"Punjab," Revisited
by horizonr, Fri Jan 25, 2008 at 04:38:41 PM EST
"Hillary Clinton (D-Punjab)" was a lame joke that backfired.
People inside and outside the Obama campaign showed, at the time -- and have continued to show -- that the joke did not originate
with the campaign's June 2007 opposition research memo in which the "(D-Punjab)"riff on the joke originally appeared.
But neither -- contrary to what every reporter who has bothered to offer a fact-checking parenthesis or footnote to "(D-Punjab)"
apparently believes -- did the joke behind that riff originate in the good-natured exchange that took place during a February 2006
fund-raiser for Clinton's 2006 Senate re-election campaign.
When the prominent Sikh-American supporter and donor who was hosting the event at his Potomac, Maryland, home introduced Clinton,
to the 80 or so other Sikh-American donors gathered, as the Senator from New York -- and from Punjab, too -- Clinton responded that
"I can certainly run for the Senate seat in Punjab and win easily."
In fact -- and this is previously unreported -- Clinton and this same supporter appear to have improvised the original joke, complete
with the opening line about her being the Senator from New York and Punjab, during an earlier Sikh-American event, which took place
in May 2005.
In that original version of the joke, Hillary Clinton responded:
I am delighted to be the Senator from Punjab, as well as from New York.
In other words, "Senator from Punjab" actually is part of what became a running joke -- a schtick -- a stock "bit" of unimaginative
but harmless political drollery, played out, in a spirit of co-conspiratorial fun, between Hillary Clinton and one of her most prominent
Sikh-American supporters, to help get her Sikh-American audiences in the mood for a speech, by reminding them of the bond they
already shared with her.
. . . . . . . . . .
Bill Clinton knows all of this. But he's hoping that most presidential primary voters don't.
That, presumably, is why, during a January 8 appearance at Dartmouth College, he asked a group of New Hampshire voters,
without elaboration:
What did you think about the Obama thing calling Hillary the Senator from Punjab? Did you like that?
and why he raised the issue again, Wednesday in South Carolina, with CNN reporter Jessica Yellin:
When [Obama] put out a hit job on me at the same time he called her the Senator from Punjab, I never said a word.
. . . . . . . . . .
PREVIOUS FACT-CHECKING ON THESE AND SIMILAR ALLEGATIONS FROM THE CLINTON CAMPAIGN ALWAYS HAS TRACED
"SENATOR FROM PUNJAB" BACK TO AN EXCHANGE THAT TOOK PLACE IN FEBRUARY 2006, BETWEEN HILLARY CLINTON AND
RAJWANT SINGH, A PROMINENT SIKH-AMERICAN SUPPORTER AND DONOR
On February 16, 2006, Singh** -- a D.C.-area dentist and national chairman of the Sikh Council on Religion and Education (SCORE) -- hosted
a fund-raiser, at his home in Potomac, Maryland, for Hillary Clinton's 2006 Senate re-election campaign.
According to Aziz Haniffa, whose report of the event appeared as an article in the March 17, 2006, issue of the New York-based India Abroad
(the oldest and largest-circulating South Asian newspaper in North America -- and the largest outside of India):
At the fundraiser...Clinton began by joking that "I can certainly run for the Senate seat in Punjab and win easily," after being
introduced by Singh as the Senator not only from New York but also Punjab.
It is clear, from context, that Singh coined "Senator from Punjab" (or words to that effect) as a term of endearment, and that Clinton took it
as such and reciprocated in kind.
Moreover -- and this is significant -- Sikhs themselves embraced the honorific and promoted it in their own media.
Perhaps the first published account of the February 2006 fund-raiser -- appearing five days after the event and nearly a month before the
piece in India Abroad -- was a lengthy article posted at SikhNet.
The first sentence of the article begins:
I can certainly run for the Senate seat in Punjab and win easily," said Senator Hillary Clinton....
. . . . . . . . . .
BUT IT APPEARS THAT THE FEBRUARY 2006 EXCHANGE BETWEEN HILLARY CLINTON AND RAJWANT SINGH WAS A
REPEAT PERFORMANCE OF A JOKE THE TWO ORIGINALLY IMPROVISED IN MAY 2005
Remember that Singh -- who hosted the February 2006 fund-raiser for Clinton -- is the national chairman of the Sikh Council on Religion
and Education (SCORE).
In 2005, Singh led SCORE to hold the inaugural the Sikh American Heritage Dinner.
Hillary Clinton was on the honorary committee for the dinner; and both she and Singh addressed the event, which was held in Washington on
May 17, 2005 -- nine months before the February 2006 fund-raiser.
A lengthy article documenting the proceedings was posted, the next day, to SCORE's Web site -- and, a few days later, to the SikhSangat News site.
So, like the 2006 article detailing the Singh-hosted fund-raiser, this 2005 article was written for a Sikh readership and published through Sikh media.
And like the later article, this one celebrates "Senator from Punjab" as an honorific that reflects positively on the Sikh community -- so much so that
this article, too, uses "Senator from Punjab" as the lead-sentence illustration:
"I am delighted to be the Senator from Punjab as well as from New York," said Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton....
The 2005 article doesn't mention who introduced Clinton at the Heritage Dinner.
But, based on reports: Given what Singh said at the 2006 event, and given that what Clinton said in response to Singh at that event is substantially
the same as what she said at the 2005 event -- an event which Singh also attended...
Ockham's razor begs us to conclude that Singh introduced Clinton in 2005, as well; that he introduced her as the "Senator from Punjab"; that
Clinton embraced "Senator from Punjab"; and that, by the time of the 2006 fund-raiser, Clinton and Singh were replaying a familiar and mutually
cherished gag -- likely in front of some of the same people.
. . . . . . . . . .
Was "Hillary Clinton (D-Punjab)" a lame riff? Yes. Was it a mistake? Yes.
But make no mistake about this: When Bill Clinton, knowing what he knows -- which is everything presented here -- stands in front of American
voters and the national media and complains that Barack Obama "called [Hillary] the senator from Punjab" -- floats just that one abstracted line
into the ether; lets it hang there, as if that's all there is; then sits back and waits for the media to do its number on Obama, never mind that
"Hillary" has used "Senator from Punjab" to raise who knows how much money for herself from the very Sikhs who gave her the name in
the first place -- when he does that, he is not only acting, he is lying. Shamelessly.
He is lying about Obama, he is lying about his wife -- and he is stealing the truth about both of them from the American people.
Are they willing to say anything to get her elected? You bet.
* This includes the fact check that the Obama campaign itself provided in the memo.
** Singh has donated the maximum $4,600 to Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign.






