Category: Dynasties

  • The Kean Fish Political Dynasty

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  • The Dolan Family Dynasty

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  • The Brown Bourbon Dynasty

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  • Cecile Richards gives John McCain a send-up to make her mother proud

    With all the talk of political dynasties passing the torch – or being shoved out of the way – little attention has been paid to another Democratic scion who shared the stage with Hillary Clinton last night.

    Her name is Cecile Richards. And like her mother, the late Democratic matriarch and Texas Gov. Ann Richards, she is a powerful, in-your-face speaker who drives home political points with wit and, often, raunch.

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    “Elections are about choices, and Mom would have said that women voting for John McCain would be like chickens choosing to vote for the Colonel,” Richards wrote in a recent column on Huffington Post.

    Now president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Richards spent her time last night excoriating John McCain’s record on women’s health issues.

    “John McCain has voted against women’s health care 125 times,” she said. “You can look it up: he voted against real sex education, against affordable family planning and, if elected, John McCain has vowed to appoint Supreme Court justices who will overturn Roe v. Wade.”

    Richards also recalled her mother’s sharp-tongued appraisal of then vice-president George H.W. Bush at the 1988 Democratic National Convention.

    “Poor George,” Ann Richards had said then. “He can’t help it. He was born with a silver foot in his mouth.”

    (Six years later, Ann Richards would be defeated by George W. Bush in her gubernatorial re-election campaign in Texas. She died from esophageal cancer in September, 2006.)

    By all accounts, Cecille Richards is a chip off her mother’s block.

    A 2004 Texas Monthly profile described her as ” a striking six-footer and longtime labor organizer with a bright, explosive laugh who can stop a room when she walks into it just as her mother can.”

    She told the magazine how her involvement in politics was all but inevitable after growing up stuffing political mailings, learning precinct politics, and hosting anti-war rallies.

    “Other families did bowling,” she said. “We did politics.”

    Besides her mother’s involvements, her father, David Richards, was a labor lawyer involved in civil rights, among other issues.

    “We represented every union in the South,” David Richards told Texas Monthly. “Teamsters and garment workers, plumbers and pipe fitters.”

    For entertainment, the family would sit around in the evening, singing old union songs like “Joe Hill.”

    After graduating from Brown in 1980, Cecile Richards worked as a union organizer, first among garment workers in the Rio Grande Valley, then with hotel workers in New Orleans and janitors in Los Angeles. Her work directing the Justice for Janitors campaign was dramatized by Adrien Brody in the movie Bread and Roses.

    In 1982, Richards met her husband, Kirk Adams, also a labor organizer and now chief of staff of the Service Employees International Union, the largest union in America. The couple, who had three children, moved back to Texas in 1990 so they could work on Ann Richard’s campaign.

    Her mother’s defeat in 1994 was what led Cecile Richards to refocus her energies on electoral politics.

    After the loss, Richards founded a grassroots organization called the Texas Freedom Network. The idea was to oppose the influence of conservative Christians in Texas politics, particularly in the election of school boards.

    Despite importunings to go into electoral politics, Cecile Richards followed her husband back to Washington in the late 1990s, and went to work for Ted Turner “to help build the infrastructure of the choice movement in America,” as she described it.

    In 2002, she became deputy chief of staff for Democrat Nancy Pelosi, of California, who had just become minority whip in Congress and was about to become minority leader. Eighteen months later, she left that job to become president of a new organization, America Votes, a coalition of several dozen progressive groups intent on turning out the Democratic vote in 2004.

    That was the position from which Planned Parenthood recruited her in 2005. Richard had no health background, but brought the steely resolve, as well as the rolodex, of a seasoned political operative.

    “Listen, the reason I took this job is, I feel like we need to go into the 21st century,” she told the Washington Post in 2006. “Clearly, with some folks in the country, we’re going to get there kicking and screaming.”

    Under Richards’ leadership, the group has been an unabashed presence at the convention. Volunteers have been stationed outside the Pepsi Center, handing out over 700 pounds of pink-papered condoms labeled “Protect Yourself from John McCain.”

  • Socialite Marylou Whitney makes grand gesture – at Eliot Spitzer’s expense

    Eliot Spitzer got another lesson in political humility from one of New York’s wealthiest and most-connected society mavens this week.

