Landon
Lecture by Bill Schneider,
political analyst for CNN
November 16, 2004
My
job at CNN, some of you may know, I'm not really a correspondent or
technically a commentator, I'm an explainer, I'm a political analyst.
So my job is really to explain what's going on. Our correspondents will
tell you this is what happened today and then I come on the air and
try to explain what it means.
I
should hasten to point out there are some things I cannot explain. I
call them the eternal mysteries of American politics. Among, them, why
liberals cannot do talk radio. Al Franken is trying to give it a good
try and we wish him luck, but it's not the format that liberals are
very skillful at, and for that matter, it would say to me it is an eternal
mystery why conservatives cannot do protest marchers. A conservative
protest march is truly a pitiful thing. So those remain eternal mysteries.
I'm
honored and pleased to be here in some part because it means finally
this very disagreeable election is over. This is probably one of the
most difficult and distasteful elections for many, many years, and people
often ask me, "What's the best election you've ever covered?"
And I would have to say that was the 1992 presidential campaign, which
was truly exciting because in 1992 we had three candidates running for
president, the first President Bush running for re-election, Bill Clinton
and Ross Perot, remember him?
There
was a time during that campaign when each of those three candidates
was ahead. Believe it or not, you have to scratch your memories real
hard to remember, but in May and June of 1992 Ross Perot was leading
in the race for president and poor Bill Clinton, who had just won the
California primary, was very upset because he beat Jerry Brown in California
and Ross Perot was still leading in the race for president, until he
got out of the race at the Democratic Convention, before he got back
into the race later that year.
That
was a wonderful campaign, very exciting. The issues really got engaged.
I mean, it started early in the year with Jennifer Flowers and ended
with the, of course, plurality victory of Bill Clinton. That was a true
rock and roll and a great political story. And for the matter one of
the best political stories I ever covered in an election campaign was
just one year ago in California, the California recall. I mean, Arnold
Schwarzenegger, it doesn't get much better than that, you know, and
the firing of an incumbent governor who had just been re-elected one
year before, and was fired by an upsurge of anger on the part of the
voters. That was a real political story.
One
of the worst political campaigns I suppose I ever covered, unfortunately
for you here in Kansas, was 1996, when Bob Dole ran against Bill Clinton
for president, and it was my misfortune to go on the air week after
week and report that Bob Dole was losing. He had been losing the week
before and I would say, "He's losing today, I imagine he'll be
losing next week," and I wish I could make this story more interesting,
but we had done 105 public opinion polls during the course of that campaign
and Clinton was winning every single time. Dole is remembered and still
honored and cherished as a great statesman in American political life,
but in that year and under those circumstances, there was just no way
it looked like he was going to be able to defeat Bill Clinton.
So
some elections in the forces are very powerful and some elections in
the forces are not overwhelming, and that as the case this year. You
know, in 2000, like in 2004, we had fifty-fifty election. 2000, of course
was famous for being as close as we've come in a long time to a perfect
tie in American politics. But fifty-fifty can have two very different
meanings. Fifty-fifty can mean, as the kids say today, whatever, and
that is what it meant really in 2000.
Things
were pretty good, you may recall, under Bill Clinton as president. Then
we regarded it as a boom in the 1990's. Today more people would call
it a bubble. Nevertheless, people were making a lot of money and they
were pretty happy with the way things were under Bill Clinton. No one
threatened us, the Cold War was over, and times looked pretty good.
So they thought maybe we should just keep the Democrats in the office,
because they had done a pretty good job.
On
the other hand, Bill Clinton had a lot of problems as president, and
a lot of voters thought it might be time for a change, so they were
right on the line, they sort of wanted a change, but they sort of wanted
to keep things the way they were under the Democrats.
And
so a lot of voters looked at the choice that year, Bush and Gore, and
they said, "Bush, Gore; Gore, Bush, whatever, I could go either
way." And for week after week the polls were showing Bush a little
bit ahead or Gore a little bit ahead and it would shift back and forth,
because a lot of voters said it didn't make much difference who won.
