By David Hogberg on 12.31.03 @ 12:08AM
Guess who’s getting nervous about Dean?
It is obvious to anyone who pays attention that Howard Dean has
a loose lip. The capture of Saddam Hussein "has not made Americans
safer" is surely a remark that will come back to haunt him as
November 2004 draws near. So will his recent ramble on radio: "The
most interesting theory that I have heard so far, which is nothing
more than a theory, I can't think -- it can't be proved -- is that
[President Bush] was warned ahead of time by the Saudis." These
gaffes, combined with the growing likelihood that Dean will win the
Democratic nomination, have some liberal pundits suddenly very
nervous.
The locus of this angst is the Washington Post. "It is
Mr. Dean's position on Iraq, however, that would be hardest to
defend in a general election campaign," the Post editorial board
opined. It also openly worried that Dean touted
"Saddam Hussein's insignificance in part because he is unwilling to
make a commitment to Iraq's future."
Other Washington Post regulars are trying to spin the
gaffes in Dean's favor. While acknowledging that the remark about
Hussein was a blunder, Michael Kinsley stated, "Dean won points in my book for another
bit of straight talk…[Dean claimed] 'frankly, it was a great
day for the administration.' This is a rare example of a politician
saying 'frankly' and then saying something actually frank. It comes
close to admitting the obvious: that this development helps Bush's
chance of winning next year's election and therefore hurts Dean's."
In other words, Dean is still the "straight talker."
Although Richard Cohen admonished Dean for his conspiracy theory
indulgence, he then suggested that it was more a matter of
"providing a context." Cohen stated, "As Dean himself said, the Bush
administration has been very stingy about revealing just what it
knew about terrorist activities before Sept. 11. Couple that with
the fact that no weapons of mass destruction have been found in
Iraq -- nor a link between Saddam and al Qaeda proved -- and you
have a requisite ingredients for a conspiracy theory: Something
here doesn't add up." Thus, what Dean said was bad, but it is
really Bush's fault.
E.J. Dionne is in frantic mode. One week Dionne is hoping the Kerry-Gephardt-Lieberman criticism of
Dean's foreign policy inexperience redounds to the benefit of
either John Edwards or Wesley Clark: "The reticence of Clark and
Edwards is instructive…Edwards, like Clark, is positioning
himself to be the candidate who remains standing." Apparently
Dionne hasn't realized that Clark's lip isn't quite securely
fastened either. Then just yesterday Dionne assured us that Dean can really win: "watch for
the appearance of the new, pragmatic Howard Dean, the doctor with
an unerring sense of his party's pulse." Apparently Dionne also
hasn't realized that a gaffe-prone candidate isn't all that
pragmatic.
Of course, some of this has filtered beyond the Post.
Paul Krugman has penned a column that would have been titled "A Guide for
the Media to Help Dean Defeat Bush" were there strict laws about
accurate headlines. The New York Times pundit speculated
that "if the conventional wisdom were instead that [Bush is] a
phony, silver-spoon baby who pretends to be a cowboy, journalists
would have plenty of material to work with." He encouraged
journalists to "Actually look at the candidates' policy proposals"
like Bush's "tax-exempt savings accounts." And if they read a
Tax Notes article on the Bush proposal as he recommends,
there will be "no excuse for failing to report that the plan would
probably reduce, not increase national savings." Finally, he
implores them to "Look at the candidates' records," because a close
look at Dean's record as governor shows "he is no radical; he was a
fiscally conservative leader." Watch for the soon-to-appear column
in which Krugman denies liberal bias in the media.
One might feel a pang of pity for the Washington Post
editorial board, which has largely supported Bush on the War to
Liberate Iraq. Other than that, one feels considerable satisfaction
in seeing these folks reap what they sow. After all, what have they
done in recent months other than encourage the heated anti-Bush
rhetoric spewed by Dean? Kinsley laid out a lengthy explanation as
to why Bush was a liar over Uranium-gate. Of Dick Cheney, Cohen
wrote "It would be fitting, then, for this most powerful of all
vice presidents to be the first in American history to be censured.
He has it coming." Dionne griped that Republicans were foreign
policy "radicals." As for Krugman-- do I even need to give an
example?
It was obvious months ago that every movement of Dean's lower
jawbone signaled a risky endeavor. Upon the toppling of Saddam's
regime, he uttered "I guess it's a good thing." David Tell caught
him indulging a conspiracy theory about Bush canceling the 2004
election. Asked by a supporter about this, Dean replied, "I've
actually heard that." But instead of calling Dean on this
irresponsible rhetoric, the response from most liberal pundits was
a wink-and-a-nod that suggested "Atta Boy Dean!" Now they are
shocked -- SHOCKED!! -- to discover that the candidate with the
most inflammatory rhetoric is also not that careful with his
rhetoric.
So what to do? Hope that the Democrats will pick someone else.
Shrug and say, "At least Dean is honest, and, well, it's Bush's
fault anyway." Delude yourself into believing that Dean's
"pragmatist" side will win out. And plead with the media to ignore
everything good about Bush and everything bad about Dean. But never
admit that perhaps, just perhaps, you played a part in this
emerging fiasco.
A few noticeable exceptions on the left did notice the problem
early on. In a column from early July, Marriane Means suggested that
Dean's "verbal blunders indicate that his lack of Washington
experience might be a distinct drawback." But even she can't seem
to help herself. Just a few days ago she referred to Bush as "our
Con Man-in-Chief." Atta Boy Dean!
As the saying goes, "Loose lips sink ships." Too many liberal
pundits have forgotten that they can also sink campaigns.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Law, Iraq