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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
11.02.2008
Goodbye, Patti Solis Doyle!

Looks like Hillary booted her top campaign manager, Patti Solis Doyle, today. This should not come as a surprise to anyone who read Michelle's prescient article from last week's issue about the imminent shake-up in Hillaryland:

The adviser most damaged by Iowa may be the one closest to the candidate: Hillary's longtime scheduler and alter ego, Solis Doyle. Among the most devout members of Hillaryland, Solis Doyle is cheered by supporters as an "unconventional" choice for campaign manager. Detractors are less kind, noting that even some of Hillary's most trusted advisers have long questioned Solis Doyle's readiness for the job. Clinton money man Terry McAuliffe is said to have expressed reservations early on, including in a conversation with the Clintons during the couple's January 2006 trip to the Dominican Republic, according to someone there with the group. (McAuliffe denies this.) Similarly, several weeks before the campaign's official launch, a handful of the most senior Hillarylanders met with the senator to express eleventh-hour doubts about Solis Doyle, says someone Hillary spoke with after the meeting.

No one denies that Solis Doyle's authority stems less from her expertise or political savvy (though defenders insist she has an abundance of both) than from her bond with Hillary. The result, say critics, is a toxic blend of insecurity (about her abilities) and arrogance (about her proximity to the boss). As they tell it, an overwhelmed Solis Doyle has become increasingly temperamental--playing favorites and abusing her relationship with Hillary to control information flow and enhance her own power. "It's become 'The Patti Show,'" snipes a former member of the Clinton White House who remains close to both Clintons. Solis Doyle is said to allow unaddressed issues to pile up, failing to do things like return calls to surrogates in need of direction or contributors in need of stroking. "People are constantly complaining to the senator and other members of the campaign family that their calls aren't being returned," notes one observer who often hears from such people. At the same time, over the course of her management career, Solis Doyle has developed a reputation for mucking around in the weeds, insisting upon signing off on even low-level decisions, such as where to hold a minor event and whether bagels or donuts should be served. (That's not a hypothetical.) She is brutal to staffers who try to circumvent her with a request, and she is not shy about reminding others of her position: When dispatched to Iowa headquarters in the final month, Solis Doyle demanded that in preparation for her arrival walls be erected around the section of the giant bullpen where she would be working.

 You can also read Mike and Noam's take over on the Stump.  

--Zvika Krieger

Posted: Monday, February 11, 2008 12:45 AM with 4 comment(s)

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huntlib said:

Damn. So sad to see her go. She sounded really incompetent.

Obligatory Dig at Hillary: I thought you were the ultimate manager? You know, the ready-from-day-one, executive's executive?

February 10, 2008 8:13 PM

fougasseu said:

There are two choices when a brand falters: Look backwards, bring back an old jingle or beloved CMO, as Coke did more than once. It almost always fails. Or try something new, find someone with a better ear to the culture, as Toyota did, as Nike does, again and again.

The Clintons looked to the past, choosing experience over real change.

They chose nostalgia, wanting to return to times that were better, a time of victories. What next? James Carville?

Real change takes fresh eyes and ears. Maggie Williams? I don't think so.

February 10, 2008 9:38 PM

primwallflow said:

I don't necessarily hold it against Hillary that she felt she had to change managers. Circumstances and strategies changes, some people are better fits for the needs of the time than others, etc. Would that G.W. Bush had had the leadership ability necessary to let go of people close to him and replace them with more competent alternatives.

It does give me pause, however, that she waited so LONG to pull the trigger on this (in the primary season, days seem like months. I can't believe South Carolina was only two weeks ago). Maybe NH and Nevada gave her false confidence that she didn't need new leadership, and then didn't want to aid and abet the Obamamentum by showing weakness right before Super Tuesday. That doesn't forgive a refusal to admit what was obvious to us observers the moment the Iowa results came back: that the primaries were not going to unfold the way everyone assumed even as late as December.

February 10, 2008 9:48 PM

blackton said:

How do you spell scapegoat again? If anyone should go it should be Penn and Wolfson. Everytime I see their mugs on TV I want to throttle the cat (good thing I don't have any). So you mean to tell me if she stroked a few donors egos or returned a few calls, Hillary would have won this past weekend. Yeah.

February 11, 2008 10:14 AM