The fictional Sen. Jefferson
Smith and McAllister parallel more than in the fact neither visited Washington,
D.C. before assuming their offices. Smith was a complete rube about the ways
Congress worked. He inherited a staff of cynics and manipulators, trying to
keep him from interfering with the agenda they shared with powerful Members. He
let the media use his story in ways to suit their needs to sell papers, even as
this raised ire among his fellow Members of Congress. At one point he let his
affections for a female distract him from doing a good job.
That McAllister shares the
similarity on the last account has become obvious to anyone perusing a politics
headline in the past week, except that in Smith’s case it only caused him to nearly
miss being able to blow the whistle on a crooked scheme, while McAllister’s
game of tongue hockey with a married aide, captured on video released to
the media, makes him appear less than
upstanding and has far greater ramifications. But the other two instances both
expose less obvious yet crucial mistakes as to why he took a job-for-life gig
and put it up for grabs.