Wednesday, June 20, 2007

A must read from Jennifer Rubin

From the "Ob"-ed page at the New York Observer, Human Events columnist Jennifer Rubin has written a piece that captures my mood to a "T", though I've been trying not to dwell on it. She has the indictment of Bush from a conservative's perspective, and the sinking sense that we're repeating 2000 by looking to FDT. I couldn't agree with or recommend this article more.

A few quotes. First, her dead-on criticism of Bush:

It is worth remembering that before he became president, then-Governor George Bush had to convince the Republican elders that he was their man: solidly conservative, more reliable than John McCain and an easy sell to the voters by virtue of his family name. He courted and was tutored by the likes of Henry Kissinger, George Schultz and Dick Cheney. They returned from the meetings confident of his bona fides and assured donors that he would be a safe choice for the G.O.P. establishment...

He’d be just fine, they said.

Well, he turned out to be not so fine. Conservatives had sold themselves, not to mention the country, short. Yes, President Bush cut taxes. But he also added Medicare Part D, the largest entitlement expansion in a generation, federalized K-12 education with “No Child Left Behind” and failed to veto a single spending bill. From the perspective of fiscal conservatives, this was a record worthy of, well, Al Gore or John Kerry.

Then of course there was “nation building.” During the pre-campaign tutorials and the 2000 campaign, he seemed to have mastered the notion that America doesn’t do well imposing itself on other cultures. That opposition to foreign adventures vanished after 9/11, when his administration immediately set about planning to democratize the Middle East by remaking Iraq.

And the worst insult of all, from conservatives’ viewpoint, was that the President eventually had the nerve to train his sights directly on them. As he pursued immigration—an endeavor that angered a large segment of the conservative base—the President and his surrogates began talking about his conservative critics with the same disdainful language he had previously reserved for Democrats.

According to the administration, the critics did not have the country’s interests at heart and were racist and ignorant.

The base was predictably outraged, and right-leaning bloggers and conservative columnists protested that they had been betrayed. But none of them should have been shocked.

Had they been more honest, they would have acknowledged that they had anointed a minimally qualified man with limited intellectual skills. He had voiced token support for their causes, but his narrow experience and sheltered life had left him unprepared for the intellectual and personal demands of the Presidency.

Unable to marshal facts and persuade a skeptical public on Iraq, immigration or Social Security, he resorted to emotional pleas and empty buzzwords. When his advisors failed him, he had no independent source of knowledge or analytical skills to guide him back on course. Moreover, the prized trait of Bush loyalty quickly lapsed into stubborn cronyism; conservatives, like the rest of the public, reacted in horror as Bush advanced unqualified friends like Harriet Miers and Alberto Gonzales.


So do Republicans learn from their mistakes?

...conservative insiders have flagged down the next undistinguished, albeit appealing, fellow to fit the bill of conservative standard bearer: Fred Thompson. (He communicates! He creates pithy ripostes to Michael Moore! He thinks Iran is a danger!)

Once again, they are enchanted by the banal. They seem unmoved by his lack of accomplishment in any field of endeavor other than acting. The highlights of his Senate record seem to be a single bill to track wasteful spending, an ineptly run investigation on illegal Chinese campaign contributions and stewardship of a McCain-Feingold campaign-finance bill that most of them despise. And so far this year, Mr. Thompson has yet to offer any specific policy proposals.

A track record of determined leadership, intellectual creativity, extemporaneous speaking skills and well-thought-out plans for the future should be minimal qualifications for the Presidency. Should conservatives reflect on the error of their previous choice, they might adopt criteria more meaningful than a willingness to genuflect to ideological convention. If not, the next chosen candidate will be as hapless as the last.

Fred Thompson might be one of the candidates with whom I share the most common ground, ideologically. But as I've been writing here for months, I've learned my lesson from Bush 43, and couldn't support FDT in the primaries. I need to see a canidate who who has displayed excellence in his professional life, who has a proven track record of executive competence, and who has the confidence and eloquence to control a debate. For the record, FDT is only 1-for-3. Romney, Huckabee and Rudy: 3-for-3. And Romney and Huckabee are much more to my liking, ideologically.

From this point forward, I have nothing else to say on the topic of a Fred Thompson candidacy. Jennifer Rubin has said it for me.

1 comments:

Fredo said...

One more thing that irks me: FDT's website (www.imwithfred.com) still does not have an issues or bio page. It's been up for weeks, and the only thing you can do is "donate" or "spread the word".

I'm pretty sure he's milked the free publicity about as far as he can, at this point.

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Always sniffing for the truth

Always sniffing for the truth

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