Category Archives: Political

The Real Legacy of Helen Thomas

I had the pleasure of meeting Helen Thomas on two different occasions: once was in the classroom; the other was in her arena otherwise known as The White House Press Briefing Room.  While many are focusing on her legacy as a trailblazing female journalist, I would assert that Thomas’ real legacy is more a reflection on the downfall of journalism itself.

Thomas had a solid reporting career for more than six decades.  She was THE reporter who asked the tough questions, followed the story, always reported “the facts” and ended every presidential press conference with, “Thank you Mr. President.”  One time I asked Reagan and Bush (41) White House Press Secretary Marlin Fitzwater about his worst day at The White House.  He quipped, “Anytime I walked in to find Helen Thomas sitting outside my office door.”

By the time I first met Thomas in late 2007, it was clear she had changed.  During the last weeks of my White House internship, I was given the opportunity to sit in and observe a live White House Press Briefing.  Being the only kid in Pittsburgh who would run home from school to watch the briefings on C-SPAN, this was a dream come true.

I had known about Helen Thomas long before I ever came to Washington and had devoured her columns and books.  But that day I was amazed at her behavior in the press room.  This wasn’t the women who broke the gender barrier in journalism, or who covered every president since Kennedy.  No this was a bitter, argumentative, combative old lady screaming at an administration official.

Several months later, I was formerly introduced to her through my undergraduate electronic journalism professor.  He had been Helen’s former bureau chef at UPI and she was our guest professor for the day.  I had the honor of the “first question” and asked her, “A lot of reporters no longer report the facts.  They go on television and provide their opinions under the label of ‘political analysts.’  Is this practice ethical, or should reporters stick to the facts?”

She obviously didn’t like my question, and got the underlying subtext.

Without missing a beat she fired back, “NO!  More opinion columnists should come down to The White House and see how it’s done!  You know they’re all crooked (the presidents).  They come to office and never fulfill their promises.”

Much of the tributes to Helen Thomas have focused on her role as a trailblazer.  The praise is well deserved.

However, it would be wrong to ignore that her career, which once practiced the gold standard of journalism, devolved into the opinion based reporting that currently poisons our media.  Furthermore, that the lowering of her professional standards occurred at a time when the public’s trust and faith in the media sunk to an all-time low.   There’s not a doubt in my mind that’s due to the movement from “political reporters” to “political analysts.”

This to me this is the real legacy of Helen Thomas.  At a time when the nation needed solid reporters chasing the facts, she deserted journalism.

Helen Thomas was 92 years old.

Hurricane Christie

Memo to conservatives: These images of President Obama and Gov. Christie did not lose you the 2012 Presidential Election.

President Obama is touring the Jersey shore with Gov. Christie later today.  Like an approaching hurricane far off in the distance, the conservative criticism of Gov. Christie that is about to reappear is both predictable and ludicrous.  Before the “conservative intelligencia” restart the anti-Christie movement, let’s take a moment and set the story straight.

The president’s visit is sure to remind conservatives of Gov. Christie’s post-Hurricane Sandy comments, comments they viewed as tantamount to treason. 

Six days before the election on NBC’s Today, Gov. Christie was asked about the federal response to Hurricane Sandy to which he replied, “The federal government response has been great. I was on the phone at midnight again last night with the president personally. The president has been outstanding in this. The folks at FEMA … have been excellent.”

President Obama and Gov. Christie brief the press after touring New Jersey and seeing the effects of Hurricane Sandy.

Matters, in the eyes of conservatives were made worse when Gov. Christie was photographed showing President Obama the decimated Jersey shoreline.  Too some in the conservative movement, including many Romney aides, Gov. Christie’s comments were what helped sway the 2012 election towards President Obama.

To that I say, get real!  Is it any reason you lost?

Chris Christie did not lose the 2012 race for Mitt Romney, Mitt Romney did that for himself.  And furthermore I counter by asking what should Gov. Christie have done?

President Obama and Gov. Christie tour the Jersey Shore via Marine One after Hurricane Sandy.

Hurricane Sandy, in New Jersey alone, killed 37 people, damaged 346,000 homes and caused $30 billion in damage.  Gov. Christie, did what good public servants do.  He put service ahead of party and went to bat for his state.