That was a fifty-fifty election where the real meaning of the choice
was, "Whatever, we could live with either outcome." It was
like if we were to do a poll and ask people, "Which would you prefer,
chocolate cake or apple pie?" the answer you would get would probably
be fifty-fifty, because people would say, "I don't know, chocolate
cake, apple pie, whatever."
That's
the way they felt in 2000 until the day after the election when suddenly
millions of voters who didn't much care whether Bush or Gore won, suddenly
when it became a sporting event that went into overtime, suddenly people
cared desperately that the right candidate won, and we saw a sudden
upsurge and interest in the election when it went into a Florida recount.
And people were suddenly desperately interested that the right guy did
get elected, and there was much more interest in that election after
election day than before election day. And people, of course, retained
their anger for years after election day 2000, because then it became
fifty-fifty with a very different meaning, a meaning that was carried
over to the election this month.
It
wasn't "whatever." I can assure you that between Kerry and
Bush very few voters said "Whatever." Most voters were bitterly
and deeply divided. It was a different meaning of fifty-fifty. And if
you look at the map of the election this year, one of the most striking
things about this year's election was how similar the 2004 election
map looks to the 2000 election map. It's almost the same map. Only three
states changed parties in 2004 from their vote in 2000. The astute political
science students among you will, of course, know the states I'm talking
about. Two states switched from Gore to Bush. One of them was Iowa,
and the other one was New Mexico, although New Mexico is still counting
ballots, so we're not entirely sure where they're going to end up, but
for the moment it looks like Bush will carry New Mexico, while their
counting their absentee ballots.
One
state switched from Bush to Kerry, and that was, of course, New Hampshire,
which is in Kerry's back yard. It went narrowly for Bush last time and
it went narrowly for John Kerry this time. Other than that, red and
blue were about the same throughout the country.
An
imagine that. We've had a very dramatic four-year period. We've had
a devastating terrorist attack, the first ever in the United States,
the first attack on American soil since Pearl Harbor, and right in a
major American city. We've had anthrax attacks, we've had a serious
recession, we've had a wave of corporate scandals, we had same sex marriages,
we've had two wars, one in Afghanistan, one in Iraq, we've had a sequence
of very dramatic - I should say traumatic changes in this country, and
yet, most amazingly, I think, the map of the 2004 election looks pretty
much like the map of 2000.
Things
have not really changed that much, which is remarkable, if you think
about it. You recall that John Edwards, the Democratic candidate for
vice president talked about two Americas. He meant two Americas that
were divided by class, the haves and the have nots. "The truth
is," he told the Democratic Convention in Boston in July, "we
still live in two Americas, one for people who have lived in the American
dream and don't have to worry, and another for Americans who work hard
and still have to struggle to make ends meet.
That
kind of class division is a familiar subject for Democrats. Most Americans
fall in the "have not" category in the Democratic Convention,
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo said of the Republicans, "Their policies
divide the nation into the lucky and the left out, into the royalty
and the rabble." Republicans constantly accuse Democrats who use
this rhetoric of stirring up class warfare and dividing the country.
But
I'm here to tell you that the division that dominates American politics
right now is not social class or education or income, it's culture.
Red and blue does not mean haves versus have nots. If it did, the Democrats
would be in better shape, because there are a lot more have nots than
there are haves. And that's the division that works for Democrats.
But
that division does not dominate American politics. Red versus blue means
liberals versus conservatives. It's culture, and certainly our poll
show that more people call themselves conservatives than liberals. So
that's a division that Democrats are quick to denounce.
The
keynote speaker at the Democratic Convention, Barak Obama, said "There
is not a liberal America and a conservative America, there's only the
United States of America.
Republicans
demonize Democrats by calling them a liberal party. Democrats demonize
Republicans by calling them the party of the rich. And what's interesting
is these two divisions cut across each other. The Democratic party includes
rich and poor, and so does the Republican party. There are not limousine
liberals who nest along the two coasts of the country in very high property
value areas, and there are not country club conservatives who vote very
strongly Republican, both rich.
There
are still lunch bucket liberals, working class voters who vote for the
Democrats because they think the Democrats will protect them economically,
and there are a lot of populist conservatives, many of them church goers
who vote Republican, even though they're not particularly affluent,
because they believe the Republican party will protect their values,
and they are less affluent voters. Both party coalitions cut right across
class lines, much more than they have in many decades.
