Todd S. Purdum | |
---|---|
Born |
Todd Stanley Purdum December 13, 1959 Illinois, United States |
Alma mater | Princeton University |
Occupation | national editor, political correspondent |
Notable credit(s) |
Vanity Fair, The New York Times |
Spouse(s) | Dee Dee Myers |
Children | two |
Family | Jerry S. Purdum (father, deceased), Connie Purdum (mother), Stephen Purdum (Brother), Edie Glavey (née Purdum) (Sister) Kate Purdum (daughter), Stephen Purdum (son) |
Todd Stanley Purdum (born December 13, 1959) is a national editor and political correspondent for Vanity Fair magazine.
Purdum is a son of Jerry S. Purdum, a Macomb, Illinois insurance broker, investor and realtor, and Connie Purdum. He graduated from St. Paul's School in 1978 and from Princeton University in 1982 where he was a member of the University Press Club.
Until late 2005, Purdum was a reporter and the Los Angeles bureau chief for the New York Times. From 1994 to 1997, he was a White House correspondent for the Times. He is now the national editor for Vanity Fair magazine.
For the July 2008 issue of Vanity Fair, Purdum wrote a scathing article about Bill Clinton, "The Comeback Id." The article analyzes Clinton's postpresidency business dealings, behavior, and possible personal indiscretions, citing several anonymous current and former Clinton aides. When asked about the article by Huffington Post writer Mayhill Fowler, Clinton said (in reference to Purdum): "He's a really dishonest reporter... and I haven't read (the article). There's just five or six blatant lies in there. But he's a real slimy guy." When Fowler reminded Clinton that Purdum is married to his former press secretary, he responded: "That's all right - he's still a scumbag" and later added "He's just a dishonest guy - can't help it." Clinton went on to observe, "It's all politics. It's all about the bias of the media for Obama. Don't think anything about it. But I'm telling ya, all it's doing is driving her supporters further and further away - because they know exactly what it is - this has been the most rigged coverage in modern history - and the guy ought to be ashamed of himself. But he has no shame. It isn't the first dishonest piece he's written about me or her." The following day, Jay Carson, a spokesman for Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, stated that Clinton regretted those remarks, but their factual content remains unchallenged by the Clintons.