The real act of treason is that the conservative movement still views the anti-Christie sentiment as acceptable.  So before the conservative movement re-ignites the debate, this conservative want to get out ahead of the storm and set a course-correction.

Welcome to our first and last reunion

“Welcome to our first and last reunion”

In the Rose Garden on my final day at The White House

In the Rose Garden on my final day at The White House

It’s those words, the opening line to the musical Follies, which I keep replaying in my head while packing my suitcase.  Surrounded in my apartment by mementos, trinkets and pictures, a feeling of anxiety fills my stomach.  Four years ago, I said goodbye to my dream job after an all too brief rendezvous.  Now, four years older (and maybe a bit wiser), I re-enter what was once hallowed ground, the administration of George W. Bush.

Currently, I’m en route to Dallas for the opening of the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum.  For staffers who worked in the administration, this is one of only two reunions we’ll ever have to celebrate the work of the 43rd president together.  And with the next reunion being a state funeral, it’s the more joyous of the occasions.  So why then am I so nervous about attending this reunion?

Marine One Landing on the South Lawn of The White House

Marine One Landing on the South Lawn of The White House

Reunions are funny things because they’re time lapses.  Unfortunately though, they can also become a state of mind.  I know too many colleagues who have never moved beyond The White House years, forever defining themselves by their brief encounter with the executive branch.

Yet in fairness though, it’s hard to move beyond The White House.  No job will EVER top it.  From the moment you leave, every job interview onward we’ll include at least one White House related question.  I can’t count the number of interviews I’ve been on where the interviewer disclosed to me that they are a Bush Republican!

Working in The White House means, you’re one of the lucky few who was on the inside gate of history looking out, and it’s that perspective on history which can define you, but only if you let it. It’s easy to become paralyzed by this state of mind, and maybe that’s my real worry.

Not that I’ve let the experience define me: but rather, the opposite.  That I haven’t branched out enough or sought tougher goals. By attending this reunion, maybe it’s a reminder to make my post-White House life as rich and fulfilling as was my Bush Administration experience.

On Thursday morning, President and Mrs. Bush will be joined by former Presidents Clinton, Bush (41) and Carter.  They each dreamed of reaching The White House, and after leaving, faced the challenge of being defined by that goal.   Their post-presidency work is a reminder that our past exists only to inform and motivate us, to use our experiences to create a better present and future.

As Bush Administration alumni, this is our first and last reunion with President Bush.  It will be, as one of the Follies characters says at the show’s opening, “A final chance to glamorize the old days…and lie about ourselves, a little.”  For me, it will be one last chance to remember the people and the experience that came to define my early professional career.  To use this final reunion as a reminder of the standards set by President George W. Bush and continuing to personally and professionally progress forward on the ideals I first held at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

The George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum

SPECIAL EDITION: A Hero Passes, A Legacy Left

Everyone has heroes.  Some people look up to athletes and others celebrities.  I admired Margaret Thatcher.  Now with her passing, I’m left to use her example as one of the guiding principles of my life.

I never met Lady Thatcher, and in fact am really too young to remember her tenure as Prime Minister.  What I know of her has been learned through various books, documentaries and watching clips of her parliament debates on YouTube, all of which confirm that her legacy was the consistency with which she held to her conservative vision.

This is a lesson I have to remind myself of daily as a young conservative living in the Obama era.  Too often I’m left to believe that the core values I was raised on, personal responsibility, hard work and professional success no longer seemed to be championed in our country.  Like many of my “conservative” political friends, I could sway and adopt today’s populist beliefs or be consumed by cynicism only to become disenchanted with our democracy.  But then again, I’m reminded of Lady Thatcher.

The England she inherited as Prime Minister in 1979 was in even worse shape then the post-recession United States of today.  Garbage piles filled the streets, rolling blackouts consumed the country and an attitude of self-doubt filed the British psyche.  Similar to today’s political conservatives, Thatcher could have championed impractical populism to solidify political support.  Instead her course was one of consistency, consistency for the beliefs she had held long before ever becoming Prime Minister:

“My policies are based not on some economics theory, but on things I and millions like me were brought up with: an honest day’s work for an honest day’s pay; live within your means; put by a nest egg for a rainy day; pay your bills on time; support the police.”

