Razzle Dazzle
Politics as
Distorted Humor
By RICHARD
STEIER
John Kerry last week proved once again why politicians
shouldn't try to be the funniest guy in the room. In response, President Bush
proved once again that he'll grasp at the shakiest of reeds to salvage political
power.
Unlike
in their 2004 race, when Mr. Bush allowed surrogates to pummel Mr. Kerry using
specious logic, he did his own punching this time. And the Massachusetts
Senator, rather than letting himself suffer lasting damage by just taking the
pounding, as he did for a crucial stage of the presidential campaign, struck
back fiercely before apologizing.
The big question, as voters went to the polls Nov. 7 with Republican control
of Congress - and Mr. Bush's accompanying hope to avoid playing defense for the
final two years of his term - hanging in the balance, was whether the electorate
was ready to be fooled again. Would the American public once more allow itself
to be distracted from the damage the President did to the battle against
terrorism by invading Iraq, and make choices based on superfluous issues and
phony rhetoric?
'Botched Joke' Gets Milked
 |
| 'BOTCHED JOKE'
ABOUT BOTCHED PRESIDENCY: Sen. John Kerry (left) found himself on
the defensive, and eventually apologizing, after his remark to
college students that he said was a reference to President Bush
leaving the nation 'stuck in Iraq' was delivered clumsily enough to
prompt charges that it was a putdown of the American troops serving
there. | |
Senator Kerry touched off the controversy Oct. 30 when he told students at
Pasadena City College in California, "You know, education, if you make the most
of it, you study hard, you do your homework and you make an effort to be smart,
you can do well. If you don't, you get stuck in Iraq."
The following afternoon, speaking in Georgia, Mr. Bush told an audience of
supporters that his old rival was maligning the intelligence of the American
troops stationed in Iraq. "The Senator's suggestion that the men and women of
our military are somehow uneducated is insulting, and it is shameful," the
President declared.
Mr. Kerry fired back later that day that Mr. Bush was distorting the intent
of his remarks for political purposes, calling his earlier remark "a botched
joke about the President and the President's people, not about the troops."
He told reporters at a press conference he held in Seattle, "If anyone owes
our troops in the field an apology, it is the President and his failed team and
a Republican majority in the Congress that has been willing to stamp -
rubberstamp - policies that have done injury to our troops and their families."
By the following day, however, Senator Kerry expressed "regret that my words
were misinterpreted to wrongly imply anything negative about those in uniform."
It wasn't clear whether the White House attack machine would be able to
exploit the controversy to mobilize its voting base and swing undecided voters
in key congressional races at a time when disillusionment with Mr. Bush has
begun to set in even among his conservative supporters.
For
one thing, sentiment against the war in Iraq is so strong even among Republicans
that some elected officials questioned the wisdom of the President bringing the issue
further to the forefront. For another, as was acknowledged by former Uniformed Firefighters'
Association President Jimmy Boyle, who campaigned for Mr. Bush in 2004, it was
pretty certain that Mr. Kerry's incendiary line was a gibe at the nation's most
prominent C student rather than a sneer at those serving in Iraq.
Unlike Mr. Bush and most of his leading advisers, prominent among them Vice
President Cheney and political guru Karl Rove, Mr. Kerry knows what it's like to
be a soldier fighting an unpopular war against an elusive and deadly enemy.
While the President was sitting out the war in a Texas National Guard unit and
Mr. Cheney was obtaining five draft deferments because, as he later said, he
"had other priorities," Mr. Kerry distinguished himself as a Navy Lieutenant who
commanded a gunboat in the Mekong Delta. His subsequent stance as a decorated
veteran speaking against the Vietnam War was not a turn against his comrades but
a demand that they be taken out of harm's way.
'Lacked the Courage to Fight'
He said last week, "If anyone thinks that a veteran, someone like me, who's
been fighting my entire career for veterans ... would somehow criticize more
than 140,000 troops serving in Iraq and not the President and his people who put
them there, they're crazy."
Senator Kerry went on to say, "I'm sick and tired of a whole bunch of
Republican attacks, most of which come from people who never wore the uniform
and never had the courage to stand up and go to war themselves."
There was some cringing among Democrats who believed he had handed the
President some raw meat to be exploited, with one candidate for Senator in
Nebraska actually echoing Mr. Bush's spin and calling Mr. Kerry's "stuck in
Iraq" remark "disrespectful and insulting." The question is, do they really
imagine that a significant slice of the electorate remains that gullible, so
susceptible to ruses that Mr. Kerry's "botched joke" could pay political
dividends for Republicans?
Mr. Kerry claimed that the line he had planned to utter to his student
audience asked if they knew what happened "if you're intellectually lazy. You
end up getting us stuck in a war in Iraq. Just ask President Bush."
The irony of this version of what he meant to say is that a case could be
made that Mr. Kerry and many of his Democratic colleagues - including both of
New York's Senators - were guilty of just that sort of intellectual laziness
when they voted four years ago to authorize Mr. Bush to go to war with Iraq.
They knew the President well enough by then to realize that rather than merely
providing leverage with Saddam Hussein, they were empowering him to once again
act precipitously and not necessarily in the best interests of the American
public.
Political Self-Defense?
