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Mark Steyn: John Kerry is all tied up in nuances
The Telegraph (U.K.) ^ | 03/02/04 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 03/01/2004 4:30:36 PM PST by Pokey78

The news that Boris Johnson and half his Tory colleagues have been flirting with John Kerry like a Congressional overseas exchange intern programme came as no surprise to me. Though the Senator likes to think of himself as exuding Kennedy-esque glamour, to Conservatives he has the reassuring mien of an unexciting Cabinet heavyweight back when the party still had heavyweights and a Cabinet to put them in.

You can see why the Tory benches have been mesmerised by the immobile features of the Botoxicated Brahmin: superficially, he has the air of a cadaverous Douglas Hurd. As the Tories used to say in the old days, he has bottom - though, in the current climate, Senator Kerry would perhaps be ill-advised to adopt it as a campaign slogan.

One appreciates that Dubya and his Texan tics are not to everyone's taste, especially overseas. That said, one reason why America is one of the few places on the planet where conservatism remains a going concern is because it's a vernacular conservatism, not the patrician kind.

Conversely, it's easy to mistake boringness for seriousness, as Dustin Hoffman and Barbra

Streisand did in last year's ratings-bust Oscar show. So I defy any Tory MP to spend as much time with Kerry as I have this past year and still say they want him on the BBC News every night for the next eight years.

In Ohio the other day, he was trying to attack Bush's economic policy for the benefit of the television crews and staggered through three minutes of puffy incoherence. At the end, the CBS guy said none of what he'd droned was usable and would he mind trying again. Eventually, they coached the Senator into a soundbite: "It's the biggest say-one-thing-do-another administration in the history of the country." He likes this so much he now uses it all the time.

I recognised the CBS problem. Last spring and summer, I went to three Kerry campaign events in New Hampshire, intending to write about them for the Telegraph. Each time, I staggered groggily out of the diner or American Legion hall and, after checking my pulse and administering self-resuscitation, I figured that everything he said was so rambling and platitudinous that to inflict it on readers would be unfair, if not actually career-jeopardising.

But I wrote the stuff down. He used the word "courage" a lot. He said that he had "the courage to take the tough decisions", and America needed "the courage to stand up". His campaign was billing itself back then as the "American Courage Tour". I think it was after his "Fresh Air Forum" (sadly misnamed) that I looked at my notes and found the following: "Sometimes real leadership means having the courage not to have any courage."

That can't be right, I thought. It must be two separate answers, or there's some missing words about a Senate Appropriations Bill in the middle that I left out. But funnily enough, I find if you stick it on the end of almost any Kerry response - the explanation as to why his vote in favour of the Iraq war was actually a vote against the Iraq war and the one about why his vote to refuse funding to the troops was actually evidence of his strong support for the troops - it makes things much clearer.

So the notion that Kerry is more verbally felicitous than Bush depends on one's appetite for sonorous senatorial blather. The Tory benches may have what Boris calls "a certain snobbish resistance to his syntax", but I love Bush-speak. "Misunderestimate" encapsulates brilliantly what his opponents keep doing.

Senator Joe Biden - a man so rhetorically insecure that he's the only presidential candidate ever to plagiarise Neil Kinnock - was bending Bush's ear about the need to take a more "nuanced" approach to Afghanistan, and Bush replied: "I don't do nuance." Beautiful, and pithy, and a lot funnier than anything in the Bush parodies.

The smart guys don't think it's funny. Richard Cohen wrote a column for the Washington Post, headlined "Bush's War against Nuance". If you've gone over to the forces of nuance, Kerry's your guy - or your nuancy boy. He's got nuances coming out of his nuances. As the New York Times put it in its endorsement of the Senator: "What his critics see as an inability to take strong, clear positions seems to us to reflect his appreciation that life is not simple. He understands the nuances."

That may be the most lethal endorsement since Al Gore leapt on the Howard Dean bandwagon and sent it careering into the ravine. Just for the record, Kerry can take strong, clear positions. It's just that he tends to take both of them. For example. On January 22, 1991, he wrote to Wallace Carter of Newton Centre, Massachusetts:

"Thank you for contacting me to express your opposition to the early use of military force by the US against Iraq. I share your concerns. On January 11, I voted in favour of a resolution that would have insisted that economic sanctions be given more time to work and against a resolution giving the president the immediate authority to go to war."

Nine days later, he wrote to the same Mr Carter in Newton Centre:

"Thank you very much for contacting me to express your support for the actions of President Bush in response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. From the outset of the invasion, I have strongly and unequivocally supported President Bush's response to the crisis and the policy goals he has established with our military deployment in the Persian Gulf."

