WORLD> America
Love in short supply for political spouses
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-06-04 14:37

WASHINGTON -- Political spouses increasingly are finding little public love to go with marriage.

The husbands and wives of elected officials long have been considered fair game, especially those in high-profile, high-paying jobs. But now, with the rise of bloggers and the march of 24-hour news, they've never been more visible, or as vulnerable to the rough and tumble of the campaign.

Consider Jackie Clegg Dodd, wife of embattled five-term Democratic Sen. Christopher Dodd of Connecticut.

Love in short supply for political spouses
In this Feb. 2, 2009 file photo, Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., and his wife, Jackie Clegg Dodd, talk with reporters during a news conference at Dodd's office in Hartford, Conn. [Agencies]

Republicans have been criticizing her for the $400,000 a year she earns as a director of several corporate boards, with the state Republican chairman questioning whether she got the posts because of the political clout of her husband. The senator is chairman of the Senate Banking Committee and facing his toughest re-election fight in 2010.

The charges came despite Mrs. Dodd's background as the former vice chairwoman and chief operating officer of the Export-Import Bank of the United States and her decade of experience working as a staffer on the Senate Banking and Appropriations panels.

Her infuriated husband cried foul.

"That is a flat-out lie and it's low-blow politics at its worst," Dodd complained in a recent Hartford Courant op-ed piece. "It is despicable that the Republican chairman would be lying about my wife's background and unfairly attacking her."

Jackie Dodd serves on the corporate boards of video rental company Blockbuster Inc., assisted living facility operator Brookdale Senior Living Inc., CME Group Inc., which is the parent company of the Chicago Board of Trade and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange; and pharmaceutical firms Cardiome Pharma Corp. and Javelin Pharmaceuticals.

She hired an ethics counsel to ensure there were no conflicts with her husband's Senate work before agreeing to take the posts.

"You're going to see these kind of conflicts more and more in families where both spouses work," said Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a government watchdog group. "High-powered people are often likely to be married to other high-powered people."

After a Courant story last month detailing Jackie Dodd's corporate posts, Connecticut Republican Party Chairman Chris Healy pounced.

"You don't become a board member with this thin a resume unless you know someone," Healy said.

While cautioning that political couples in general need to be careful to avoid conflicts, Sloan said Dodd's wife has "some pretty good qualifications to be a corporate director."

   Previous page 1 2 Next Page