An
astute political observer, possibly the most astute in American politics,
Bill Clinton, acknowledges that today's politics has a lot more to do
with values than with class. And at the core of what value split in
America we have a very, very ancient cultural conflict. In fact, I would
describe it as a cultural civil war, the civil war of the 1960s, which
is now nearly 50 years old.
Clinton
told the American book sellers after his book was published last summer,
"If you look back on the '60s and on balance you think the '60s
did more good than harm, you're probably a Democrat. If you that that
the '60s did more harm than good, you're probably a Republican."
And
that's about as concise a definition as I can give you of what the two
parties stand for. It's a split between two figures who came of age
in the '60s. Bill Clinton, who clearly sees more good than harm in the
'60s, and George W. Bush, who is of the same generation, the same baby
boomer generation, but who sees more harm than good in the culture clashes
of the 1960s. That continues to define American politics.
I
describe it as a cultural civil war, and it's a cultural civil war we
have never gotten over in Americans politics. In some ways, it is like
the real civil war of the 1860s Americans did die. Fifty-eight thousand
Americans died in the Vietnam war, and that remains and remained a bitter
memory of that generation. But we can't seem to get over the cultural
civil war of the 1960s.
I
thought we had, and I, in fact, went on the air to talk about it after
Sept. 11th, when the country for one year pulled together. For one year
we had unity in this country. It was a tragic unity, it was borne of
a terrifying terrorist attack on American soil, but for one year, from
September 2001 to September 2002, the country was unified, and for one
year - it sounds amazing to report this - but for one year - I have
the evidence, I have a Ph.D. I'm supposed to have evidence and do -
a majority of Democrats supported George W. Bush and approved of the
job he was doing as president.
And
I went on the air and said, "Finally after September 11th - finally
perhaps we have put the divisions that have poisoned American politics
since the 1960s behind us and we are entering a new era in American
politics."
Ladies
and gentlemen, it lasted exactly one year. Something happened in September
2002 that brought all the old divisions back. It was September 2002,
that the Bush White House began the Iraq rollout. Remember the chief
of staff announced, "You don't roll out a new product until after
Labor Day," and they were ready to present the Iraq war as the
new policy of the Bush administration. They waited until Labor Day 2002,
then they started talking about the need to go to war in Iraq, to remove
Sadam Hussein, and then to my dismay, all the old divisions of American
politics came roaring back and the red and the blue map once again prevailed
in American politics.
Now,
the figure who exploited that division most effectively in this election
was, of course, Carl Rove. He's now the toast of Washington, the successor
to Lee Atwater and James Carville as the boy genius of American politics.
I suppose you can call him a boy, he's 52 years old, but he is the great
genius of American politics. President Bush hailed him as the architect
of this election victory.
What
did Carl Rove do exactly? Well, it has become the prevailing theory
of this election, particularly among Democrats, that what Carl Rove
did was organize a stealth army below the media radar screen, a stealth
army of evangelical voters because we didn't see it coming, nobody reported
on it. We didn't ask too many questions about moral values, and they
pulled a surprise attack on election day and overwhelmed Democrats at
the polls, who did a very good job of mobilizing the Democratic base.
Young
people, minorities, single women, they came out to vote in very large
numbers, but they were overwhelmed by Rove's raiders at the polls, because
they massed in the churches all over the country, and the media didn't
see it coming, so it came as a shock and a surprise to the Democrats
that there was this army out there. And after, as we all know by now,
our network polls showed moral values as the number one issue of concern
for voters this year.
And
it was, because the voters were otherwise divided on the issues. They
were split. Those people who said the big issues were the war in Iraq,
the economy and jobs, health care, they voted for Kerry, that was about
half the voters. Those voters who said the biggest issues were moral
values and the war on terrorism, they were about half the voters - and
taxes - they voted for George W. Bush. So the voters were really divided
on the issues and that enabled those who came out to vote and make a
statement on moral values to show up as the single largest issue.
