11.1.02 @ 4:34PM
Campaign 2002 concludes on an appropriate note.
We live in confused times. We're not connecting. Too much is
left unsaid. And much of what is said is a lie. Either that, or
we're talking to ourselves. If we can face ourselves.
Say you live in Texas, and your name is Rick Perry, which makes
you the Republican governor, and your opponent in this year's
election, one Tony Sanchez, a Democrat, calls you "by far the most
disgusting human being I have ever known." What should be your
response? Hide in the Alamo? Demand a list of all the people
Sanchez has met in his life and hope there's someone more
disgusting on it? Allow dueling on Election Day? Or stay out of the
guy's way?
More than one candidate this year has chosen to sit out a
scheduled debate, which allowed the empty chair that stood in his
place to win points on good posture alone. Thinking ahead, one has
to hope George W. Bush decides to be a no-show at the next
presidential debates. That way Al Gore can entertain us by walking
up to the empty chair and breathing heavily at it, maybe even
bumping its back with his chest. The clincher will come when he
then sits down on it and, assuming its legs can absorb the
unexpected heft, declares he's running on both tickets.
Or better yet, he can follow the example of Indiana Rep. Julia
Carson, who walked out of the debate with her Republican challenger
this week, implying his very presence on the stage gave final
confirmation to his negative campaigning style. "I don't feel
comfortable being in the same room with him," she complained. By
some oversight, she'd failed to obtain a restraining order. To do
her one better, only inventive Al will have the imagination to walk
out of a debate his opponent had already boycotted.
Al's bigger half continues to dominate the political
conversation. Big Bill stood front and center at the Wellstone
Woodstock Memorial last Tuesday night, highlighted by the knowing
smiles and embraces he exchanged with Democratic comer Walter
Mondale. Which led to this angry note from Enemy Central agent of
our the northern Midwest division, Jack Hughes: "I'm mad at the
Minnesota Democrats. I was hoping they would nominate Eleanor
Mondale -- and if she won, we could all sit back and watch the cat
fight between Eleanor and the junior senator from New York." Good
taste and various privacy zoning laws keep us from elaborating. But
let us, just for the historical record, posit that Ms. Mondale was
a much better friend to President Clinton than the much berated Ms.
Monica.
In his squinty-eyed way, Mr. Clinton continues to dominate
politics even in a place called Arkansas. Naturally, it's the
Republicans who end up without hope. There's Gov. Mike Huckabee,
whose wife has become his ruination because she thought she could
get herself elected Razorback secretary of state. Being co-governor
wasn't enough for her? Then there's Sen. Tim Hutchinson, who'll end
up costing the GOP the Senate, all because he dumped his Hillary to
marry his mistress. Note how Bill never made that mistake, if only
because polygamy isn't allowed under Arkansas law.
In further miscommunications, Haitian Democratic voters came
ashore in Florida last Tuesday, ready to vote in person rather than
via absentee ballot. Only problem was, they arrived a week early,
and the Florida Democratic Party had neglected to set up housing
for its guest voters. And it's not clear if their temporary voter
visas remain valid. They were issued eight years ago, during the
Clinton administration's restoration of democracy to Haiti, another
of its crowning achievements suddenly paying huge dividends.
In more banana politics, Republican gubernatorial hopeful Bill
Simon is being criticized for radio ads alleging that Democrats
teach children that "homosexual practice is okay." Does that mean
that those criticizing Simon would argue that such practice is not
okay? Could they make up their frigging minds? Surely a Democrat
who ran such an ad would be accused of tolerance and braggadocio.
If that's not confusing enough, what is one to make of claims that
the late Paul Wellstone was "grossly, openly homophobic" because of
his support for the Defense of Marriage Act? Or by contrast, the
insistence by a letter writer in Friday's New York Times
that speakers at the Wellstone memorial "talked about the senator's
legacy in terms of racial, sexual and economic justice"?
For resolution of this controversy we'd normally turn to a
seasoned political veteran who is now positioned to continue
Wellstone's work, assuming he has resigned from the dozen or two or
ten corporate boards on which he most recently served. But our
worry is that this referee of ours has other conflicts that could
permanently disqualify him.
From what we can tell, this is a man who has known what it's
like to be jilted, or almost jilted, by another man. As the
Atlantic Monthly put it in a 1983 profile of our guy, it
was another case of shaky communications. "In a suite in New York's
Carlyle Hotel on the morning when Carter was supposed to announce
his choice, Mondale, who had no idea what Carter would do, kept
picking up the phone to make sure it was working. Afterward,
friends say, he resolved never to be in this subservient position
again." (Kind of reminds you of Vickie Carr, in "It Must Be Him,"
singing, "he'll never hurt me anymore.")
If it's any consolation, today's selection of Walter Mondale as
Enemy of the Week went a lot more smoothly than his selection as
Jimmy Carter's veep. Indeed, it was in keeping with his knack for
being in the right place at the right time. Tuesday will confirm
that being named EOW was the last honorary appointment of Walter's
distinguished career.
topics:
Law, NATO