There was nothing subtle about his interview with Kellie Boyer who was seeking a job with the Republican National Congressional Committee in 1989."When you want to play with the big boys,you have to lay with the big boys,"Ailes said to her,according to a report in theNew York Timeslast week. Everyone needs a special friend,he told her. When she asked whether she would need more than one"friend",he assured that she'd"only have to give a blow job once in a while".
So I was gob-smacked to learn that Susan Estrich is Ailes'lead lawyer. Estrich was the first woman to run a presidential campaign (for Democrat nominee Michael Dukakis in 1988),and is a renowned fighter for sexually abused women,turning her own rape into a searing testimony published asReal Rape in 1987.
Just a year ago she wrote in a local newspaper of being brought to tears by reading inNew York magazine the"revelations of Bill Cosby's disgusting behaviour over the last four decades". Now she is spokeswoman for Ailes whose behaviour would seem to be as"disgusting".
Estrich has been an occasional Fox commentator for some years but that hardly explains why she would take this job,especially when full-time Fox employees are declining to stand by their boss. Ailes might think a counter-intuitive defence by a Democrat and a feminist will give him sufficient plausibility to negotiate a juicy severance.