The Long Fall of Debbie Wasserman Schultz [View all]
PHILADELPHIAAs Debbie Wasserman Schultz made her unceremonious exit as chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, what was most remarkable was what you didnt hear: practically anybody coming to her defense.
The Florida congresswoman did not go quietly. She reportedly resisted stepping down, and blamed subordinates for the content of the leaked emails that were released Friday, which clearly showed the committees posture of neutrality in the Democratic primary to have been a hollow pretense, just as Bernie Sanders and his supporters long contended. She finally relinquished the convention gavel only after receiving three days of strong-arming, a ceremonial position in the Clinton campaign, and a raucous round of boos at a convention breakfast.
Few Democrats will miss Wasserman Schultz, who was widely seen as an ineffective leader. She was a poor communicator whose gaffes often caused the party headaches; a mediocre fundraiser; and a terrible diplomat more apt to alienate party factions than bring them together. Only Donald Trump has unified the party more, Rebecca Katz, a Democratic consultant who supported Sanders in the primary, told me wryly.
The emails just confirmed what we already knew, Lis Smith, a former aide to primary contender Martin OMalley, told me. She was not an honest broker in this process. She should have been gone long agoshe did the party a huge disservice.
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/07/the-fall-of-debbie-wasserman-schultz/493019/