Most Popular
-
The Talk of the Green Iguana
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
-
The She-Zebra
Will Erin Meehan be the first female ref in the NFL?
-
Are We There Yet?
Jeez, can we just embrace the electric car already?
-
Guitar Zero
Maybe the next generation won't even play instruments. Clapton and Hendrix? So passé.
-
Accidental Hit Man
Sure, Paul Brandreth talks like a wiseguy. But is he a cold-blooded killer?
-
Your Mom Thinks Hes Hot (6)
-
Man-Child in the Promised Land (5)
Pop star Sean Kingston hopes the party's just begun
-
The Talk of the Green Iguana (4)
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
-
Guitar Zero (2)
Maybe the next generation won't even play instruments. Clapton and Hendrix? So passé.
-
Shooting the Moon (2)
Aim high or aim low, you're bound to hit something, even if it's the sleep button
-
The Talk of the Green Iguana
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
-
The She-Zebra
Will Erin Meehan be the first female ref in the NFL?
-
Are We There Yet?
Jeez, can we just embrace the electric car already?
-
Guitar Zero
Maybe the next generation won't even play instruments. Clapton and Hendrix? So passé.
-
Accidental Hit Man
Sure, Paul Brandreth talks like a wiseguy. But is he a cold-blooded killer?
-
Check Out Black Journalists Association Workshop
02:25PM 03/11/08 -
Plantation Police: Slain Lawyer Wasn't Sexually Assaulted
09:27AM 03/11/08 -
Sun-Sentinel Monkey Business
05:32PM 03/10/08 -
Rick Ross "Speedin" With a New Album
02:39PM 03/11/08 -
Tuesday Morning Music Fix: Del the Funky Homosapien, Cajun Dance Party, Elbow and more
11:19AM 03/11/08 -
R.E.M. Disappoints at Langerado
07:33PM 03/10/08
What we are writing about
- Anoushka Shankar and...
- anything goes here
- B-Side Players
- BankAtlantic Center
- Black Guayaba
- Body/Antibody
- Cate Blanchett
- Deerfield Beach
- FLIFF
- Guillermo Trujillo:...
- his landscapes feel...
- Kid Rock
- Marcus Carl Franklin
- Maroon 5
- Natalie Cole
- National Collage Society
- No World for Tomorrow
- October 11 through...
- October 19 at the Rose...
- Q&A
- Rio de Janeiro
- Sharon Jones and the...
- The Afromotive
- The Cribs
- The Darjeeling Limited
- Top DVD picks
- Transformers
- Various artists
- will.i.am
- Written and directed...
Recent Articles By Bob Norman
-
The Talk of the Green Iguana
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
-
Cops and Gypsies
Friendly law enforcement officers become the weapons of rival destruction in the gypsy tribal wars
-
Ol' Man Wiley Had a Farm
The patriarch of Waldrep Farm wouldn't go near the place nowadays. Will anybody else?
-
Terrible Trio
The Wasserstrom conviction should have at least a few pols shaking in fear — but, hey, this is Broward
-
Wheel of Misfortune
Crist needs to find the stones to deal with the Seminoles
National Features
-
Houston Press
"It Was Like an Armageddon Movie"
For days after Hurricane Rita, a Texas prison was hell on earth.
By Chris Vogel -
SF Weekly
The Candidate
Our columnist knows Ralph Nader's running mate all too well.
By Matt Smith -
The Pitch
How Not To Be a Rap Star
First of all, lay off the Ecstasy.
By Nadia Pflaum -
Village Voice
Project Runaway
What becomes a gossip columnist most?
By Michael Musto
GOPundit
Oft-quoted USF Prof Susan MacManus is neutral. Yeah, right.
By Bob Norman
Published: June 17, 2004She's a first-rate sound-bite slinger, a newsroom Rolodex regular, and as accessible as 411. When reporters need a quick political quote, they call Susan MacManus at her office, home, or cell. If she doesn't pick up, she'll almost surely phone back before deadline.
MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida, is quoted in newspapers so much that her name has been misspelled more often -- about 400 times as "McManus" -- than most professional political observers get in print. Her name's been spelled right thousands of times, more than 200 of them in the Sun-Sentinel and the Miami Herald.