They
were only 22 percent, they didn't dominate the electorate, but it is
true that the evangelical voters did show up in large numbers, as did
everybody else. And it is also true that they voted about 80 percent
for George W. Bush.
Rove's
strategy of rallying the conservative base worked. It's not the whole
story of this election, because what we found was that most voters on
election day thought that abortion should remain legal. Sixty percent
favored some form of legal recognition of same sex relationships, if
not by marriage, then at least by civil unions. The voters this year
were no more religious, no more church going than they'd been in the
past. Yes, religious voters favored Bush by a couple of points more
than they had in 2000, but so did non-church going voters than in the
past.
Issues
like abortion and gay rights and stem cell research are the most divisive
issues in the electorate, so it's very easy to read Mr. Rove's strategy
of energizing the conservative base as a strategy of divide and conquer.
But I don't think that's exactly what happened in this election.
You
know, throughout the campaign Republican critics of Rove's strategy
were fearful that a sharp-edged campaign to rally the conservative base
would end up alienating moderates. And they were very worried about
that, that the swing voters, if Bush ran hard on stem cell research
and a federal marriage amendment and anti-abortion that they would alienate
the moderates. I don't think Rove's achievement was simply to energize
the party's base, it was to do that without alienating moderates. And
that was the real miracle that he achieved, because from 2000 to 2004
Bush's support held steady among moderates and independents.
Bush
actually carried the Catholic vote against a Roman Catholic candidate.
When Kennedy ran, the second Catholic to be nominated for president
in 1960, he got almost 80 percent of the Catholic vote. But this year
the only voters for whom Kerry's Catholicism was an issue seemed to
be the Catholic Church, who seemed to be offended that he didn't follow
teachings of the church on a lot of issues, including abortion. Most
other voters didn't care and the Catholic vote went by a narrow margin
for George Bush.
Bush's
biggest gains came among women. Kerry carried women, but by only three
points, where Gore had carried women by 11 points. And perhaps the most
significant gain by George Bush this year - a very significant gain,
because they're the largest minority group and one of the fastest growing
in American politics - was among Hispanic voters. That came as a real
shock. Bush carried 44 percent of the Hispanic vote across the country.
No Republican presidential candidate, including Ronald Reagan, have
ever done that well among Hispanic voters. In fact, he got almost 60
percent of the Mexican-American vote in Texas, his home state.
Why?
Well, the easiest explanation is a lot of Hispanic voters not only are
religious and follow the teachings of the church, but they have ties
to the military. Hispanics volunteer and serve in the military in disproportionate
numbers. So Bush, the candidate who had a strong appeal to military
families, did exceptionally well among Hispanic voters.
And
that suggests that he had something going for him besides religion and
conservative values, and that was the that was a strong leader and he
had a clear stand on the issues. For eight months the Bush campaign
kept up a relentless attack on John Kerry as a flip-flopper. It goes
all the way back to March 3rd, the day after Super Tuesday, when Bush
went before a Republican audience and said, "Senator Kerry has
been in Washington long enough to take both sides on just about every
issue." And it ended at midnight on November 1st, the Monday night
before the election, when Bush came home to Texas and at a rally in
Dallas he said - he denounced Kerry's vote against funding the troops
in the Iraq, and he said "Then when he cast that vote he entered
the flip-flop hall of fame when he said 'I actually voted for the 87
billion dollars before I voted against it.'"
And
the voters got the message. On election day most voters described John
Kerry not as a man who said what he believes, but as a man who said
what he thinks most people want to hear.
I
think the problem was Kerry never had a coherent narrative message,
a theme for his campaign. Bush got there first, or Carl Rove, or both
of them, and portrayed him for eight solid months relentlessly, mercilessly
as a flip-flopper, as a man who was wavering and inconsistent and that
prevent Kerry from getting across the message he needed to get across
to win this election.
What
was the message that Kerry tried to win on, that could have won this
election? You know, my job at CNN, I like to portray, is an explainer,
as someone whose job is to understand the times. When he was prime minister
of Britain, a great statesman, Benjamin Disraeli, once received a note
from an Oxford University undergraduate, who wrote the great prime minister
and said, "Prime Minister, I am considering a career in public
life. What is it that I must know to make a career in public life?"
