The GOP’s Anointed One may practice his politics
privately, but the bigger mystery is why he is ultimately not a
Democrat. (From our September 1996 issue.)
Art by Dean Macadam
NO ONE KNOWS what Colin Powell really thinks, or what he will do,
and it may be he does not know himself. Not long ago, though, he
was supposed to lift American politics out of the slough of
despond into which it seemed to have fallen. Powell was the
Democrats’ worst nightmare, and the Republicans’ best hope. He
was a public figure of unblemished reputation, and a good guy as
well, and if anyone knew anything bad about him, they just
weren’t saying. Grumpy conservatives may have had reservations,
but grumpy conservatives don’t count. The media loved Colin
Powell, and Bob Dole would have killed to get him on the ticket.
But all this has changed, of course, and Powell’s aura has fled.
Therefore we may look at him now without tears, and discover the
awful truth: He does not want to run for office, but would not
mind being anointed; he also would be more comfortable as a
Democrat.
In a way, his supposed candidacy and party affiliation were both
accidental. The first public suggestion that he might grace a
Republican ticket came from Howard Baker. In 1987, a television
interviewer pointed out to the former senator that the Democrats
had Jesse Jackson, while the Republicans did not have a prominent
black as even a token. Baker said smoothly that Powell could be a
candidate for vice president. George Will and Charles Krauthammer
noted this then in their newspaper columns. In 1990,
Parade magazine raised the possibility of a Bush-Powell
ticket in the next presidential election. Powell’s candidacy, or
non-candidacy, was media-borne even from the beginning, and it
culminated in the frenzy of last fall. Powell was free at last
from writing his memoirs, and could lead a great crusade. He
would declare himself a presidential candidate, and rescue the
Republican Party from the conservatives who now controlled it. He
was dissatisfied with things as they were. As he told Barbara
Walters, “I have not been able to find a perfect fit in either of
the two existing parties.”
Political commentators interpreted this as high-mindedness,
but it was really more like disdain . No one
who was serious about politics could ever find the perfect fit
that Powell suggested he was seeking. Actually, no one who was
serious about politics would bother looking. The two parties
might be divided on broad principles, but they had their internal
differences, and neither was run solely to please one individual.
The search for a perfect fit had nowhere to go, although many of
the commentators insisted that a variation would be useful.
Powell might not fit the Republican Party, but the party might be
made to fit him. He could yank it away from its distressing
rightward tilt, and move it back to the center.
In fact, the idea that Powell was a Republican was never
far-fetched. Flags and bunting and the sound of bugles became
him. It was hard to imagine a man as wedded to the military as he
was to be a Democrat. Admiral William Crowe, his predecessor as
chairman of the Joint Chiefs, had supported Bill Clinton for
president (and been appointed Ambassador to the Court of St.
James’s as a reward), but Crowe always seemed more like a
bureaucrat than a warrior. Powell might have been just as
skillful a bureaucrat, but he looked more like a warrior, and
warriors had no place in the Democratic Party. It teemed with
people who saw the military not so much as an instrument of war
as a vehicle for social change. Gays would have their own NCO
clubs, and women would drive M-1A1 tanks. It was simply
impossible to think of Powell as being comfortable with, say, Pat
Schroeder. Besides, it was known that when the Clinton
administration had sounded him out for a possible Cabinet
position, he had not shown much interest. Loyalty demanded that
he stay with the party of Presidents Bush and Reagan. They had
elevated him through the command, and he in turn had served them
well. There had been a laying on of hands, so to speak, and he
was destined to follow them into the White House.
Or anyway, so it seemed. “If I had to bet today on one person for
the Republican presidential nomination, I’d put my money on Colin
Powell,” William Kristol wrote in the first issue of the
Weekly Standard last September. Kristol did not
necessarily endorse the Powell candidacy — although clearly he
favored it — but more important, as a Republican seer and
strategist he gave it official status. The Sunday morning talk
shows took a great leap forward. Commentators quoted Kristol, and
then interviewed one another.
Sam Donaldson said a Powell presidency would be “good for the
country.” Media enthusiasm knew no bounds, and exactly where
Powell stood on any issue was irrelevant. He transcended race and
partisan politics, and personified the American dream. Meanwhile,
he was off on his fabled book tour, while he kept his “options
open.”
