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The Truman Show (In Choosing Miers Bush Pulled a Truman)
The New Republic ^ | October 5, 2005 | William J. Stuntz

Posted on 10/05/2005 4:44:50 AM PDT by RWR8189

 

What kind of president picks both John Roberts and Harriet Miers? They look like the ultimate odd couple. Roberts is not a Bush crony, he has a résumé to die for, and everyone who knows him says he's unbelievably smart. Miers is more than a crony but certainly not less--Fred Barnes says no president has ever known a Supreme Court appointee as well as Bush knows Miers, and he may be right. She has the kind of résumé you expect to see in the director of a not-very-important federal agency: president of the local bar, member of the Dallas City Council, chair of the Texas Lottery Commission. Roberts looks like an idea guy, the person who figures out the theory that changes the way people think about his field. Miers looks more like a gifted schmoozer--at best, she's the one who hires the idea guy. (Apparently, she had a lot to do with hiring Roberts.) The conservative meritocracy meets the old-gal network. It doesn't add up.

Actually, it does. We have seen this kind of presidential appointment pattern before, in Harry Truman's White House. Truman's list of Supreme Court nominees looks like a reading list for Mediocrity 101: Harold Burton, Fred Vinson, Tom Clark, and Sherman Minton. All but Clark were buddies from Truman's Capitol Hill days--classic Miers-like picks. But Truman had his Roberts moments as well. Along with forgettable hacks like John Snyder and J. Howard McGrath, his Cabinet included giants like George Marshall and Dean Acheson, wise men who crafted the policies that won the Cold War.

That strange combination flows naturally from the Truman characteristic that history so admires, the one that his contemporaries found so frustrating: his decisiveness. Truman didn't believe in deferring to experts; as the sign on his desk said, the buck stopped with him. Though an ex-senator, he had a very un-legislative disdain for decision-making procedure. Mostly, he just called 'em as he saw 'em, with little reflection and no second-guessing.

In a White House like that, decisions are bound to be high-variance. When layers of process and staff surround every appointment, the extremes--good and bad--tend to be lopped off. Brilliant minds with controversial ideas get nixed along with third-rate schmoozers. But when the boss refuses to staff it out and trusts his own intuition, all those options remain on the table. Cream can rise to the top. So can scum. That is how Harry Truman's presidency produced both Dean Acheson and Fred Vinson, the brilliance of the Marshall Plan and the ineptitude of the Korean War. Few administrations have such highs or such lows.

Like Truman, George W. Bush makes decisions easily. He obviously trusts his own intuitions, especially about people--remember, this is the man who looked into Vladimir Putin's soul. Also like Truman, Bush does not readily admit mistakes, and hence rarely corrects them. It is no accident that both presidents fought badly improvised wars. Finally, Bush has a Truman-like virtue many presidents lack: He doesn't mind having people with better minds and better educations around him. Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz--these are major-league talents, a cut above the norm for their jobs. So is John Roberts, who might be the smartest chief justice since Charles Evans Hughes. But along with the Rices and Robertses come an Alberto Gonzales here, a Michael Brown there--people who are a notch or two below the norm for their jobs. As is Harriet Miers.

It seems odd that our first business-school presidency would suffer from flawed decision-making--isn't decision-making what they teach in business schools? But it may not be so odd after all. When corporate managers hire underlings, they choose from the pool of people who have done similar jobs before and succeeded. Sometimes it doesn't work, and you get New Coke. But the potential for catastrophe is limited by the pool; only people who have done something like the job in question, and done it in a way that made money, are eligible.

At first blush, government looks the same: You give the best jobs to people who have done well in similar jobs. But the equation doesn't work, as a look at Harriet Miers makes clear. Miers has just been named to one of the top lawyers' jobs in the country, after a successful career doing other lawyers' jobs. So far, so good. But success in Miers's professional world is surprisingly hard to get a handle on, partly because there is no clear measure of what lawyers sell. If the client wins the litigation, credit the lawyer's skill. If the client loses, blame the law. Well-functioning markets require yardsticks like stock prices and market shares. The market for legal services has no such yardsticks. Even if it did, legal institutions seem designed to obscure credit and blame. Partners put their names on briefs that associates write, just as judges who hire the right law clerks acquire reputations for writing smart opinions. The person who sells the idea to the client is rarely the one who had the idea.

