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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The chief strategist of George W. Bush's 2004 re-election campaign said he had lost faith in the U.S. president overIraq and other issues, in a high-level rupture of Bush's famously loyal inner circle.
Matthew Dowd, a polling expert who switched parties to become a Republican and also served as a senior strategist in Bush's 2000 presidential campaign, told The New York Times in an interview on Sunday that Bush must face up to Americans' growing disillusionment with the war.
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gretchl2000
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (9)
at 06:12 on April 2nd, 2007
Why are the views of Matthew Dowd a surprise?
Matthew Dowd Stockman
By Jeffrey Lord, American Spectator
Published 4/2/2007 12:08:03 AM
To the New York Times, the one-time "top strategist" for President Bush who has now turned on the President because of the Iraq War is a predictable hero, fodder for a front page story ("Ex-Aide Details a Loss of Faith in the President").
Yet in reading of the defection of one-time Bush loyalist Matthew Dowd, the fact that Dowd "in a wide ranging interview" with Times reporter Jim Rutenberg "called for a withdrawal from Iraq and expressed his disappointment in Mr. Bush's leadership" should come as no surprise at all. Why?
As Rutenberg's article makes clear, Dowd was once "a top strategist for the Texas Democrats" who was "impressed by the pledge of Mr. Bush to bring a spirit of cooperation to Washington." Says Dowd of Bush: "It's almost like you fall in love, I was frustrated about Washington, the inability for people to get stuff done and bridge divides. And this guy's personality -- he cared about education and taking a different stand on immigration." Now, the man who, as a Bush strategist in the 2004 Presidential campaign, criticized Democratic nominee Senator John Kerry for proposing "a weak defense" believes that "Kerry was right" about Iraq.
In other words, Matthew Dowd did not support George W. Bush because Dowd was himself a principled conservative. No, Dowd signed on to the Bush effort because, by his own admission, he "fell in love" with Bush's personality. Whatever else all of this tempest in a teaspoon demonstrates, one major point is surely that when you support a candidate because you love the way he -- or she -- "cared" you are headed to an inevitable political disillusionment.
What is particularly striking in this incident is the way both Dowd and Times reporter Rutenberg present Dowd's views as if they themselves are ideology-free. In fact, both subject and reporter reveal a fierce devotion to the liberal ideology that defines "getting along" and "bridging divides" as, well, being a liberal. Notice Dowd's musings on how much the "only candidate to appeal to him" is Senator Barack Obama. By now the cat is out of the bag that Obama's soothing rhetoric is being deliberately used to hide the most liberal Senate voting record of any candidate in the Democratic field. A candidate who gets a 100% thumbs up from liberal stalwarts Planned Parenthood, the NAACP, the National Organization for Women, and Americans for Democratic Action and a healthy 92% from the AFL-CIO may be many things, but someone seeking to bridge the philosophical divides in the country or the nation's capital is not one of them.
Particularly troubling is the Times' -- and Dowd's -- assertion that the President refused to meet with anti-Iraq war protestor Cindy Sheehan, when both certainly are aware Bush declined not a first but a second meeting with the woman who has plainly presented herself as a fierce anti-Semite with an admiration for fascists like Venezuela's Hugo Chavez.
THIS IS NOT THE FIRST TIME a President under siege has been turned on by an aide who seems unable to understand the principles he signed on to represent. In the Reagan Administration the role of Matthew Dowd was played by Reagan's Director of the Office of Management and Budget, David Stockman. Presenting himself to both Reagan and all of Washington as a principled conservative supply-sider, it wasn't long into Reagan's first term before Stockman turned on the President, like Dowd his "faith" shaken by events. Also like Dowd, Stockman turned to a liberal reporter to express his grievances, professing shock when they hit the front pages.
In Stockman's case his beef was Reaganomics. Finally leaving Reagan's side in a fury, the young numbers wizard proceeded to write a book pronouncing the Reagan Revolution "radical, imprudent and arrogant," ripping Reagan and Stockman's former colleagues for defying "settled consensus." Notice those words: "settled consensus." They say nothing -- zero -- about principle. They are about the politics of getting along, no matter how far into the ditch the "settled consensus" and its practitioners have driven the country.
Stockman's views on "consensus" reflect precisely Dowd's views on Iraq. "If the American public says they're done with something, our leaders have to understand what they want," asserts Dowd to the Times. "They're saying, 'Get out of Iraq.'"