THEN, IN NOVEMBER, he said he would not run for office, although
he promised Republicans he would register in their party. He also
said, however, that Mrs. Powell would remain a Democrat. He may
have been telling us something here. Registered Republican or
not, he was still keeping his options open. Try as he might, it
was hard for Powell to think of himself as a Republican. “It is a
racist society,” he said after the O.J. Simpson verdict. “All you
have to do is listen to Mark Fuhrman.” Possibly he thinks the
party still carries old baggage. Republican leaders may talk
about the Big Tent and mean it, but there is the pull from
friends, family, and history. One imagines Colin Powell telling
Alma Powell of his decision to enroll as a Republican, and her
saying, “Colin, how could you?”
Powell has hinted at this in his memoir My American
Journey. He recalls the advice he got from Stu Spencer, the
California political consultant who, among other things,
practically invented Ronald Reagan when he first ran for office.
Powell says Spencer told him, “Colin, if you ever do go into
politics, do it as a Democrat. I know you well enough, and I
don’t think you’d be comfortable with some of the Republican
agenda. You were raised in an old-fashioned Democratic home.
You’re too socially conscious.”
It is the only reference to Spencer in the 643-page memoir, and
it waves there like a flag. Powell also mentioned what Spencer
told him when he was interviewed by Henry Louis Gates for the
New Yorker. Powell may be loyal to past presidents, but
he has qualms about being a Republican, and in truth many
Republicans continue to have qualms about him. They do not
express them openly, though, because they have that most
Republican of all fears: God forbid someone should think they are
racist.
Here is a border state congressman, who is one of the party’s old
bulls: “Is Powell really a Republican? We don’t have to
manufacture Republicans, you know, and what would he add to the
ticket? Everyone knows the blacks are wedded to Clinton.”
And here is a freshman Midwestern congressman, who speaks
enthusiastically about the growing number of minorities in the
party, but does not think black candidates can attract white
voters: “We’d never have to worry about Powell being a candidate.
He’s not a risk taker. He’s not an entrepreneur. It’s not in his
character. He’ll talk about running, but never do it.”
And here is a Midwestern senator, faultlessly in the middle: “The
question is, could Powell click the way Perot clicked in 1992? We
don’t know. We don’t know what he’d actually do until he did it.”
But what Powell will do is unknown, and it may be he will never
do anything. A man who knows him well, and therefore declines to
be identified, says Powell wants to be president, but that he
thinks he would lose his “moral credibility” if he were to admit
it. Presumably, then, Powell would never hold office unless he
were drafted, or else swept away by popular demand. There is no
chance of that happening now, of course, but it does explain some
of Powell’s recent behavior. He seems to have found politics
beneath him, and consequently he has squandered the glow from a
year ago, and made himself look foolish. He said he would not
campaign for Dole; then he said he would. He said he did not plan
to speak at the Republican convention; then he said he did. He
criticized party positions on abortion, gun control, welfare
reform, and affirmative action. He said, mysteriously, “I am
practicing my politics privately.” Meanwhile, he was off on
another book tour, chatting once again with Katie Couric and all
the gang, this time to sell the paperback versions of the
hardcover. None of this was dignified, although Powell might have
weathered it, but the press was growing restive. It had been too
worshipful too long, and it was looking for a corrective.
IN LATE JUNE it found it. Powell spoke in Austin, Texas, before
som 1,000 owners of Schlotzsky’s sandwich shops. The dais from
which he spoke was decorated with cans of jalapeno peppers, sacks
of bun mix, and jars of hot sauce, and, according to the
Austin American-Statesman, he was paid $60,000 for
speaking. It also was reported that Schlotzsky’s got him for
$60,000 because it booked early. Otherwise it might have had to
go up to $80,000.
The speech was widely noted, along with the fee, peppers, bun
mix, and hot sauce. Powell is serious about his image, and this
one did not seem quite right. Old advocates began to rethink
their positions. Maureen Dowd of the New York Times
called Bill Kristol to confer. Then she wrote a Sunday column in
which she said Powell was “pretending he can be inside politics
and outside politics at the same time, disguising his lack of
nerve with high moral language.” Newsweek was out the
next day. The old conventional wisdom on Powell, it said, was
“Above politics as usual.” The new one was “Mario Cuomo in a
uniform.”
Meanwhile, it has been reported that Powell would like to be
secretary of state. This is a position more or less above
politics, and he could hold it in either a Dole or Clinton
administration. Many possibilities now suggest themselves, and
here is one: Clinton wins, and Warren Christopher retires. Strobe
Talbott jumps ship. Clinton appoints Powell. Ken Starr hands up
an indictment, and congressional Democrats turn honest. Clinton
is forced to resign, and Gore becomes president. Gore, though, is
now tainted, and at their convention, the Democrats decide that
an African-American general would be just right. Powell is
nominated by acclamation, and finally things work out.
(This article by John Corry, then The American
Spectator’s senior correspondent, appeared in our September
1996 issue.)