And Disraeli said, "Young man," he wrote him back in longhand,
the note is preserved at the Disraeli home in London - he said, "Young
man, there are only two things you must know to pursue a career in public
life. You must know yourself and you must know the times."
Now,
we have a entire journalistic industry which sees as its mission explaining
who the candidates are, what they eat for breakfast, how they're brought
up. We know a lot about John Kerry, we know a lot about George W. Bush,
his religious values, etc. My job is a little bit different. My job
is to try to understand the times, which is crucial in politics, because
the times can change in a week. And my job is to look at the polls,
to go out there and travel the country, to understand what there is
- and this is - frankly, if some of you are in marketing, you know this
is just market research. You have to go out and find what there's a
market for in any political year.
Kerry
needed a defining theme, and that has to be something the voters want
that they're not getting from the incumbent. In 1960, after eight years
of President Eisenhower, voters thought the country was slowing down.
Particularly after the launching of Sputnik and after the U2 incident,
people thought the United States was losing ground to the Soviet Union.
Americans after Eisenhower were looking for a leader who offered youth,
dynamism, vigor. That was John Kennedy, who won the election very narrowly
on a promise to get the country moving again.
The
Democrats got elected, they served for eight years, and as we all remember
from the 1960s, the country was torn apart by racial protest, by violence
in America's cities, by student disruptions at universities, by the
war in Vietnam. The country was torn apart and Americans desperately
wanted an experienced professional who could bring order to America.
And so what did we do? We resurrected a politician from the political
dead.
Clinton
liked to call himself the comeback kid. He had nothing on Richard Nixon.
Richard Nixon had lost the presidency and two years later he ran for
governor of California and he lost that, too. Who could come back from
two defeats like that? The answer is Richard Nixon did it. He came back
because he had something to offer in 1968 that Americans were desperate
for. He looked like a man who could bring order to the country. And
after the turmoil of the '60s that's exactly what Americans wanted.
At the end of the campaign Nixon saw in the crowd a young girl with
a sign that said, "Bring us together," and he went over to
the young girl and he grabbed the sign, and he said, "Yes, that's
what I'm running to do. I'm running to bring the country together,"
at a time when America was even more divided than - is it difficult
to imagine - more divided than it is today.
He
ran as a candidate who could bring order to the country. It helped that
he was right in the middle in 1968. In the Republican party he had Nelson
Rockefeller on his left and he had Ronald Reagan on his right. And in
the general election he had Hubert Humphrey on his left and he had George
Wallace on his right. But perhaps more importantly, wherever Humphrey
and Wallace showed up there was a riot.
Richard
Nixon was a man of order, who could bring order to the country. So we
elected him and, of course, we got Watergate. After Watergate, after
that bitter and terrible experience, one candidate figured out what
there was a market for in 1976. He came out of nowhere. I've been to
Plains, Georgia, fold, believe me, it's nowhere. He came out of nowhere,
a one-term former segregationist governor of Georgia, totally unknown,
who ran on a simple promise that he brought to Iowa and New Hampshire.
The promise was "I will never lie to you." And after Watergate
millions of Americans heard that promise and they said, "At last,
a president who will never lie to us."
He
promised integrity in the White House, and, you know what, we got it,
we got a man of integrity and Jimmy Carter is honored throughout the
world, he's a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who is honored still as a man
of honor, decency and morality. Morality in government was what he sold
and morality in government was what there was a powerful market for
after Watergate.
But
when we elected Jimmy Carter we discovered we were missing something.
He was criticized as wishy-washy and ineffectual. He didn't seem to
be much of a leader at a time of great challenge, when inflation was
out of control and there was terrible unemployment in the country, and
a gas shortage that brought long lines at the gas pumps, and at the
end, the hostage crisis where he seemed totally ineffectual in getting
anything resolved. The country in 1980 yearned for strong, decisive
leadership. Enter Ronald Reagan.
