Tall, thin and with steely blue eyes, the candidate breezed into the gym for a staged rally in his honor. A few Secret Service agents milled about. The walls were adorned with red, white and blue bunting and helium-filled balloons bumped against the ceiling.
The year was 1980, the place was Rutland, Vt., and the man of the hour was George Herbert Walker Bush, then on the lower half of the GOP presidential ticket topped by Ronald Reagan.
I was a wide-eyed young reporter working for a paper called the Burlington Free Press, lugging around a cassette recorder the size of a breadbox. When Bush concluded his spiel, a campaign aide tapped me on the shoulder and said the candidate would now meet with me privately in a side room.
Moments later, Bush strode into the room and told me quite candidly that he was not concerned with the gaggle of national reporters waiting outside. He explained in ribald terms that could not be printed in a family newspaper that they couldn't get anything in their papers about the event unless he goofed up. He said he was willing to take my questions because he was in Vermont to get his message out to the people of Vermont.
I fired up the cassette deck and proceeded to ask him how he could countenance being on the same ticket with a guy he had accused of "voodoo economics." I asked how the GOP was dealing with the gender gap, which, according to national polls at the time, cast Democrats as the preferred party of female voters. I asked about environmental regulation, an important topic then and now in Vermont, and then got to rattle off a few other questions, before an aide came in and said the candidate had to get going.
And that was that. I had my story. And the man we could not have known would go on to become the future 41st President of the United States was on the front page of my newspaper the next morning.
The memory of that day came back to me last week while I was up in Albany sitting 120 yards away from a podium on which stood President Barack Obama. Reporters these days, with occasional exceptions, generally do not get prolonged access to a member of a presidential ticket unless they are anchors of national television networks.
Getting access to even local politicians can require some acrobatic work.
In Albany, there are 262 press secretaries, and that's just for members of the Assembly and Senate. To get them or state agency press aides on the phone, oftentimes a secretary will insist on screening your call.
Three decades ago, before cellphones and the Internet existed, I could call a governor of a small state or a U.S. senator at home, and it was no big deal.
Call me a fan of greater access and less spin. The politicians who avoid us live in trepidation of saying something that would make their consultants cringe. The consultants insist that their clients stick to the talking points.
In the meantime, I'm hoping I can locate that old cassette tape so I can donate it to the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum in College Station, Texas. Perhaps it will serve as a relic of a time when national candidates deigned to speak to local reporters, without fear of tripping up.
Joe Mahoney can be reached at jmahoney@thedailystar.com or 432-1000.
Local News
Back when White House hopefuls didn't fear reporters
- Local News
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Area school budgets get voters' OK
With schools in the area proposing budgets at or below the state tax cap, all districts reporting by 10 p.m. said voters approved their spending plans.
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School budget voting results
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Tree-killing insect found near Unadilla
A tiny pest with a big appetite for ash trees has arrived in Delaware and Otsego counties, according to the state Department of Environmental Conservation.
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Roxbury artist's portrait exhibit is a record-breaker
ROXBURY -- Greg Frederick is an artist who has likely broken more records than anyone reading this story today. By records, we mean that relic of the musical recording industry -- vinyl long-playing albums (the ones with the small hole in the center) and 45 revs per minute single records (the ones with the considerably larger hole in the center).
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Bruni to step down after 30 years
Children's programs, a computerized card catalog and online access to a world of information are among changes ushered in at the Huntington Memorial Library in Oneonta by Marie Bruni since she became library director 30 years ago. "It's been great,'' Bruni, who plans to retire, told the Oneonta Common Council during a meeting in City Hall on Tuesday night.
- Tuesday, May 21, 2013
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State investigation seeks missing Bassett Rx pads
The state is investigating the possible theft of blank prescription pads from Bassett Medical Center, a spokeswoman for the hospital confirmed Monday.
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Classes resume after threats at schools
School was opened on schedule at two area schools where Internet threats caused lockdowns Friday afternoon, two superintendents said Monday as the investigations continued.
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Survey: Town residents cool to merger
More than half of Oneonta town residents responding to a survey oppose the idea of a merger with the city of Oneonta, the study summary said.
But a majority said "yes" to a partnership with the city to protect the reservoir and quality of drinking water. Two-thirds oppose drilling for natural gas, according to responses, the survey reported, and a majority supports commercial and industrial development in the town.
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Lawmakers: Farm bill has 'devastating' mandates
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Correction
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Copes Corner Park gets new lease on life
The job description for town supervisor doesn't normally include mowing grass, but that's what Charlie Eckelmann found himself doing the other day over at Copes Corner Park in the hamlet of Gilbertsville.
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School budget votes held today statewide|
Voters across the state go to the polls today to decide the fate of their local school budgets. In many cases, the selection of board of education candidates and propositions are on the ballot.
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Blodgett plan review to continue at meeting
The Oneonta Planning Commission on Wednesday will continue its review of environmental impact documents submitted as part of a site plan application for a proposed student apartment complex on Blodgett Drive.
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Area life coach wins state recognition
Heidi Friedman, a local life coach, has been awarded a statewide honor by The Arc, a 60-year-old national organization, and ANCOR, an associated organization.
- Monday, May 20, 2013
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Fill each day, SUCO grads told
Two speakers at the State University College at Oneonta asked audiences to push the ``pause button'' on their lives Saturday.
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Community comes together to build playground
The quote "If you build it, he will come" from the 1989 film "Field of Dreams" is often slightly altered to "If you build it, they will come."
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Police to patrol schools after threats
Police will be present at public schools in Delhi and Walton today as a precaution in the aftermath of last week's online threats, school officials said Sunday.
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Ramsaran remains in jail
Ganesh Ramsaran, accused of murdering his wife, remained in Chenango County jail Sunday on bail, authorities said.
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Library, airport on council agenda
The Oneonta Common Council will consider the future of the Huntington Memorial Library and of the municipal airport, among other business, during a meeting Tuesday night.
- Saturday, May 18, 2013
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Area medic recalls Afghan service
Today is Armed Forces Day, a day when the nation honors the contributions that military service members make toward ensuring its security.
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Area school budgets get voters' OK