Lady Thatcher’s beliefs were controversial and her legacy will forever be debated. But I ask, what is life without a few bumps?  The fact remains that when she left office, England had been transformed to enter the new century in a much stronger position and the world was at peace.  Could any leader ask for much more?

My task remains clear, that to honor her legacy, I need to remain true to my beliefs: that government should be small and efficient, fiscal management is necessary for our democracy’s survival, and personal responsibility is core to the character of our country. As someone who currently opposes most of the Obama Administration’s policies, my tone must be civil while my criticisms must always contain constructive suggestions, a lesson I try to practice with every entry on this blog.

And now with Lady Thatcher’s passing, a legacy is left is to guide our country, and indeed the world, to hopefully a better place.

Passport Control SOS

Over the Easter weekend MarqueePolitics, like many of you, traveled to spend the holiday with family.  It was on this trip where he saw, up-close, the absolutely foolish effects of the sequester.

I’m not a morning person, but at 6 a.m. on Monday morning I found myself in the main terminal of Toronto’s Pearson International Airport.  Not wanting to miss my 8:30 a.m. flight back to DC, I gave myself plenty of time to clear security and also get my standard breakfast: a large iced coffee with an apple fritter.  For some unknown reason, for flights bound for the USA, passengers have to clear American customs prior to boarding in Toronto.

So at 6:15 with passport in hand, I walked toward Passport Control only to be denied entry.  When I inquired why a security agent informed me, “Due to recent budget cuts (the sequester), you are not allowed to enter customs until your flight time-range is called.”  I was then directed to a holding pen, joining well over a 100 other miserable passengers who were experiencing the same fate.

After 75 minutes of sitting and listening to the airport loudspeaker blast the greatest smooth jazz hits of the 1980’s, it was announced that those with 8:30 flight times could now enter customs.  Cognizant that it was now 7:30, that my flight was leaving in one hour and I still had to clear customs AND security, I ran to Passport Control only to find myself standing in line for another 25 minutes.  When I finally arrived at a US Border agent, the agent asked for my passport, furiously stamped it, handed it back to me, and told me I was free to go all without looking up or asking questions.

With five minutes to spare, I made my plane and sat at my gate dumbfounded.

My position on the sequester is well known: it was an absolutely foolish attempt to tackle America’s debt problem.  The sequester is the equivalent of telling an alcoholic to quit drinking hard liquor and stick to beer!  Sequestration inadvertently cuts the wrong areas, rather than address the heart of America’s debt problem.  What’s even more embarrassing is that the stupidity of this law is now being seen by citizens from around the world when they travel through America’s borders.

The financial catastrophes of Cyprus, Greece, Ireland, Italy and Portugal should serve as a warning to America.  Our time to fix the debt is running out.   Cutting border security and TSA staff, furloughing government employees and across the board cuts are the wrong approach.  If you disagree, try going through American customs or boarding an American-bound international flight.  If you do, bring a book, cause you’ll be there a while!  But don’t worry, you’ll have plenty of time to read the sign about how this delay was made possible due to budget cuts.

The Republican Producers

Sometimes people fail for a reason.  In the musical The Producers, the main characters purposely fail to con others out of money.  Why the Republican Party consistently fails, and seems to enjoy doing so, is beyond me.

If you think I’m being partisan let’s take a look at the Republican’s blunders over the past two years and see why these events are so harmful.

2012 Republican Primary

Action: The primary race turned into a proverbial debate over which candidate was the most socially conservative.

Result: The primary race alienated female/gay/immigrant voters and positioned the Party as out-of-touch and out-dated.

Rape Comments by Reps. Richard Mourdock and Todd Akin

Action: In their respective 2012 races, Representatives Richard Mourdock and Todd Akin essentially associated rape to an act of God.

Result: Failure to condone these statements by Party leaders (including nominee Mitt Romney) further alienated female voters.