Those Senators knew as well as anyone that there was no link between Saddam
and Osama bin Laden, and that going to war with Iraq would divert troops and
attention away from destroying the man and the terrorist network responsible for
9/11. And so, even if they could not have anticipated Iraq turning into a modern
Vietnam, they should have understood that the potential risks of invading
outweighed the rewards.
There were likely two motivating factors for most of the Democratic Senators
who acquiesced and gave Mr. Bush his license to invade: concern about how "no"
votes could be used against Democrats in the 2002 elections, and about how such
votes might be exploited by Republicans to compromise the presidential ambitions
of Senators like Mr. Kerry, John Edwards, and Hillary Clinton.
Taking the timid way out on the war authorization vote did not pay off
politically, however. The Democrats were routed in the mid-term 2002 elections,
including one particularly grotesque contest in which Georgia Sen. Max Cleland,
a triple amputee as a result of wounds suffered in Vietnam, had his patriotism
impugned by the Republican opponent who defeated him.
Senator Kerry, with Mr. Edwards as his running mate, was defeated by Mr. Bush
in 2004, with his evolving stance on the Iraq war one of the prime examples used
by Republicans to bludgeon him as a flip-flopper.
Fallout for Hillary
Senator Clinton might have seemed to escape consequences for her moment of
political weakness, since she didn't even have to debate the issue during her
reelection campaign, but it is the doubts her vote created about her character
that have left so many Democrats looking elsewhere, from the old (Al Gore) to
the new (Barack Obama), for a potential champion in 2008.
In contrast to the Democrats he once stampeded, Mr. Bush is like the late
Howard Cosell: often wrong, but never in doubt. Despite his religious
convictions, he has the morals of a back-alley fighter when it comes to politics
- and a corresponding lack of shame.
During the 2000 Republican primary in South Carolina, his spinmeisters
portrayed Sen. John McCain as someone whose long tenure as a prisoner of war during
Vietnam had unhinged him mentally; four years later, they caricatured Mr. Kerry as someone who,
by becoming a leader of the anti-war movement in the early
1970s, turned his back on the troops with which he had once served.
All that finger-pointing and smearing has allowed Mr. Bush to achieve
political success while being an utter failure as a President over the past six
years.
It is laughable to listen to Democrats and even Republicans call for the
firing of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, as if he were the guy who bears the
ultimate responsibility for what has happened in Iraq.
Had Cheney Pegged
The sway that Mr. Cheney supposedly holds over the President suggests that,
despite Mr. Bush's professed determination to cast himself in the shadow of
Ronald Reagan rather than his own father, he didn't pay nearly enough attention
to the Gipper. It was Mr. Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz who argued hardest against
cultivating relations with the Soviet Union during the Reagan Administration,
and Mr. Reagan who had the good judgment to tune them out. (The prime area in
which the current President has succeeded in emulating his role model is in
widening the income gap between the rich and ordinary workers: both presided
over eras in which they boasted of robust economies but real wages for
nonsupervisory employees declined.)
Bad History, Bad Advice
The consequences of Mr. Bush's failure to follow Mr. Reagan's lead in
ignoring Mr. Cheney offer perhaps the lasting lesson we have gleaned from the
President Mr. Kerry calls, with justification, "intellectually lazy." If you
rely on ideologically skewed retellings of history rather than actually studying
it, you are doomed to make huge blunders.
We'll know better after the election whether Mr. Kerry's clumsily phrased
remark allowed Mr. Bush to once again successfully change the subject, shifting
the focus away from his disastrous handling of Iraq and Katrina and his lack of
conspicuous successes elsewhere aside from cutting taxes for his wealthiest
backers.
For Mr. Kerry, last week's contretemps should be
a reminder that humor isn't necessarily a gift in politics. Many of
the sharpest wits in that profession - Adlai Stevenson, Eugene McCarthy and Mark Green
come to mind - never achieved their electoral goals. Rudy Giuliani's funniest moment in
office - his appearing in drag during the 1997 Inner Circle Show -
is now considered a potential liability for him should he seek the Republican nomination
for President.
In contrast, it would be hard to find much rip-roaring humor in anything said
by the two most effective and popular Presidents of the last 30 years, Mr.
Reagan and Bill Clinton. Mr. Reagan's most famous wisecrack, the "There you go
again" shot he fired at President Jimmy Carter during one of their 1980 debates,
may explain why.
It came in response to Mr. Carter's claim that if elected Mr. Reagan would
slash Medicare spending, one of a series of statements the challenger believed
misrepresented his positions. The amiability with which Mr. Reagan delivered the
line didn't make it any less of a zinger, however. And zingers make us laugh,
but they also cause a certain amount of wincing when delivered in the political
arena rather than in a comedy club.
Not Meant to Entertain
Mr. Bush more than any other modern President has had a life's arc that
mimics that of the fictional Bluto Blutarsky of "Animal House," rising from
drunken revelry in college to high elected office as a grown-up.
We don't look to government as a diversion from real life, however, but
rather as a place where solutions might be found to the anguish and horrors that
exist.
Mr. Kerry lost sight last week of the fact that young
people look to their political leaders for inspiration, not entertainment. Mr.
Bush, on the other hand, is incapable of providing either.