Bob Beckel

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Bob Beckel
Bob Beckel.jpg
Bob Beckel, 2011
Born Robert Gilliland Beckel[1]
(1948-11-15) November 15, 1948 (age 75)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Nationality United States
Education Wagner College, BA (fine arts)
Occupation Political Pundit
Home town Lyme, Connecticut, U.S.
Political party Democratic[2]
Relatives Graham Beckel (brother)

Robert Gilliland "Bob" Beckel (born November 15, 1948)[5] is an American political analyst and pundit, and a former political operative. He is currently an analyst and commentator on CNN. He had been a commentator on the Fox News Channel, where he co-hosted The Five until he was released in 2015 after being absent for several months while recovering from back surgery.[3]

Early life

Beckel was born in New York City and grew up in Lyme, Connecticut. He is the son of Cambridge Graham Beckel, Jr. (author of Workshops for the World: The United Nations Family of Agencies)[6] and Ellen Gilliland Beckel.[7][8] He is the brother of actor Graham Beckel.[3]

Beckel has a BA from Wagner College in Staten Island.[9] While in college, he played football[10] and worked for Robert F. Kennedy's presidential campaign in 1968.[3][11]

After college, Beckel served in the Philippines as a Peace Corps volunteer from 1971 to 1972,[12] and later was a graduate school professor of politics at George Washington University.[13][14]

Career

Government

In 1977, Beckel joined the United States Department of State as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations, becoming the youngest deputy assistant Secretary of State in the Carter administration.[11] In that role, he helped to shepherd the Panama Canal Treaty through Congress to ratification.[11][15] The following year was appointed Special Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs, working on ratification of Salt II and Mideast treaties.[11][16]

Politics

Beckel was the campaign manager for Walter Mondale's 1984 presidential campaign.[17] During that campaign he became known as the man who effectively wrapped the Wendy's slogan "Where's the beef?" around Gary Hart,[11][10] Mondale's opponent for the Democratic nomination.

In late 1984, he formed the consulting firm Bob Beckel & Associates, or BBA, which was succeeded in 1985 by Beckel–Cowan, described by Robert G. Kaiser in The Washington Post as "a pioneering 'grass roots' lobbying firm whose specialty was building support for policy ideas—or creating the appearance of it—around the country. This was the art form that came to be known as 'Astroturf' lobbying, since the grass-roots sentiments being expressed were not entirely natural."[18]

In 2002, Beckel managed the campaign of Alan Blinken, the Democratic nominee for United States Senate in Idaho, until he resigned after being targeted for extortion by a prostitute.[19] In 2010, he made a brief appearance as himself on the Season 8 premiere of TV series 24 in a mock debate with fellow Fox News Analyst Monica Crowley.

Fox News

In 2011, Beckel joined Fox News as a co-host of The Five, and co-hosted some 708 episodes,[20] until June 2015, when Fox announced that Beckel had left the program.[2][3][21] A Fox spokesman said: "we couldn't hold The Five hostage to one man's personal issues".[2] Beckel, whose last appearance on the show had been in February 2015, had been absent while recovering from back surgery.[2][21]

CNN

In October 2015, Beckel was hired by CNN to offer commentary on the 2016 election.[22]

USA Today

From 2005 until the end of 2015, Beckel had been a columnist for USA Today, where he wrote articles with friend and political opposite Cal Thomas in the style of "point–counterpoint".[23]

