plame mess is dealt with in the first chapter - but if you are tempted to put down the book after that, you will miss the very real and interesting history lesson that follows.

The evolution of Novak's political thinking (over the decades) is also interesting to read about.

If you read this book, you will understand why Novak's relationship with Tim Russert (and others from the liberal wing of American politics) was possible.

Note: I've been a fan of "Meet the Press" for years, and will miss Tim Russert. If NBC puts Chris Mathews in Tim's chair, it will be the end of the program. Joe Scarborough would be a better choice. Particularly, since we are heading into a Left-of-center era ..
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