National sleaze repository Harold Ford really needs that civil service job:
Zeroing in on a perception that Ms. Gillibrand too readily defers to Senate leaders, especially Senator Charles E. Schumer, he added: “We have a fundamental difference on independence. We have a difference on the level, the kind and the stature of advocacy New Yorkers deserve. And we have some honest differences on issues.”
He blasted her support for the proposed health care overhaul, which is expected to cost New York an extra $1 billion a year, and for opposing the taxpayer bailout of the financial industry.
“It was a mistake,” he said, noting that most Wall Street firms had already paid back the money. “How can you be against ensuring that the lifeblood of your city and of your state survives?”
[...]
After Mr. Ford, a five-term Tennessee congressman, arrived in New York, he took a job as a vice chairman at Merrill Lynch (now Bank of America). But he kept a toe in politics, becoming a commentator on Fox and then NBC, which features him several days a week on programs like MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”
[...]
Mr. Ford declined to discuss what he is paid by the bank, but publicly available data suggests that he earns at least $1 million a year. Asked what role outsize pay packages played in fueling the financial crisis, Mr. Ford said he objected to capping executive compensation on Wall Street. “I am a capitalist,” he said. “I believe that people take risk, and there are rewards if they do well; they should lose if they don’t.”
Yet somehow he gets by:
Speaking from a conference room at New York University, where he is a teacher, Mr. Ford, 39, expressed enthusiasm about his new hometown, though he described a life quite different than most New Yorkers. On many days, he is driven to an NBC television studio in a chauffeured car. He and his wife, Emily, a 29-year-old fashion executive, live a few blocks from the Lexington Avenue subway line in the Flatiron district. But Mr. Ford said he takes the subway only occasionally in the winter, to avoid the cold when he cannot hail a cab.
Asked whether he had visited all five boroughs, he mentioned taking a helicopter ride across the city with fellow executives, at the invitation of Raymond W. Kelly, New York City’s police commissioner. “The only place I have not spent considerable time is Staten Island,” he said, adding that “I landed there in the helicopter, so I can say yes.”
Asked about his baseball loyalties, he responded: “I am a Yankees fan,” and added that he had yet to visit Citi Field, the home of the Mets.
He has breakfast most mornings at the Regency Hotel on Park Avenue, and he receives regular pedicures. (He described them as treatment for a foot condition.)
Obviously a populist campaign is called for.
Offering a glimpse into a possible campaign strategy, Mr. Ford and his aides said he would run as an insurgent who is uncontrolled by the entrenched political class that he says has rallied around Ms. Gillibrand. His tentative slogan: “Harold Ford: nobody’s man but ours.”
Harold, please….



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He should definitely mention the pedicures while discussing HCR at whistle stops in Rome, Utica and Potsdam.
Pedicures? PEDICURES????
I wonder if his stylist puts little Confederate flags on his toenails.
Billions for billionaires, but not one cent for sick people! There’s a slogan.
It takes a Harold Ford to stand up for the oppressed masses of Wall Street.
“Some people call you the elite ~ I call you my base”.- Smirk.
A Helicopter in every garage, I say. Who wants to go down into the subway anyway and step over all those homeless bodies, perhaps messing up your pedicure in the process?
And Junior expects to get by on the $174K that senators are paid, how, exactly? (Granted, it’s just until he can ditch the job to start pulling in the tall coin as a lobbyist, but still.) Maybe a few satchels picked up on that Lex Ave line, eh?
You know, back in the day, a lot of people in Memphis gave him a lot of (mostly unearned) credit for being different from his larcenous and adulterous family, but really, he’s the most cynical and greedy of them all. I suspect that, between now and the primary and/or the general, he and Sarah Palin will probably get together at some Fox function and have a few drinks and a few laughs talking about their favorite cons and marks, the way that grifters do.
Potsdam hasn’t seen a real politician since Truman and Stalin met there.
Kidding, since I spent 4 wonderfully frozen years there.
Vice-chairman? How silly of me to think that perhaps he had taken a job as one of those “producers” of profit for the company.
And he comes right out and says he opposes KG for her opposition to the bailout AND for her support for health care?
Tone-deaf, indeed.
He speaks for New Yorkers, eh, but rides the subway only when it’s “too cold” to catch a freakin’ cab? Perhaps he just needs to go back to his “warm, sunny south.”
New Yorkers have accepted “carpetbaggers” before, but this one – I just don’t see it. It looks like he’ll do himself in.
oh man, what i wouldn’t give to see harold negotiate the nyc subway system. hell, i bet he couldn’t figure out how to buy an mta card.
One of the many reasons NOT to support the Dems anymore.
I can’t wait to see the Tea Baggers embrace Harold Ford as the “outsider” candidate. He’ll show those fat cats in Washington how to be a fat cat!
what the hell kind of “risks” do those assholes take, anyway?
No, he was hired as a politician, with a (highly compensated) toe in the world of finance, about which he knows less than the dimmest Merrill Lynch summer intern.
Nice Hal Chase reference in the title. Baseball’s Prince Hal was probably the single most corrupt player in history. No conscience whatsoever. Quite an appropriate comparison.