The Borneo Post

What the movie ‘Weiner’ tells us about Huma Abedin

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ABOUT 15 minutes into a newly released documentar­y about her husband’s train wreck of a campaign for New York City mayor, Huma Abedin reflects on the awkward improbabil­ity of it all.

“Those of you who know me are probably surprised to see me standing up here. I’m usually back of the room, far away from the microphone as possible,” she tells an audience of well- heeled women in a swanky Manhattan apartment where she has come to raise money for Anthony Weiner’s mayoral bid.

Abedin, of course, is the famously private aide de camp, confidant and surrogate daughter to Hillary Clinton. She is Clinton’s couture- clad palace guard.

It was astonishin­g for Abedin to have allowed such a film as “Weiner” to be made at all — much less to put a high- definition, closeup lens to the most humiliatin­g chapter of her life.

The filmmakers go into the Weiners’ home, eavesdrop on their arguments, capture awkward moments of silence and exasperati­on. They open windows on a strained partnershi­p that is being held together but appears a long way from healing.

Especially striking are the ways in which Abedin’s own marriage follows the patterns of her boss’, raising many of the same questions. Was it love or ambition that made her stay with a self- destructiv­e politician who betrayed her again and again? Is her suffering a testament to her character, or evidence that something is lacking in her judgement? Key figure in many controvers­ies

“Weiner” premiered in January at the Sundance Film Festival, opened in the top 10 markets on the May 27, and will expand to screens across the country in coming weeks. The ex- congressma­n has said that he gave filmmakers Josh Kriegman, a former staffer, and Elyse Steinberg access in hopes that people might get a fuller picture of him. But at this point, the person whom everyone wants to see is his wife.

The timing of the film’s release is hardly ideal, coming at a moment when Clinton appears poised to become the first woman ever to win a major party’s presidenti­al nomination. Abedin comes off as the oldest stereotype in politics: the suffering, ornamental spouse.

Off- screen, however, Abedin has become a key figure in many of the controvers­ies that have swirled around Clinton.

She has been interviewe­d by the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion in connection with its probe into Clinton’s use of a private email account. Questions have also been raised about the fact that, during the last six months of Clinton’s tenure at the State Department, Abedin was drawing paycheques simultaneo­usly from the government, a private consulting firm with close ties to the Clintons, the Clinton Foundation and the secretary’s personal office.

The film traces Weiner’s 2013 mayoral campaign, launched less than two years after the sexting scandal that forced his resignatio­n from Congress. After a brief stint at the top of the polls, the endeavour collapses under the fallout from a fresh round of revelation­s that he had returned to his old ways, using a pseudonym “Carlos Danger.”

Abedin, now 39, had not only acquiesced in his bid to re- start his political career, but had encouraged it.

“She was very eager to get her life back that I had taken from her, to clean up the mess I had made, and running for mayor was the straightes­t line to do it,” Weiner says in the film.

But then, she had had a frontrow seat for a political crash and resurrecti­on once before. Abedin began working for then-First Lady Hillary Clinton in 1996 as an East Wing intern – right around the same time that Monica Lewinsky became one in the West Wing.

She was a George Washington University student at the time, the Michigan- born daughter of a Pakistani mother and Indian father, both academics. A practising Muslim, she had spent much of her childhood in Saudi Arabia.

Abedin’s sense of style has made her a fixture on the glossy pages of the fashion magazines. When she donned a specially made Oscar de la Renta gown to wed Weiner in 2010, Bill Clinton officiated at the ceremony. Remaking their image

For Abedin and Weiner, the first step toward political redemption was remaking their image, from that of a late- night punchline to a loving couple in recovery. There were gauzy profiles of their family life in the New York Times Magazine and People Magazine. His announceme­nt video opened on a scene of the couple and their curly- haired toddler having breakfast in their kitchen.

Seemingly, no detail was too small for Abedin to fret over. At one point in the film, she tells Weiner that she is “not crazy about those pants.”

“We all have our things to bear,” he says dismissive­ly. “They’re lightweigh­t. I need lightweigh­t trousers.”

The film showcases both her charm and her calculatio­n. Abedin coos over the phone to one potential donor: “It’s Huma. How could you tell my voice? I haven’t talked to you in a year. How was the engagement? I want all the details.”

When she hangs up, she announces: “All right. He’ll max. His wife is going to max out, and he’ll try to raise another five.” “Ka- ching,” Weiner exults. Only touched upon are the implicatio­ns of what she is doing on his behalf. Abedin worked the contacts she had made through the Clintons, and leveraged the expectatio­ns of the role she would have in a future Clinton administra­tion. Some who are close to the Clintons were appalled.

“People like Huma, but they saw her trading on the Hillary card and resented it, but that didn’t mean they didn’t show up” for Weiner, one longtime Clinton friend and adviser had told the Washington Post at the time. “The chatter was, if you wanted to stay in Hillary’s good graces, you answer the call from Huma.”

Abedin is an accomplish­ed woman who has been one of the secretary of state’s closest advisers. But there are moments in the film where she is beset by wonkish insecuriti­es. She asks her husband for “a book. Like a prep book. Just something. I have nothing.”

He seems mystified: “Just like a novel or something?” Second scandal

“Don’t you remember my event last week?” she snaps. “That woman was like, what’s his position on – And I’m like, I don’t know what the hell his position is on X.”

As the second scandal breaks, the camera catches 23 seconds of excruciati­ng silence beween the couple, before Weiner asks the crew to leave. But Abedin stands by his side at the subsequent news conference professing that she loves him, she forgives him, she believes in him.

And when Weiner’s shellshock­ed staff holds a meeting in the couple’s apartment to regroup, Abedin coaches his communicat­ions director Barbara Morgan to put on her game face when she heads out the door.

“Just a quick optics thing,” she tells Morgan. “I assume the photograph­ers are still outside, so you will look happy? I’m saying this for you. I don’t want it to be, ‘ The press secretary walked out very upset at 6: 30.’”

But it soon becomes clear to her, if not to him, how irredeemab­le his situation has become. She looks on as he watches, over and over again, a replay of a set-to that he had with MSNBC host Lawrence O’Donnell. His expression is one of ectasy; hers, of horror. Finally, she walks out of the room, shaking her head, and saying: “Sorry, I can’t.” As Abedin retreats from the public eye, she turns back to Clinton’s world for advice – and specifical­ly to longtime media handler, Philippe Reines. She defers to Reines’ objections, when Weiner presses her to attend a campaign event.

“I’ll give you some prep in the car,” Weiner says.

“You don’t know anything,” she replies.

“I would say you act like a normal campaign candidate’s wife: ‘ I think Anthony is doing an amazing job. It’s great to be out here,’” he persists.

Abedin slumps in her chair and buries her chin in one hand, fidgeting with the other. Because, as both she and anyone who watches can see, there is nothing even remotely normal about any of this. — WP-Bloomberg

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 ??  ?? Abedin with Clinton in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighbourh­ood of Brooklyn, New York, last Apr 17. (Below) Abedin helps her boss order during a quick stop at Omar’s in Newark, New Jersey on Wednesday. — WP-Bloomberg photos by Melina Mara
Abedin with Clinton in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighbourh­ood of Brooklyn, New York, last Apr 17. (Below) Abedin helps her boss order during a quick stop at Omar’s in Newark, New Jersey on Wednesday. — WP-Bloomberg photos by Melina Mara
 ??  ?? Denise Brown
Denise Brown

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