Hillary: What’s in a Name?
Preston Bynum still remembers Hillary Rodham. The former chief of staff for Arkansas Gov. Frank White, Bynum worked on White's campaign to oust a young Bill Clinton from the governor's mansion in 1980, an effort that succeeded in part because voters disapproved of Hillary's decision to keep her maiden name. "White was just very perceptive," Bynum told NEWSWEEK. "He would say, 'Can you believe they're married and she never took his name?' " Bynum said the flap underscored her exoticness in Arkansas. "She was still kind of a hippie," he recalled, adding that her style "just didn't sit well with people."
Soon enough, Hillary Rodham was Mrs. Bill Clinton. Governor White's widow, Gay, said she thinks Hillary's curtsy to Arkansas's old-fashioned mores helped Clinton defeat White in their 1982 rematch. "Right after my husband was elected, she pretty much became Hillary Clinton," White said. "It must have been received well." Webb Hubbell, Hillary Clinton's old friend from Little Rock's Rose Law Firm, said the furor "bothered her because she had her own identity. She had gone to law school, she had things going on that were her own."
The issue followed the Clintons to Washington. In a poll conducted just after Bill took office, 62 percent of respondents said the First Lady should be known as Hillary Clinton rather than Hillary Rodham Clinton. Later, a New York Times column asserted that "there have been … four wives of Bill Clinton": Hillary Rodham, Mrs. Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton and, "rather suddenly about the time her husband became President," the full HRC.
Neel Lattimore, Clinton's deputy press secretary at the time, said that Hillary's inner circle was baffled by the obsession. Staff referred to her interchangeably as Hillary Rodham Clinton or Mrs. Clinton. Emphasizing that use of Rodham was "not some mandate from on high," Lattimore denies that the First Lady changed her name for political reasons. But the press never let it go. In 1999, Maureen Dowd wrote a satirical column addressed to "Ms. Rodham Clinton Rodham." Is it any wonder that in her Senate races and now in her presidential bid, Ms. Rodham Clinton Rodham has decided to keep it simple? The campaign goes with just Hillary, spokesman Jay Carson said, "because it reflects the warmth and familiarity people feel toward her."
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Suzanne Smalley returned to Newsweek as a national correspondent in July 2007 after spending three years covering police and crime for the Boston Globe. At the Globe she broke several major stories, including news of the federal indictment of three Boston police officers and a feature story documenting how police and clergy arranged a secret truce between two of Boston's most violent street gangs. She also won awards for her expose on excessive state trooper salaries and for a series of articles about the fatal police shooting of a college student celebrating outside Fenway Park in the wake of the Red Sox American League Championship victory over the Yankees.
Prior to her three-year stint at the Globe from 2004 to 2007, Smalley worked at Newsweek as a reporter covering the 2004 presidential campaign as part of Newsweek's Campaign Special Project Team. In that position, she followed the campaigns of several Democratic candidates across the country, filing behind the scenes reporting for a Newsweek special issue published immediately after the election. The National Magazine Awards recognized the project, awarding Newsweek the prestigious best single-topic issue honor. The reporting was later used in a book titled "Election 2004: How Bush Won and What You Can Expect in the Future."
Before her election coverage, Smalley covered several major breaking news stories for Newsweek, including the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center, the disappearance of Chandra Levy, and the Elizabeth Smart kidnapping.
A native of Coral Gables, Florida, Smalley graduated from Georgetown University magna cum laude and received a masters degree in journalism from Northwestern University's Medill School.
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