Posted on 11/07/2002 10:13:41 AM PST by tiogio
November 07, 2002
Democrats need an injection of charisma
By Tina Brown
Bush has charisma. Journeys With George should make Gore want to slit his wrists
IN POLITICS there is no greater aphrodisiac than a motorcade, except perhaps a great big jet with UNITED STATES OF AMERICA emblazoned across its fuselage.
Nothing makes this fact more cruelly apparent than when I see Al Gore toting his laptop off a commercial flight and trudging through the terminal in search of a luggage cart.
The 2004 presidential campaign began this Tuesday when the Senate and governor races ended. Which Democrat is going to have the testosterone to go up successfully against the bantam swagger of the Republican machine? The candidates could do well to steal a leaf out of the Bush play book as shown in Journeys With George, Alexandra Pelosis self-styled home movie featuring GWs off-camera moments with the press in the 2000 campaign. At one point the Bush spin machine fretted that the movie was going to make their man look bad. They neednt have worried.
Pelosis camcorder offered only one political revelation how thoroughly Bush rolled the press with his awesome vaudeville show of disciplined spontaneity. He kids around. He flatters them with good ol boy nicknames. He bowls them over by bowling an orange down the planes aisle. He raises a trouser leg to demonstrate his Texan wardrobe: Now these, these right here, are cowboy boots. You feel youre at ladies night and that Pelosi and Co have been so seduced there will be a ribald heckle from backstage, Take em off!
To appreciate the success of Bushs charm offensive you have to see its effect as encapsulated in the archived bulletins of the 2000 campaign by the media sleuth Bob Somerby, whose website The Daily Howler deserves to be better known.
At the start of the season in June 1999, there were a lot of hairy-chested media proclamations about how tough their scrutiny was going to be. The Great Bush Unveiling will take place under the withering gaze of some 200 reporters and photographers, wrote the esteemed David Von Drehle of The Washington Post. A week later, heres what Von Drehles withering gaze saw: Looking relaxed and sounding eager, Texas Governor George W. Bush barnstormed across Iowa today with his heart on his sleeve, hoping to show that he can touch voters as effectively as he has tapped the chequebooks of the Republican elite.
Fine, except that simultaneously the Gore campaign was being launched in the Post under the headline The Big Sleepy and profiled with a piece that began helpfully with a four-paragraph definition of the word boring. The Gore camp saw bias, but mostly it was sloth.
Deconstructing Gores animatronics was a less sweaty occupation than digging around in, say, old company minutes and Securities and Exchange Commission documents to pin down the facts about Bushs mysteriously prescient sale of stock in his Harken oil company until the press had more time ie, after Dubya was elected President. Journeys With George should make Gore want to slit his wrists.
A president, Newt Gingrich once told me, has to be a compelling individual around whom people can organise their hopes. Charisma is not just projected. Its conferred. Charisma conferred was the reason dinosaur chic was so big this year, with Fritz Mondale, 74, and Frank Lautenberg, 78, recalled to life. We saw the hazards too. Lautenberg pulled off a win in New Jersey, but the stolid drone that earned Mondale the headline Norwegian Wood in 1984 when he ran against Reagan turned out to be even worse now the years have added an accusatory, grandfatherly ring.
Of all the Democratic retreads, how about bringing Gary Hart back for 2004? He is a less senescent 65. He is thoughtful as hell. He keeps cranking out his scary but prescient reports on national security; even before 9/11 Hart was warning of the risks of terrorists striking a skyscraper. After the Clinton years his ancient hanky panky with Donna Rice aboard Monkey Business seems almost quaint. At 65, its probably safe to assume that his hormones have calmed down. After all, Ted Kennedys have. Ted is 70 now and his enormous cereal-box head, barnacle jowls and stout frame have morphed him from reprobate kid brother to classic, old-time Irish politician. The years suit Hart too. He is much more credible now hes going grey.
The devastated Democrats have to find a new star they can get behind fast. Despite the yawns of the press, Al Gore, well ahead of all other Democrats in the polls, is way behind Bush. If Gore doesnt run, the best bet is probably Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, who was in town last week to ingratiate himself with big-money donors. He can dial up moral authority from his past as a Vietnam Vet who was also prominent in the anti-war movement and, more importantly, he has a face political cartoonists will love: long, plunging, ecclesiastical, with Lincolnesque lines and a shock of prime-time hair. Beside him, the other fresh contender, Senator John Edwards of North Carolina, comes off as a GQ twinkie.
Frantic Democrats keep calling up the bona fide charisma of Bill Clinton. In the fag end of the campaign he made a late-night appearance with Hillary at a heaving downtown club, Lotus, to try to throw a last-minute life jacket to the drowning New York gubernatorial candidate, Carl McCall. The former presidents silver head swivelled like a Klieg light at the sardined young money crowd who were partying to the appropriate Clintonian anthem of rapper Nellys Hot in Herre.
They went berserk when Bill went into his familiar hound-dog political jam. Lemme tell ya all somethin bout politics (pause, roars, screams, yelps) an how many points ah was behind at the same time right before ah won (whistles, foot stomps, fainting fits).
Beside him, Hillarys pants suits were pressed to kill. But not till 2008.
tina.brown@thetimes.co.uk
They went berserk when Bill went into his familiar hound-dog political jam. Lemme tell ya all somethin bout politics (pause, roars, screams, yelps) an how many points ah was behind at the same time right before ah won (whistles, foot stomps, fainting fits).
Beside him, Hillarys pants suits were pressed to kill. But not till 2008.
When I started reading this article, I kinda figured this is where it would end up.
Don't bet on it. The Clintons' "forte" was never intelligence; rather, 'twas and remains arrogance and shamelessness. Tuesday proved that the electorate may be growing up, but those two will always be arrogant and shameless.
Won't happen. The absolute core value of any liberal philosophy is that the intellectuals should tell us peons how to run our lives.
Calling Dr. Kervorkian
The Voice of the Arousal Gappers, checking in. You can wipe the drool off your keyboard now, Tina.
For anyone who may not be familiar with the song referenced here, the lyrics of "Hot in Herre" contain the immortal chorus, "It's getting hot in here/So take off all your clothes." Appropriate Clintonian anthem indeed!
First, get a brain transplant.
Then a soul.
Regards, Ivan
What the Democrats don't realize is that Clinton is a LIABILITY and always has been even as President. The myth of Clinton as a "political genius" is so ingrained into the Democrat faithful (see Democratic Underground) that simple facts escape them: Clinton presided over the loss of the house in 94', during his reign 300 state and nationally elected Democrats defected to the GOP, he was never elected by a majority, and is a polarizing figure that has a full third of the country that hates his very existence and will turn out to vote against any candidate that appears with him no matter what. And while in office he signed off on major Republican polcies like welfare reform and enacted not one substantial liberal policy. The only thing Clinton achieved throughout his eight years in office was managing to stay there. The Democrats wasted untold amounts of moral and political capital in their senseless and twisted support of him that they turned off millions of indepedents. There was no Democratic principle not jettisoned in order to defend Clinton (the height of this self abasement being Gloria Steinem saying that every man is allowed one free grope of women they work with) Clinton gutted the left (NOW's membership is below 50'000 and is a shell of itself.)
They will hold up Clinton and Gore in 2004 and lose big.
Could this Tina Brown be this Tina Brown?
"the rumor mill
is totally out of hand ... It's all mad
hackdom run amok!" That's what New
Yorker editor Tina Brown told the
gossip columnist Liz Smith recently,
brushing aside whispers that she and her
husband, Random House publisher
Harry Evans, would soon be fleeing
New York for London.
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