Most government jobs are even worse. Aside from the rare disaster that leaves corpses in its wake, government agencies know no bottom line--or else, the bottom line is perverse: Raise your agency's budget and you've done a good job. Creative, insightful people are scattered through the world of government service. But they don't always rise to the top. Some of the people who do rise to the top are better at impressing the boss than at generating innovative ideas.

Harriet Miers may be one of those people. If so, we can chalk this bad appointment up to the governing style of a president who makes decisions easily but not always well, a president who has seen steep highs and deep lows, a president who trusts his intuitions even when he shouldn't. A president who, on his bad days as well as his good ones, looks a lot like Harry Truman.

William J. Stuntz is a professor at Harvard Law School.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bush43; harrietmier; harrytruman; miers; scotus; stuntz; truman; williamjstuntz
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1 posted on 10/05/2005 4:44:51 AM PDT by RWR8189
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To: RWR8189

Interesting read.


2 posted on 10/05/2005 4:47:35 AM PDT by Huck ("If people are disappointed, they have every reason to be." Mark Levin on GW's latest lame move.)
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To: RWR8189

I have always likened GWB to Truman.


3 posted on 10/05/2005 4:50:12 AM PDT by Paradox (Just because we are not perfect, does not mean we are not good.)
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To: RWR8189
Harriet Miers may be one of those people. If so, we can chalk this bad appointment

Lovely leap from may to can without that annoying wait for history to unfold. The writer may just have potential to become a liberal jurist, since he transmogrifies words so easily.

William J. Stuntz is a professor at Harvard Law School.

Ah, I see the problem now. He's aghast that the rabble might get a seat at SCOTUS.

4 posted on 10/05/2005 4:51:51 AM PDT by dirtboy (Drool overflowed my buffer...)
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To: Huck

I have not seen nor heard what Mark Levin had to say about the latest nomination. Where can I see it.


5 posted on 10/05/2005 4:52:58 AM PDT by David Isaac
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To: dirtboy

Just out of curiosity, what part of "if so" did you have trouble with?


6 posted on 10/05/2005 4:53:38 AM PDT by AntiGuv (™)
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To: AntiGuv
Just out of curiosity, what part of "if so" did you have trouble with?

Its use to make a long leap to a pre-ordained conclusion by a Harvard mandarin.

7 posted on 10/05/2005 4:55:23 AM PDT by dirtboy (Drool overflowed my buffer...)
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To: RWR8189
Ah, the Harvard elite speaks out.

They hated Truman, called him nothing more than a haberdasher, which he was in private life.

They hated Nixon, he went to Duke not some eastern establishment like Harvard or Yale.

They hated the actor, Reagan.

And they hate Dubya.

Yet each of these men saved the world it their own time. Truman with the bomb, Nixon with going to China, Reagan bringing down the soviets, and now our President trying to save the world from islamofascists.

What did their favorite elite accomplish, the failed Bay of Pigs disaster, the highest interest rates and long gas lines, and a man who diddled a young girl and fell in love with Arafat.

I'll take our guys anytime.

8 posted on 10/05/2005 4:56:55 AM PDT by OldFriend (One Man With Courage Makes a Majority ~ Andrew Jackson)
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To: dirtboy

Oh, I see. Well, that clears it up.

FYI, "if so" is not conclusionary; it is conditional.


9 posted on 10/05/2005 4:56:57 AM PDT by AntiGuv (™)
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To: AntiGuv
FYI, "if so" is not conclusionary; it is conditional.

The intent of the writing is conclusionary, and slyly uses conditionals to get there. This is a bunch of random thoughts around a pre-determined conclusion with absolutely no evidence to back up much of anything about Miers.

