The French ambassador, Pierre Vimont, hosted a breakfast for political bloggers from the left, middle, and right at his palacial residence this morning in Washington, DC.
(Anyone who lives in DC is familiar with the French ambassador's residence, at least from the outside (photo, top left -
credit NCinDC). It's a gorgeous, huge structure, on a huge piece of land, right around the corner from Joe and me, and just across the street from Donald Rumsfeld. It was my first time inside, and it was quite beautiful in that over-the-top gilded way that only the French can pull off.)
Starting a few months ago, the embassy decided they wanted to reach out more to political bloggers. The reason, I'm gleaning - and I don't want to speak for them - is that they recognize blogs as another political power in Washington, and just as the embassy reaches out to journalists and other important individuals and institutions in Washington, they now wish to include influential blogs in that outreach. The breakfast was off-the-record - sorry folks - but it was quite interesting. The floor was ours to discuss what we liked, and much of the conversation centered around the economic crises and the Middle East. At times it was "lively," as they say in diplomatic circles.
What intrigued me about the meeting, rather than the substance - in reality, I don't expect seasoned ambassadors to drop any bombshells around foreign journalists - was the fact that it was happening at all. Now, this isn't the first time we, as bloggers, have dealt with foreign affairs, or foreign governments. The city of Amsterdam invited a number of us on a trip there several years ago, but that was to promote tourism, not discuss politics. And several of us were invited to Israel last year by a Jewish group here in Washington (I couldn't make it at the time), and while that was certainly a political trip, it was organized by Americans, not the Israeli government. And I was invited by Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyanni to meet with her last summer when I was in Athens (though my uncle held her job back in the 80s, so that might have played a role in her interest).
In any case, the fact that an ambassador wanted to meet US political bloggers is interesting to me, in and of itself.
Oh, and the croissants were to die for.
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