2011 Grand Bargain and 2012 Fiscal Cliff Failures

Action: Republicans were unable to reach a debt limit and fiscal cliff deal with President Obama on two separate occasions.  Furthermore, they could not articulate what their actual positions were in these negotiations.

Result: Not only did taxes go up, but public opinion shifted against the Republican Party.  The public now approves of the tax increases that were enacted.

2013 CPAC Convention

Action: While not an official Party action, it spoke volumes when the Conservative Political Action Convention (CPAC) invited Donald Trump and Sarah Palin to speak, however Governors Chris Christie (NJ) and Bob McDonnell (VA) were not invited.

Result: I’m not sure that the public took note of this, but for those who did, these actions created the image of an out-of-touch conservative wing of the Party.

The first step is admitting you have a problem…

Fortunately the Republicans have at least another year until the 2014 midterm elections, three years until the next presidential election and several leaders are aware of their perception problem.  Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Governors Bobby Jindal (LA) and Chris Christie have all begun publicly discussing the need to broaden the Republican Party’s appeal.   As one leader recently said, the Republican Party needs to stop being the party of stupid.   But it will take more than speeches to do this including: public condemnation of members when they take to saying unintelligent comments, an ability to publicly communicate their message and to position themselves beyond the Party of tax cuts and abortion.

The Producers may have set out to fail, but if you’ve seen either movie version or the stage show, you know their fate takes a wildly hilarious turn.  In a black humor sort of way, the Republican’s fate may be similar, however nobody in the Party will be laughing when their failures culminate in electoral defeat.

 

Just the Facts

Growing up, we used to watch a lot of retro-television in my family.  One such show was Dragnet, a police drama from the early sixties featuring two sobering cops who used to always tell suspects and witnesses that all they wanted was, “just the facts.”

Watching the coverage leading up to today’s sequestration cuts, I feel a “just the facts” attitude is needed to set the record straight.

FACT:  Today, March 1st, $85 billion in federal cuts will take effect.

FACT: The White House proposed, and the Republican Congress agreed to, the sequester thus making both parties responsible for the situation.

FACT: The sequester does not touch the two biggest drivers of America’s national debt and deficit: entitlement spending and healthcare.  This effectively proves, what a stupid idea the sequester was to begin with (okay this last sentence was more of an opinion than fact).

FACT: Despite numerous threats from the Obama Administration, it really remains to be seen what the real effects of the sequester will be in each state.

These are the facts of the sequester as they currently stand.  If there is one word to describe the sequester, events surrounding the sequester and the behavior of our political leaders it is this: Cowardice.

Never has a solution so stupid, been proposed for a problem so serious.  And never has our political leadership failed to adequately respond to a preemptive crisis.

This blog has written numerous times about the need to tackle our debt, and will remain focused on the issue.  The facts remain that unless serious reform of our tax, entitlement and healthcare systems are enacted, the monetary and economic fate of the United States will not be pleasant.

May I recommend that for all our citizens and political leaders, we skip the theatrics, and proceed with just the facts.

Go See Lincoln

Washington is abuzz this week with pre-inaugural festivities.  By next Monday, the Capitol will be aglow with the majesty of the inaugural ceremony, the pomp and circumstance of the inaugural balls and celebrations of America’s 44th president, Barack Obama.  In preparing for the start of his second term, I hope the President will go see the movie Lincoln, hopefully learning that acting like a politician is not shameful behavior.  For if President Obama is to survive the second term battles that lie ahead, he will need to act like politician of the highest caliber.

Lincoln is principally set in January 1865 and centers on the passage of the 13th amendment.  Having just been re-elected, President Lincoln is trying to pressure Congress to pass the amendment during their lame duck session (remember prior to the 20th amendment, Congress didn’t start their session till March).   What may surprise moviegoers were the tools Lincoln used to get the amendment passed, many of which are still employed.

Lobbyists, federal appointments, political maneuvering and dodgy answers, were all used by Lincoln to get Congress to pass the amendment.  The film makes no secret of this, and neither does Lincoln.  At one point in the film Lincoln turns to his cabinet, raises his hand and declares, “I am the president of the United States of America, clothed in immense power! You will procure me those votes!”