MacManus, a 56-year-old self-described Florida cracker, has appeared in every major newspaper in America -- including 30 times in the New York Times since 1995 -- and been on every cable news network. But her home turf is the Sunshine State, where she's the undisputed queen of punditry. The St. Petersburg Times, which has quoted MacManus some 400 times, dubbed her the most quoted Floridian during the 2000 election. Her name's been in more than 1,000 stories that mention Jeb Bush.
Problem: MacManus has served as an adviser to the governor and was a member of his transition team. Jeb Bush also appointed her to the Florida Elections Commission, which she chaired until 2003. Currently, she's a member of the Governor's Council of Economic Advisors.
That's right, she's a Bushie. Nothing wrong with that, as long as it's disclosed in the stories. But it almost never is. Instead, reporters routinely identify her only as USF political scientist or professor, which implies an Ivory Tower neutrality.
Now, MacManus wouldn't admit she's a Republican when I caught up with her last Wednesday morning. As if to prove her accessibility, she promptly returned my call while preparing to board a flight to Washington from Tampa International Airport. When I asked about her personal political persuasion, she replied: "I don't really say, but I'm pretty much like a prototypical Floridian: I vote on the person and the issue."
Uh huh. So what about her service to the governor?
"I worked on an advisory task force for [former Democratic Gov.] Lawton Chiles too," MacManus offered. "My attitude is that I'm a Florida employee, and if an elected official asks for my help, I do it. I don't give campaign contributions, and I don't campaign for people."
This gave me an idea. After we had our chat, I clicked onto the state's Internet political campaign database and punched in her name. There, I found only two contributions, dating back to 1996, one for $25, the other for $100, both to -- drum roll, please -- the Republican Party.
Now there was smoke to go with the gun. But is she really all that biased? Her analysis is often benign, the simple handicapping of various races based on poll numbers. But after reading dozens of her quips, I detected a clear political bent toward the GOP. The Republican spin is sometimes heavy, other times light, but it's often there.
Some examples of the MacManus magic:
During the contentious 2000 presidential recount, she basically called for Al Gore to give up. MacManus criticized the Florida Supreme Court, which ruled in favor of a recount, for its "partisanship." In a column by political writer Buddy Nevins in the Sun-Sentinel, she said, "The more litigious this gets... the more angry people will become. People will feel their votes are being turned over to lawyers." Then she said one of the candidates should throw in the towel -- and that candidate, of course, was Gore. To borrow a Nevins' literary ploy, hmmmm.
In a 2002 Sun-Sentinel story about Jeb Bush's inaction regarding scandals at the Department of Children and Families, MacManus threw a spitball. Sure, you could see him as a poor leader, our USF pundit was paraphrased as saying, but the governor might also be regarded as "a patient man who gave his appointee plenty of time to fix DCF. Even the most patient person can run out of patience," she was quoted as saying. That's some sweet, sweet spin coming from a Bush appointee.
Her apparent love of all things Bush doesn't end with Jeb -- it permeates her comments about the president and his war. When Saddam Hussein was captured, she was quoted by Knight Ridder's chief Washington correspondent, Steven Thomma: "This is a real punctuation mark for the president... There's nothing like success to make the cost [of war] seem palatable." There's one rotating observation that didn't stand the test of time.
In the Atlanta Journal-Constitution this past August, she downplayed the effect of constant troop deaths and bombings in post-invasion Iraq on the president's popularity: "What these stories do is simply rekindle in the back of a lot of Americans' minds that the same thing could happen here and we need to be proactive about it." Nice.
She routinely takes a negative spin on Democratic candidates. When Janet Reno was seen as Jeb Bush's chief rival in 2002, MacManus spoke in article after article about how Reno's Parkinson's disease made voters uneasy, as if she were repeating a mantra from Republican headquarters.
The list could go on and on. But MacManus isn't really breaking any rules. It's the reporters who rely too much on her and pass off her sprinkles of wit and wisdom as nonpartisan commentary that are in the wrong. And that's a long list of journalists.
The king of MacManus mania is William March, senior political reporter for the Tampa Tribune, which is in USF's backyard. He's used her in 59 stories during the past nine years or so, according to a search of Nexis, a news database service. One of the professor's princes is Mark Silva, a former Miami Herald reporter who is now the Orlando Sentinel's political editor. He's floated her words of wisdom 37 times.









