Heard on the Hill: Too Sexy for the Twin Cities?

By Emily Heil and Elizabeth Brotherton
Roll Call Staff
Sept. 4, 2008, 12 a.m.

Her novel dishes about the seamy side of the political fundraising world — particularly the one inside the GOP’s money-making machine — so one wouldn’t expect former Republican fundraiser Nicole Sexton, who’s now with the ONE Campaign, to be the GOP’s favorite author.

Still, those who felt exposed by the truth-as-fiction book “Party Favors” apparently took their literary tastes a bit further than

just taking the book off the list for the next book club gathering. According to his agent, Sexton canceled a book signing scheduled for Sept. 2 at a local Barnes & Noble bookstore because “top GOP officials” put pressure on her and on the nonpartisan ONE Campaign to nix the event.

A similar event at a Denver-area Borders bookstore during the Democratic National Convention went off without a hitch.

Sexton’s literary agent, Maura Teitelbaum, who’s with Abrams Artists Agency, says Republicans didn’t like the way their buck-raking operations were portrayed in the novel, which follows a young fundraiser who becomes disenchanted with the venality and loose ethics of her profession.

“It’s a shame that in this historic presidential election, when we should be focused on important issues like the economy and the war and global warming, that there are politicians that feel it’s important to squash a book signing,” she tells HOH. “It’s disheartening.”

GOPers might not have liked the book’s (fictional, of course) depiction of some fundraisers who skimmed huge amounts of money from their donors, or the way fundraisers REALLY view many donors — with a combination of pity and repulsion. An RNC spokesman said he knew nothing of the incident. But Teitelbaum says the book should open people’s eyes to dirty secrets on both sides of the aisle. Besides, she says, it’s just a fun read.

“I mean, it’s a pink-and-fuschia-covered book!” she tells us.

Plight of the Pretty. There’s been plenty of debate as to whether Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) is qualified to be vice president, but there’s been little doubt that she’s, well, kind of a hottie.

And while the pundits dig into Palin’s political experience and government record, HOH is here to analyze how the former beauty queen’s attractiveness will affect her campaign to be the nation’s No. 2 gal.

Fortunately, there’s an expert on such things.

Liza Figueroa Kravinsky is the maker of “Beauty: In the Eyes of the Beheld,” a documentary studying the effect of beauty on women. And although most wouldn’t be overly sympathetic to the plight of the really, really good-looking, being beautiful is a Catch-22 for Palin, Figueroa Kravinsky said.

“Her looks got her in the door, I think, because she won a pageant and won local office. I’m sure her looks really helped there,” Figueroa Kravinsky told HOH. “But at a certain level as a beautiful woman rising her in her career, it can hurt her.”

Palin already has been objectified, with significant news coverage focused on her looks, Figueroa Kravinsky said. It’s possible Palin will even dress to downplay her beauty.

“I think there’s a reason why she wears glasses,” Figueroa Kravinsky said. “And it’s a good thing that she’s not blond.”

Not So Fast. Before you leave the Twin Cities, local Rep. Jim Ramstad (R-Minn.) has a few suggestions for you. HOH caught up with Ramstad, whose district wraps around Minneapolis, on Wednesday at a lunch sponsored by the Creative Coalition, for some thoughts on what Minnesota sights we shouldn’t miss before we pack up and head back to Washington. Ramstad says visitors to his part of the world should be sure to check out the Mall of America — which happens to be in his district, natch, and drop some serious coin. “They should spend a lot of money, because our economy needs it,” he said.

Baucus: We Must Reform Health Care Now

March 8, 12 a.m.

Ten years ago, Dan DeJong, a fourth-generation rancher from just outside Libby, Mont., was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Dan worked hard all his life, but when faced with massive bills to treat his cancer, Dan and his wife, Pat, had no choice but to sell the family’s land and apply for Medicaid and food stamps. Read Full Article

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