The Dowd/Stockman view that a president needs to settle for consensus instead of exerting presidential leadership is a view that, thankfully, America's more thoughtful chief executives have ignored. Abraham Lincoln was elected with a bare 40% of the vote in 1860, which is to say almost 60% of the country voted against Lincoln's views on ending slavery. Lincoln ignored the "consensus" and went on to save the Union and end slavery once and for all. There was certainly no "consensus" among the American business community and the GOP that FDR's New Deal was the correct economic prescription to get the country out of the Great Depression. And certainly FDR held out no olive branches to help bridge the divide. Labeling his opponents "enemies" he thundered: "They are unanimous in their hate for me -- and I welcome their hatred." Presumably former Democrat Dowd holds FDR high on his pantheon of great presidents -- a position Roosevelt did not achieve by seeking consensus.
The "consensus" of the early 1960s in the American South certainly was decidedly not to end segregation -- but John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson went ahead and did it anyway, in spite of furious racial riots and repeated violent clashes that stated plainly their ideas about Civil Rights were wildly unpopular with huge numbers of the American public. And as any member of the Reagan Administration can testify, the "consensus" among Democrats that Ronald Reagan should abandon both his economic program and his decision to win the Cold War outright over the Soviet Union was overwhelming. Reagan, thankfully, paid the idea of "consensus" no heed whatsoever. In the end, it was Stockman and his Democratic friends who were proved wrong, and the pro-consensus zealots -- liberals all -- who lost the historical argument.
It is doubtless not lost on George W. Bush that his own father took the advice of the Matthew Dowds of the day and broke his "read my lips" tax pledge -- and saw his 90% plus poll ratings dwindle to a solid electoral thrashing at the hands of Bill Clinton.
So what to make of Matthew Dowd? Well, not much. Doubtless he's a nice guy. Surely his views are causing some angst amongst his former colleagues in the Bush crew.
They shouldn't. Like David Stockman from Reagan days, Dowd's central idea of government is based on principals, not principles -- unless they are liberal principles.
He was never one of them to begin with.
Jeffrey Lord is the author of The Borking Rebellion. A former Reagan White House political director, he lives in Pennsylvania where he is the president and CEO of QubeTV, an online conservative video company.
at 09:30 on April 2nd, 2007
On the other hand who cares about ideology? Do we really want an idealogue in the White House? What ever happened to actually getting something done? I think that is the big criticism of Bush. Whatever he touches breaks regardless of the principles he adheres to.
at 10:06 on April 2nd, 2007
A successful recovery from the internet bubble collapse and the Clinton recession, a successful recovery from the 9/11 recession and the loss of the airline and travel industries, no major terrorist acts in the USA since 9/11, prosperity with low inflation for six years, no acts of depravity in the White House - not too bad unless you suffer from BDS.
at 12:08 on April 2nd, 2007
Respectfully, your comments truly are an example of revisionist history:
at 12:35 on April 2nd, 2007
You can try to spin away the facts all you want. They don't change.
at 12:49 on April 2nd, 2007
The problem is: We probably don't know all of the facts. And in 30 years time some might be to frail to be tried for the crimes they committed today. A bit of adultery in the Oval Office seemed to me a lot more tolerable than Christian style Mullahs mimicing the Nordic God Thor to liberate others at gunpoint. But surely most Iraqi families must feel much more comfortable to be killed by friendly fire and phosphorus bombings rather than an insurgent car bomb.
at 12:53 on April 2nd, 2007
Not that 'War on Terror' did not say it best! But we have so many Bush apologists on NP.
I just started thinking about how much the last 6 years have sucked, and a list appeared. There is a lot left to spin.
Like say, two wars, an endless war, thousands of international civillians killed, thousands of soldiers killed, zero money for health care, zero money for veterans, zero money for education, and one of the worst environmental records to date.
Endless corruption & scandals, a crumbling VA system, the loss of our own civil rights, the destruction of everyone else's rights, the Patriot Act, rising interest rates for students, a huge gap between the rich and the poor, stolen debt relief. Holding citizens without trial or due process, spying on Americans , a return to a divided America, a disgusted world community.
Oh, yeah, and the complete mis-managment of America's worst natural disater, perhaps those images of drowning & stranded people in New Orleans floated out of mind.
Let us not forget the huge debt, endless debt that my children and their children will be facing. The loss of National Parks, and national treasures.
The continued attack on our friends and neighbors. The destruction of church and state. The loss of American Diplomacy, the detaining of immigrant families.
No need to go on, really. Of course there is plenty more, and when it is all said and done the top one percent will have made one hell of a killing. But you can always spin history when you have faith.
"A beautiful age that's being born. With the richest possibilites for life ever know to man, greater travel, far greater communication, greater knowledge, more possessions, more life, more of everything; for certain people anyway."
at 13:07 on April 2nd, 2007
Wow, what's endless is the baloney. I guess you guys don't remember Carter.
at 13:32 on April 2nd, 2007
It's interesting but the initial attack on this posting has been pretty much in line with the official talking points: