Late in 1992, just before Bill Clinton was inaugurated President of the United States, I went to Washington to profile Pamela Harriman, who was credited with helping elect him and would soon become his ambassador to France. Our long conversations were unattributed however, at her insistence, though later, a biographer, Sally Bedell Smith, would reveal she’d been my primary source. This week, a new biography of Harriman called Kingmaker was published, giving her a titular promotion: Thirty years ago, my editors at New York Magazine had called her “America’s Queen Mother”. And when she died, I published excerpts from our conversations in the New York Times, which used her description of herself as its headline: “A Backroom Girl.”