Matthews Berates 'Jealous, Little, Phony' GOP for 'Pathetic Swipe' at Obama Trip
Chris Matthews, on Monday's Hardball, was outraged at the RNC's
criticism of the Obamas wasting taxpayer money to go see a Broadway
play as he railed that it was a
"jealous, pathetic swipe at the First
Couple," and remarked "What a jealous, little political party the
Republicans have become." Matthews also took a shot at former President
George W. Bush as he contrasted Obama's tastes with Bush's as he
claimed the problem he and others had with Bush was his "utter disdain
for any kind of thought or culture. His total lack of curiosity toward
anything beyond his own backyard."
Matthews then questioned if the GOP
attack was made out of "jealousy or simple nincompoop
anti-intellectualism?"MATTHEWS: Well let's get this
straight. President Bush's jaunts to Crawford, Texas were okay by their
lights, but President Obama's day trips to New York are cause for
outrage? This is the kind of pissant criticism that makes you wonder
why Michael Steele still has his job. Is this jealousy or simple
nincompoop anti-intellectualism? Whatever it is I like having a
president who takes his wife up to Broadway. [audio available here]
The
following are all of Matthews' teasers and then his anti-RNC rant as it
occurred during the "Sideshow," segment of his June 1, edition of Hardball:
CHRIS MATTHEWS: And what's wrong with dinner and a
Broadway show? Well when it comes to Barack and Michelle Obama just ask
the Republicans. Here's the front page of today's New York Post. We'll
have the GOP's jealous, pathetic swipe at the First Couple in the
"Hardball Sideshow tonight."
...
MATTHEWS: Up next
President and Mrs. Obama go to New York and take in a show but the
Republicans don't seem to like it. They're raining on their little
parade. They go up for one day and this phony outrage. Next in the
"Sideshow." What a jealous, little political party the Republicans have
become. You're watching "Hardball," only on MSNBC.
...
MATTHEWS:
Back to "Hardball." Time for the "Sideshow." I don't think the
Republicans get it yet. The problem many of us had with President Bush
was not that he was any less intelligent than most presidents or
certainly not most journalists. God gave him brains. It was his utter
disdain, George Bush's utter disdain for any kind of thought or
culture. His total lack of curiosity toward anything beyond his own
backyard. Now here goes the Republican Party that should have learned a
lesson from this experience, taking a cheap shot at what the voters
chose last November, a President – excuse me for saying this – with
interests. You can see Michelle and Barack Obama there returning from
their night out at in the Big Apple on Saturday night. The First Couple
dined at the West Village's Blue Hill restaurant and took in a Broadway
show, Joe Turner's Come and Gone, about black-America in the early 20th
century. The President was making good on a campaign promise, that's
how he put it, the one that he made to his wife. One that Republicans
were all too ready to pounce on. The day after Obama's dream date to
New York the Republican National Committee put out this e-mail.
"Putting On A Show," they called it. Calling out the Obamas for jetting
away at taxpayer's expense. An RNC spokesman piled on adding, quote,
"If President Obama wants to go to the theater, isn't the presidential
box at the Kennedy Center good enough?" Well let's get this straight.
President Bush's jaunts to Crawford, Texas were okay by their lights,
but President Obama's day trips to New York are cause for outrage? This
is the kind of pissant criticism that makes you wonder why Michael
Steele still has his job. Is this jealousy or simple nincompoop
anti-intellectualism? Whatever it is I like having a president who
takes his wife up to Broadway.
—Geoffrey Dickens is the senior news analyst at the Media Research Center.