10 posted on 10/05/2005 5:00:55 AM PDT by dirtboy (Drool overflowed my buffer...)
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To: David Isaac
I have not seen nor heard what Mark Levin had to say about the latest nomination. Where can I see it.

Well, I haven't read anything by him, but I did hear a snippet of his rant on Hannity's radio show on Monday evening - I think he used the words "travesty" and "outrage" a couple of times....

11 posted on 10/05/2005 5:03:44 AM PDT by brewcrew
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To: David Isaac
Let's just say he's not her biggest fan... neither am I.
12 posted on 10/05/2005 5:06:58 AM PDT by johnny7 (“Nah, I ain’t Jewish, I just don’t dig on swine, that’s all.”)
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To: dirtboy

Well, the evidence is in the article; you just disagree with his assessment of it. The conclusion fits the article perfectly well. It's certainly not any kind of leap at all.


13 posted on 10/05/2005 5:08:21 AM PDT by AntiGuv (™)
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To: AntiGuv
The conclusion fits the article perfectly well.

And the conclusion is based on a premise that cannot be proven at this point, namely, that Miers is an unqualified crony.

14 posted on 10/05/2005 5:09:32 AM PDT by dirtboy (Drool overflowed my buffer...)
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To: RWR8189
" ... But along with the Rices and Robertses come an Alberto Gonzales here, a Michael Brown there--people who are a notch or two below the norm for their jobs. As is Harriet Miers."


Really?


Why is it I have utter contempt for Professor Stuntz? Perhaps it is his in your face Harvard elitism? No, that can't be it. I have been vaccinated.


As my wife is prone to say, "there are some people that should not be allowed to go to college" ... I would suggest Stuntz is but one more of those.


.

15 posted on 10/05/2005 5:10:09 AM PDT by G.Mason
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To: RWR8189
What kind of president picks both John Roberts and Harriet Miers? They look like the ultimate odd couple. Roberts is not a Bush crony, he has a résumé to die for, and everyone who knows him says he's unbelievably smart.

It wasn't more than a month or two ago that everyone was calling Roberts a lightweight. Funny things happen when one waits for the facts before making up one's mind.

16 posted on 10/05/2005 5:12:07 AM PDT by MortMan (Eschew Obfuscation)
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To: RWR8189
He obviously trusts his own intuitions, especially about people--remember, this is the man who looked into Vladimir Putin's soul.

The author lost credibility with this sentence, and goes on to write a bashing article with flimsy logic.

When Bush made that remark, it was early in both his and Putin's presidencies. It was appropriate that Bush tried to give Putin the benefit of the doubt. And it's not the President's fault that Putin turned out to be a commie pinko who couldn't live up to history's expectations.

The author is a whiny Hahvaad liberal elitist.

17 posted on 10/05/2005 5:12:50 AM PDT by prairiebreeze (Take the high road. You'll never have to meet a Democrat.)
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To: AntiGuv; dirtboy

Prof. Stuntz's commentary is entirely gratuitous with respect to Ms. Miers. The "if so" is a rhetorical trick that can be used as much for emphasis as a conditional. Given the absence of any evidence whatsoever that Ms. Miers is incapable of doing a good job on the Court, the "if so" IMHO is "conclusionary" - mixed with disdain and hubris that is in abundance around the Yard.

Personally, I will wait for more informed and fact-driven commentaries before I draw any conclusion about Ms. Miers.


18 posted on 10/05/2005 5:13:38 AM PDT by bjc (Check the data!!)
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To: David Isaac

I don't know. I listened to his radio show yesterday on my way home for about 40 minutes.


19 posted on 10/05/2005 5:19:22 AM PDT by Huck ("If people are disappointed, they have every reason to be." Mark Levin on GW's latest lame move.)
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To: dirtboy

Well, that is correct, but that's not what you pointed out to begin with. If the premise is false, then the conclusion obviously is too, because the conclusion directly follows his premise.


20 posted on 10/05/2005 5:19:49 AM PDT by AntiGuv (™)
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