Controversial comments

  • In December 2010, with reference to Julian Assange while on Eric Bolling's show Cashin' In (on the Fox Business Network), Beckel commented, "This guy's a traitor, he's treasonous, and he has broken every law of the United States. And I'm not for the death penalty, so [...] there's only one way to do it: illegally shoot the son of a bitch."[24]
  • Beckel evoked controversy in August 2011 when he implied on air that he had held back from criticizing his Fox News colleague Sarah Palin. He agreed with The Five co-host Greg Gutfeld when Gutfeld said he felt awkward making negative comments about Palin, because "it's like [badmouthing] a co-worker." "I know exactly what you mean," Beckel added. "I'll be honest, I've pulled my punches."[25] Both Gutfeld and Beckel later said they were joking, however.[26]
  • On April 16, 2012, Beckel appeared on Hannity with Jennifer Stefano and Neal Boortz. After Stefano claimed that the Head Start Program, which aims to help poor children, did not work, Beckel replied, "You don't know what the fuck you're talking about!" Beckel did not realize the show was back from the commercial break, and initially refused to apologize. When persuaded that the show was, in fact, live, Beckel apologized for his choice of language, but stood by the overall intent of the statement.[27][28]
  • In August 2012, Beckel reportedly offended some Jews when he referred to Jewish Americans who had participated in a Mitt Romney fundraiser in Israel as "a bunch of diamond merchants we don't know the names of."[29]
  • In November 2012, Beckel concluded, while commentating on the San Francisco public nudity ban live on Fox News, that most nudists were, as children, "probably gang-banged, I don't know!" and then proceeded to laugh about his comment and saying, "they were probably sexually assaulted, I don't know!"[13][30]
  • In February 2013, Beckel made the statement that rapes on campus do not really happen and asserted that victims of date rape are not going to "take a gun out and shoot [their] date."[13][31]
  • In April 2013, in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings, Beckel commented that visas should be denied to students who emigrate from Islamic countries.[32] Beckel later apologized for his statements.
  • In July 2014, during a discussion on The Five about who poses a threat to the U.S., he stated, "The Chinese are the single biggest threat to the national security of the U.S. They have been, they will be and they can wait, they're very patient. Do you know what we just did? As usual, we bring them over here and we teach a bunch of Chinamen–er, Chinese people–how to do computers and then they go back to China and hack into us."[33]
  • In January 2015, during a discussion on The Five about youth sentiments about radical Islam, he said: "I think it's sort of like in the United States where younger people today, it's not at all unusual for people to see multicultural dating, for example. Back when I was young you didn't date out of your own ethnicity. But in Europe and other places, this mingling that's going on here, younger people are beginning to find this acceptable. And that's the thing that is sort of scary because they're getting exposed to it on a daily basis."[34]

Personal life

In 1992, Beckel married Leland Ingham.[35] They had two children from the marriage and divorced in 2002.[36]

Beckel is a recovering alcoholic.[3][37] He has spoken openly about his past addictions to drugs and alcohol, admitting in July 2011 on The Five: "I'm a recovering addict and cocaine was my drug of choice."

In 2007, Beckel was involved in an altercation in a Bethesda, Maryland, grocery store parking lot with a man who took issue with his anti–George W. Bush bumper stickers.[38]

In October 2011, Beckel nearly choked to death on a piece of shrimp at a Fox News reception, but was saved by Fox News chief Roger Ailes and The Five co-host Eric Bolling.[3][39]

In early 2015, Bob was absent from The Five for a number of weeks which led to speculation that he had been fired, but Fox later announced that his absence was due to "health related issues", and it was later revealed that he had major back surgery on March 26 at a New York area hospital.[3] His spot has been filled by Fox regulars Juan Williams, Julie Roginsky and others. During his absence, Beckel stated via his Twitter account that while many conservatives sent well wishes for a recovery and return, many on the left never said anything.[40]

2015 Memoir

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Only in America can a guy manage a presidential candidate to a forty-nine-state rout, then go on to be paid very well to dispense political advice on TV and in lecture halls. What a country!

Bob Beckel, in Prologue from: I Should Be Dead - p. 3[3]

In late 2015, Beckel published a memoir, I Should Be Dead: My Life Surviving Politics, TV, and Addiction, co-written with John David Mann.[3]

A book-signing party celebrating publication of Beckel's book, hosted by Cal Thomas, aired in November 2015 on C-SPAN.[41][42]

Bibliography

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References

  1. The Five, March 10, 2014 https://archive.org/details/FOXNEWSW_20140310_210000_The_Five#start/3540/end/3600
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  6. New York: Abelard-Schuman, 1954, 1962 (rev. ed.)
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  20. The Five at IMDb Accessed 2015-12-31
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  39. Bob Beckel Choking: Says Roger Ailes, Eric Bolling Saved His Life. Huffington Post. 2011-10-14.
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  41. Book Party for I Should Be Dead: Bob Beckel delivers remarks and mingles with guests at a book party for his book, I Should Be Dead: My Life Surviving Politics, TV, and Addiction - Newsvader, January 2, 2016. Accessed 2016-01-10
  42. Book Party for I Should Be Dead (Video), c-span.org, November 15, 2015. Accessed 2016-01-10

External links