Joe Klein
(born September 7, 1946) is a longtime Washington, D.C. and New York journalist and columnist, known for his novel Primary Colors
, an anonymously written roman à clef portraying Bill Clinton's first presidential campaign. Klein is currently a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and is a former Guggenheim Fellow. Since 2003 he has been a contributor at the current affairs Time
news group. In April 2006, he published Politics Lost
, a book on what he calls the "pollster-consultant industrial complex". He has also written articles and book reviews for The New Republic
, The New York Times, The Washington Post, LIFE
and Rolling Stone
.
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JOE KLEIN TICKETS
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Early life and career
Klein graduated from the
Hackley School and the
University of Pennsylvania with a degree in American civilization. In 1969, Klein began reporting for the
Essex County Newspapers, and
The Peabody Times
in
Massachusetts In 1972, he reported for Boston's
WGBH, and until 1974 he was also the news editor for
The Real Paper
in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was a contributing editor for
Rolling Stone
from 1975 to 1980, and Washington bureau chief from 1975 to 1977.
[1] He became friends with actor-director
Tom Laughlin after interviewing him for
Rolling Stone
and appeared briefly as a reporter in Laughlin's 1977 film
Billy Jack Goes to Washington
.
Klein published
Woody Guthrie: A Life
in 1980 and
Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam
in 1984. He was a political columnist for
New York
from 1987 to 1992 where he won the
Peter Kihss Award for reporting on the 1989 race for
Mayor of New York. In May 1992 he joined
Newsweek
and wrote the column "Public Lives", which won a
National Headliner Award in 1994.
Newsweek
also won a
National Magazine Award for their coverage of
Bill Clinton's 1992 victory. From 1992 to 1996 he was also a consultant for
CBS News, providing commentary.
Primary Colors
In January 1996, Klein
anonymously published the novel
Primary Colors: A Novel of Politics
, based on the
1992 Democratic presidential primary. The book spent nine weeks as number one on the
New York Times bestseller list, with its author listed as "Anonymous". Several people, including former Clinton speechwriter
David Kusnet and, later,
Vassar professor
Donald Foster correctly identified Klein as the novel's author, based on a literary analysis of the book and Klein's previous writing. Klein lied, denying authoring the book and publicly condemning Foster.
[2] [3] Klein denied authorship again in
Newsweek
, speculating that another writer wrote it.
Washington Post
Style editor
David von Drehle, in an interview, asked Klein if he was willing to stake his journalistic credibility on his denial, to which Klein agreed.
[4] On July 17, 1996, Klein admitted that the speculation had been correct.
[5]
Later career
In December 1996, he joined
The New Yorker
to write the "Letter from Washington" column. In 2000 he published
The Running Mate
, a sequel of sorts to
Primary Colors
. In March 2002 Klein published
The Natural: Bill Clinton's Misunderstood Presidency
, an account of Clinton's two terms in office.
In January 2003, he joined
Time
to write a column called "In the Arena" on national and international affairs. It appears in ''Time
s upfront "Notebook" section and has been criticized for its reporting about Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic opposition to warrantless wiretapping. The column has been the source of several retractions by
Time''.
Klein is a regular blogger on time.com's
Swampland
blog. In November 2007,
Salon
columnist
Glenn Greenwald wrote about factual errors in a Klein story about the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). Klein reported that the Democratic version of the FISA bill "would require the
surveillance of every foreign-
terrorist target's calls to be approved by the FISA court" and that it therefore "would give terrorists the same legal protections as Americans."
[6] Time
later published a comment: "In the original version of this story, Joe Klein wrote that the
House Democratic version of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) would allow a court review of individual foreign surveillance targets.
Republicans believe the bill can be interpreted that way, but Democrats don't." Greenwald noted that the text of the legislation does not require court review of individual targets, and that
Time
's response disregards this fact.
[7] [9] Klein's response was, "I have neither the time nor legal background to figure out who's right."
[10]
Later, Greenwald reported that
Time
"refused the requests of two sitting members of Congress ... to correct Klein's false statements in Time itself".
[11] Greenwald has reported that Senator Russ Feingold has been informed by
Time
that his letter rebutting Klein will be published in a forthcoming issue.
[12] [13]
Political views
In
The Natural
, his book about the Clinton presidency, Klein gave a mixed assessment of Clinton's time in office. In the book, he wrote: "the conventions of journalism prevent me from fitting too neatly into one political niche (although as a columnist for the New Yorker and Newsweek my predilections are obvious)".
[14]. Klein's depiction of the Clinton presidency also gave a detailed examination of the moderate Democratic positions espoused by the
Democratic Leadership Council, as well as
third way politics generally, of which Klein was highly complimentary.
He is an admirer of
George W. Bush personally, although he has sometimes disagreed with his policies. In an interview with
Hugh Hewitt Klein said of Bush, "Let me say that of all the major politicians I've covered in presidential politics in the last two or three times around, he is the most likely to stick with an issue, even if the polls are bad, and to govern from the gut as you said. I don't always agree with the decisions that he makes, but I think he is an honorable man, and when I've criticized him, I've tried to criticize him on the substance, and certainly not on his personality, because I really like the guy."
In 2008, Klein caused controversy with comments on the motivations of
neoconservatives, when he said:
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| The fact that a great many Jewish neoconservatives – people like Joe Lieberman and the crowd over at ''Commentary (magazine)
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American foreign policy scholar
Max Boot and the
Anti-Defamation League National Director,
Abraham Foxman [16], were among the critics of Klein's views. Klein is also frequently criticized by
Bob Somerby, a media commentator.
[17]
In May 2009 he invited further controversy when he was quoted in an article in Politico.com, wherein he stated that the reasoning and ideas of prominent conservative commentator Charles Krauthammer were of limited value because of Krauthammer's being wheelchair-bound:
"There's something tragic about him... His work would have a lot more nuance if he were able to see the situations he's writing about."
Personal life
Klein lives with his wife, daughter Sophie and son Teddy, in
Pelham, New York, and is also the father of two adult sons.
In March 2008, Klein aroused controversy after making what many saw as an anti-
Catholic remark in regards to
NBC's
Tim Russert,
Chris Matthews and the
New York Times
Maureen Dowd related to their coverage of
Hillary Clinton. Others, such as media critic
Bob Somerby, defended Klein's comment as accurate.