    The disgraced former governor of New York was recalled – or more accurately, mocked – at Saratoga Racetrack, when a pair of colts named “Luv Gov” and “Ninth Client,” made their debut at the races. The colts’ owners are Marylou Whitney, the so-called Queen of Saratoga, and her third husband, John Hendrickson.

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    “We just wanted to have a horse named after a big part of New York history,” Hendrickson told the Albany Times-Union. “Don’t you think a dead heat with Skipadate and Ninth Client is a classic?”

    Ouch.

    “Luv Gov” was part of the headline splashed across the cover of the New York Daily News after Spitzer was caught on a federal wiretap arranging a visit with a high-priced prostitute. The wiretap captured the voice of a man identified in court papers as Client 9, arranging to have a prostitute travel from New York to Washington to meet him. After Spitzer was identified as Client 9, the governor was engulfed in a political furor, and resigned a few days later.

    So why would would an 82-year-old socialite, famous for her philanthropy and her parties, seek to rub Spitzer’s face in that?

    Whitney, as it turns out, had a history with the former governor. The grand dame of racing had been the honorary chairwoman of Empire Racing Associates, a consortium of companies bidding to take over the racing franchise in New York State from the not-for-profit New York Racing Association. Whitney was a powerful advocate of the take-over, arguing that a for-profit company would “protect Saratoga’s historic traditions and put horse racing first.”

    Spitzer, however, nixed the deal, suggesting antitrust and other concerns involving Empire’s partners, Magna Entertainment and Churchill Downs.

    If that wasn’t enough, Whitney was reportedly outraged by Spitzer’s efforts to sink the fortunes of her longtime friend, Joseph Bruno, until recently, the leader of the state Senate and a longtime advocate of horse racing.

    When news broke that Spitzer’s aides had tracked Bruno’s use of state aircraft for personal travel, and then leaked their findings to the press, Whitney told the New York Times, “It made me very unhappy.”

    The Times described her reaction this way: “Squinting ever so slightly, vowels stiffening, she added: ‘I stand by him. We all do.’”

    When Bruno resigned last month, Whitney broke down during an interview with an Albany television station. She described him as a longtime advocate of horse racing, as well as of Saratoga County, which he had represented for more than three decades.

    Whitney first came to Saratoga 50 years ago, on the arm of her late husband, Cornelius Vanderbilt “Sonny” Whitney, the scion of both the Vanderbilt and Whitney fortunes. When he died at 93 in 1992, he reportedly left his widow $100 million.

    She has used that money, among other things, to carry on her late husband’s passion for horse breeding and racing., as well as for Saratoga Springs. Her colt Birdstone, a product of Marylou Whitney Stables in Lexington, Ky., defeated Smarty Jones in the 2004 Belmont Stakes.

    The socialite famous for grand gestures – arriving at charity balls by balloon, in carriages shaped like pumpkins, or towed by horses disguised as unicorns – has also given millions of dollars to the Saratoga Performing Arts Center, the national museum of dance in Saratoga, Saratoga Hospital, and a thoroughbred retirement fund.

    About 10 years ago, she married Hendrickson, a former aide to Gov. Walter J. Hickel of Alaska. Hendrickson, who is 39 years her junior, has run many of her business affairs, among other things, negotiating the sale of a large tract of Whitney family property in the Adirondacks to the state of New York for a hefty price.

    Whitney remains active despite suffering a stroke in 2006, hosting her traditional opening day luncheon in Saratoga’s Carousel Restaurant late last month.

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  • Love means never having to say you’re poor

    A new power-couple has been born. Courtenay Semel and Casey Johnson are dating, reports the New York Post.

    Courtenay Semel is the daughter of former Yahoo CEO Terry Semel and starred in the 2005 reality TV show Filthy Rich: Cattle Drive, in which wealthy teens were filmed working on a ranch. She has known Casey Johnson for 12 years.

    Casey Johnson is the daughter of Robert Wood Johnson IV, CEO of the Johnson Company and owner of the New York Jets. She’s the heir to the Johnson & Johnson franchise.

    While Semel counts Lindsay Lohan in her circle of friends, Johnson is a longtime pal of the Hilton family.

    After a messy 2006 break-up with her boyfriend, John Dee, due to an alleged affair he had with her aunt, Libet Johnson, Casey Johnson is now “so happy and completely in love,” with Courtenay Semel, sources tell the Post.

    Johnson has also recently adopted a daughter, Ava, from Kazhakstan.