By George Neumayr on 5.29.08 @ 12:08AM
This is the McClellan the White House knew and used all along.
The talking point du jour from the White House regarding Scott
McClellan's surprisingly non-bland memoir is that "this is not the
Scott we knew." Actually, it is.
What's likely is that just as the White House pushed him to make
statements he couldn't cobble together on his own, so too did the
editor for this book, What Happened.
At least that's what I deduced from Ari Fleischer's Wednesday
night interview with CNN's Campbell Brown. Fleischer said that he
asked McClellan if he had worked with a ghostwriter on the book.
McClellan said no, according to Fleischer, but allowed that his
editor had "tweaked" some of his copy.
"Tweaked" probably means massively rewrote. And if so, why
should this surprise the White House? Why is the White House
surprised that a dullard they manipulated could also be manipulated
by a book editor?
Exhibit A of the thesis of McClellan's guided book is McClellan
himself. Why did Bush hire him in the first place?
Some of these defections are due to caginess; this is one
probably just due to cluelessness. A sharp and opportunistic book
editor probably saw in McClellan an effective puppet and McClellan
went along with it.
It was funny to watch Chris Matthews on Hardball read
McClellan's supposed prose with such solemnity. Suddenly a flack
the press considered a buffoon a few years ago has become in their
eyes a major thinker, whose words deserve magisterial
treatment.
From David Stockman to John Dilulio to Scott McClellan, nothing
excites the press more than a "Republican" critical of an old boss,
provided the defector shows a willingness to fortify the media's
prejudices. Had McClellan written in the book of his disappointment
with Bush's sham conservatism, the book would sink without a
trace.
But throw in a couple of passages that read like New York
Times editorials and you have a bestseller after days of media
mulling. Some of the reported passages in What Happened
contain tortured, highly qualified criticisms of Bush, which
McClellan is likely to get tangled up in over the next few days on
Countdown and the like where he is scheduled to be
interviewed.
But you have to hand it to his unscrupulous editors: they did
manage to coax some usable gossip out of him. Such as this morsel,
in which Bush talks about the media's investigations into his
possible cocaine use:
"'The media won't let go of these ridiculous cocaine
rumors,' I heard Bush say. 'You know, the truth is I honestly don't
remember whether I tried it or not. We had some pretty wild parties
back in the day, and I just don't remember.'
"I remember thinking to myself, How can that be?" McClellan
wrote. "How can someone simply not remember whether or not they
used an illegal substance like cocaine? It didn't make a lot of
sense."
This should keep
The Daily Show busy for days. Bill
Clinton said he didn't inhale pot; Bush, pace McClellan, seems
never to have exhaled at "wild parties" long enough to sort out the
evening's events.
A lot of these Republicans defections are predictable and
self-inflicted: a Republican administration, seeking to curry favor
with the press, brings in a liberal Republican or semi-conservative
Democrat (like Dilulio) and then lo and behold this person finds he
objects to that administration and later criticizes it. In this
case, the Bush administration's self-inflicted wound was to hire a
stooge who it first manipulated and then released into the world to
be manipulated by others. They handed him talking points and he
read them to millions; then his new masters handed him talking
points and he wrote them up into a bestselling book.
This is the McClellan they knew.
topics:
Conservatism