It is in trying to reconcile both of his strong, clear positions that Senator Kerry winds up tying himself up in nuances. He was at it again this weekend. "This President always makes decisions late," he huffed apropos Haiti. Hang on. He's just spent the past year complaining that Bush makes decisions too early, rushing in when he could have spent another year or so chit-chatting with the French.

I'm sure there are millions of Kerry supporters who'd like to take a tough Kerry-like stand this November. The best way to do that, in the spirit of his war votes, is to vote for Bush and then spend the next 10 years solemnly explaining that that was your bold courageous way of expressing your opposition to Bush.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: 2004; britain; england; greatbritain; kerry; marksteyn; marksteynlist; tories; tory; uk; unitedkingdom
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To: JohnHuang2
Sometimes leadership means having the courage not to have courage

Reminds me of Eleanor Clift defending the rapist soon after he told us there would be no tax cuts. "It takes real courage to break your promise."

61 posted on 03/02/2004 6:20:50 AM PST by Brasil ("The cause of freedom is in good hands." GWB)
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To: dighton
If you've gone over to the forces of nuance, Kerry's your guy - or your nuancy boy.

Is that 'u' necessary? It works just as well without it:

If you've gone over to the forces of nuance, Kerry's your guy - or your nancy boy.

62 posted on 03/02/2004 8:01:38 AM PST by blanknoone
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To: JohnHuang2
Mark Steyn ~ Bump!

We are winning ~ the bad guys are losing ~ trolls, terrorists and the democrats are sad ~ very sad!

~~ Bush/Cheney 2004 ~~

63 posted on 03/02/2004 8:07:00 AM PST by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: Pokey78
Please add me to your ping list. Thank you.
64 posted on 03/02/2004 11:38:53 AM PST by Seth1
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To: annyokie
Au contraire: Florence King in National Review.

I agree, and it's fitting that Steyn's Happy Warrior column should occupy the page where King's The Misanthrope's Corner was once featured.

65 posted on 03/02/2004 11:41:44 AM PST by Constitution Day ("The germ of dissolution of our federal government is in the constitution of the federal Judiciary.")
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To: scholar; Bullish; linear; yoda swings
Ping
66 posted on 03/02/2004 12:16:00 PM PST by knighthawk (Live today, there is no time to lose, because when tomorrow comes it's all just yesterday's blues)
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To: okie01
Absolutely right, okie. Excellent point.
67 posted on 03/02/2004 7:19:13 PM PST by NonValueAdded ("Not Fonda Kerry")
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To: Pokey78
CBS guy said none of what he'd droned was usable and would he mind trying again. Eventually, they coached the Senator into a soundbite

I'd love to see a transcript of that coaching.

68 posted on 03/02/2004 7:27:12 PM PST by GretchenEE
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To: Pokey78; Howlin; riley1992; Miss Marple; deport; Dane; sinkspur; steve; kattracks; JohnHuang2
<< If you've gone over to the forces of nuance, Kerry's your ... nuancy boy. >>

Where's Louis Prima when we need him?

Will someone please imbed a few bars of Just a Gigilo to round out this otherwise perfct dish?

[Republican Party advertising pros please note!]
69 posted on 03/03/2004 10:52:18 PM PST by Brian Allen ("He who dares not offend cannot be honest." - Thomas Paine)
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To: Tax-chick
Egad! Kerry is so boring he even makes Mark Steyn dull! Global emergency! 3 posted on 03/01/2004 4:34:54 PM PST by Tax-chick

This was one of Steyn's lesser columns (by which I mean, he did not commit Genius even once).

I, also, blame the subject matter.

70 posted on 03/04/2004 4:29:32 AM PST by OrthodoxPresbyterian (We are Unworthy Slaves; We have only done Our Duty)
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Comment #71 Removed by Moderator

To: Pokey78
The Western world's current tides of politics very often come and go in cycles. In fact, today's post-liberal post-modernist party supposedly on the left reads like yeareryears' patrician conservatives. And given that the British Conservative Party consists of two strains: one of a patrician kind, the other a Thachter kind, it is easy to see a group of patrician British Conservatives (with capital C) fawning over John Kerry (who looks and feels like a silver-spooned rich centre-leftist to me).
72 posted on 03/11/2004 8:54:56 PM PST by NZerFromHK
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To: Pokey78
A Mark Steyn bump
73 posted on 03/11/2004 9:48:45 PM PST by Irish Eyes
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