Keeping up with John Kerry-speak



Kerry’s emotional and long farewell address to the Senate on Wednesday came in at around 7,700 words. In contrast, Sen. Daniel Webster’s famous 1830 speech against state nullification of federal laws — widely seen as the greatest ever delivered in the Senate, was about 4,500 words.


Kerry will be joined in many meetings by a former Senate colleague, Vice President Biden, who’s never been accused of shying away from peroration every now and again.

Indeed, Biden is the holder of the world indoor bloviation record for his spectacular 1,100-word question during Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Supreme Court confirmation hearing in 1993. It went on so long it seemed Ginsburg wasn’t sure what the question was.

So they might want to schedule an intermission. Maybe two.


Dean Rusk rarely tweeted

But it seems Kerry can limit himself to 140 characters when he wants. Expect him to be far more active on Twitter than his predecessor.

On Kerry’s first day on the job, the State Department (@StateDept) tweeted that any messages directly from the big boss would be labeled with his initials — JK.

By contrast, Hillary Clinton barely dipped a toe into the social-media pool (in fact, the Loop sponsored a contest last year to help her craft her first tweet). As a senator, Kerry clearly enjoyed it, with recent tweets from @JohnKerry covering everything from the death of the owner of a Boston cannoli shop, to the Pats’ Super Bowl chances, to a birthday shout-out to then-colleague Sen. Max Baucus (to whom he said, “We’re still kids in this place.”)

But now that Kerry’s in the high-stakes world of international diplomacy, he might be in danger of sending mixed messages in a medium where meaning is easily lost. His sign-off, “JK,” for instance, is also online shorthand for “just kidding.”

Which could create some confusing diplomatic signals, IMO.


Power parenting

We’re hearing that
Samantha Power
, a longtime (since 2005) Obama foreign policy adviser and still likely ambassador to the United Nations — should there be an opening — is leaving the administration in the next few weeks to rest up and “spend more time with her family.”

(That may be the first time we’ve ever written that phrase where it actually happens to be true. She’s got two little kids at home; one is 3, the other 8 months.)

Power, now senior director for multilateral affairs and human rights at the National Security Council and a former war correspondent, is a professor, a human rights expert and the author of a widely acclaimed book — “A Problem From Hell,” which accused the United States of ignoring Balkan genocide.

She had been the No. 1 pick for the U.N. slot if Susan Rice had become secretary of state.

That didn’t happen, of course. But with deputy national security adviser Denis McDonough moving down the hall to be White House chief of staff, it’s hard to figure anyone but Rice becoming national security adviser if, as expected, that slot opens up with incumbent Tom Donilon leaving perhaps later on this year.

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