In the next sixth months President Obama will have battles with the Republicans on: cabinet appointments, the budget, the debt ceiling, federal spending, gun reform and possibly immigration.  Furthermore, President Obama will also have to compete with the fact that presidents tend to get weaker as their second term progresses, remember they are lame duck leaders as well.  If President Obama is to cement his legacy on the debt and federal spending, he’ll need to wield a Lincoln-ian style deal that includes the Republican.

President Obama has long made it known of his admiration for our 16th president.  In fact, at next Monday’s inauguration ceremony the President will be sworn in on the Lincoln bible, and his 2013 State of the Union Address is currently scheduled for Lincoln’s birthday, February 12th.  The lesson thought that President Obama must take from his predecessor is that politics matters.  He can’t keep a pious attitude towards the professional, when he is the profession’s most notable leader.  Politics doesn’t always have to be nasty, it does however need to achieve results.

President Obama, congratulations on your second term.  The American people, of both political parties, are counting on you!

Notes from the Stage Door – Fiscal Cliff Edition

Call the Fiscal Cliff the Grinch that stole Christmas in 2012 or the first Festivus grievance of 2013, but I can’t remember a time when politics left such a dark shadow over the holidays.  In politics, process maters, especially when it involves a policy that will affect every American’s taxes.   This week’s Notes from the Stage Door is dedicated to helping you understand the political process which saved the nation from once again avoiding economic uncertainty.  The underlining in all these stories is this: personal relationships matter…enter Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Mitch McConnell.

Politico: The fiscal cliff deal that almost wasn’t

Politico (a must read for anyone interested in politics) provides a great overview of everything that went down during the fiscal cliff negotiations.  This includes Speaker John Boehner telling Senator Harry Reid to f*ck off, and how Biden and McConnell were able to save the day.

The New York Times: Lines of Resistance on Fiscal Deal

The biggest conundrum of the entire deal is the Republican’s response.  A decade ago, the thought of  making 85% of the Bush tax cuts permanent was a pipe dream.   Now it’s a reality, and even more ironic is that this all happened under President Barack Obama.  Still, Republicans remains unsettled about the deal and unresolved about where they go to next.

Les Fiscal Miserables

Finally, a friend from across the isle, sent this to me last week.  I thought, with this being a blog about the arts and politics, a Les Miserable-Fiscal Cliff theme tumblr could not have been more appropriate!

Where’s the Outrage?

I was watching the Monday Night Football game when the replacement referees blew the infamous ‘failed Mary’ play which cost the Green Bay Packers a win.  Normally I go to bed after the game, but that night I wanted to see how the post-game commentators would handle the call.  In retrospect I didn’t need to stay up, because the game would become a national outrage and media sensation for the following week.

Over the last three months there has been a news story that has received similar media coverage; consistently making the A-section above-the-fold and always the lead story on all the evening news broadcasts.  The story is the fiscal cliff – a series of financial taxes and regulations set to expire on January 1, 2013.  Unlike the Monday Night Football game though, the fiscal cliff has failed to really capture the public’s imagination, leading me to ask: where’s the outrage?

I know that after the longest Republican Primary in history (or so it seemed) and the election, the last thing Americans want to focus on this holiday season is another political drama.  But pause for a moment, and ponder what happens if Congress fails to act.  If all the tax cuts expire and sequestration procedures go into full effect, they will essentially slow American economic growth to roughly .5%, essentially throwing the country back into a recession.

Now I am not naïve, and will acknowledge that football is a much easier game to understand than Congressional politics and the debt.  However, it’s shocking how apathetic Americans are about this subject.  Americans frequently like to think of their nation as a world superpower, the victor of the Cold War and so on, but our political inability and public apathy on this subject could doom the country to second-class status.

Ironically enough the Monday Football Game ultimately has had little to any effect on the Green Bay Packers this season.  They will make the playoffs.  However, the public’s lack of motivation on Congress to pursue solid public policy answers will cause the United States to suffer in its overall performance.  All of this leads me to ask the question: where’s the outrage?

For complete coverage and analysis of the fiscal cliff please visit: http://www.politico.com/p/pages/fiscal-cliff