I
don't think Ronald Reagan could have been elected in any other year
but 1980, because he scared people. They were afraid if we voted for
Ronald Reagan he's start a war, or he'd throw old people out into the
snow. He said scary things. And if you remember, many of you who were
around for the 1980 election, it wasn't until the last week of that
campaign, after the one and only debate with Jimmy Carter, when he gave
the famous closing statement, "Ask yourself if you're better off
than you were four years ago. Is it easier to buy things in the store?"
One
debate, and Americans breathed a sigh of relief and took a calculated
risk that Ronald Reagan wasn't a dangerous man, that he wouldn't the
terrible things he sometimes said he wanted to do. And it was safe to
vote for Ronald Reagan. So we took a change, we elected him, and for
12 long years the Democrats are out of power.
It
took Bill Clinton to finally figure out the right message to compete
with the Republicans. George Bush was president and under the first
President Bush, who served with honor, who was a hero of the world,
he stood astride the world like a colossus after the Gulf War, 90 percent
approval. The everything began to fall apart when the country had a
bitter recession of the early 1990s, and George Bush the father was
famously out of touch with ordinary Americans.
Remember
when he showed up in a supermarket and seemed unfamiliar with the working
of a supermarket scanner, and in the town hall debate - I think that
was in St. Louis - he looked at his watch as if he was impatient to
get out of there, didn't want to answer questions from voters. He was
out of touch with ordinary voters at a time when ordinary voters were
in deep anxiety and pain and were looking for a president who felt their
pain. Bill Clinton marketed empathy. That was his stock and trade. George
Bush, it wasn't a problem of his competence, he could do the job, but
people thought he didn't understand what life was like for ordinary
Americans. Now, Clinton had a strength, empathy, he also had an obvious
weakness. We elected Clinton knowing full well that there was a problem.
Because the first thing we ever learned about Clinton before the Hampshire
primary of 1992, was about some relationship with Jennifer Flowers.
And the second thing we ever learned about Bill Clinton was about his
peculiar relationship with the draft board during the Vietnam war. So
Americans were fully aware that Clinton might have problems of character.
And
even on election day when we asked Americans, "Do you think Bill
Clinton is honest and trustworthy?" most Americans said, "Well,
honestly, no." And only 43 percent voted for him. That's why there
was such a thing as Ross Perot, because Americans were completely convinced
that George Bush didn't deserve a second term, but they weren't confident
in Bill Clinton because they had problems with his integrity and character.
But they took a chance.
I
like to describe the voters as going to the polls in 1992 with their
eyes wide open and their fingers crossed that Clinton could do the job
of turning the economy around because he was smart, he was knowledgeable,
he was surrounded by a lot of very bright people, he could get the job
done. And they crossed their fingers his problems of character would
not create a constitutional crisis. Well, guess what? We got what we
voted for. He could do the job.
With
the Republican Congress he helped to turn the economy around and we
got the deficit under control and had for several years a budget surplus
in this country. The job got done and in his second term his problems
of character did create a constitutional crisis, which wasn't a surprise
to people, because they knew perfectly well that he had certain problems
and they could come home and become and issue, which, of course, they
did.
What
did voters want in 2000 that they weren't getting from Bill Clinton?
The candidate who captured the times was not Bush and it wasn't Al Gore.
It was the candidate who ran in New Hampshire by driving a bus around
the state. The bus had a very memorable name. It was called "The
Straight Talk Express," because when John McCain ran for president
he ran as the un-Clinton. The one thing people were not getting from
Bill Clinton was straight talk.
When
I would go around the country in 2000 and ask voters what they thought
of President Clinton, they would usually say, "Well, he's a bit
of a rascal, but, you know, he feels your pain, he connects with you,
I can listen to him for hours." And I would ask them, "What
has Bill Clinton ever said that you find memorable as president?"
And they would sit in silence and then they'd start to giggle and someone
would say, " I did not have sexual relations with that woman."
And I'd say, "Is there anything else Bill Clinton ever said as
president that you find memorable?" "I didn't inhale."
"Anything else?" And they'd think for a minute and someone
would say, "It depends on what the meaning of is is."
Those
are all the opposite of straight talk. Not only that, McCain was a war
hero, Clinton is still regarded by many Americans as a draft dodger.
And McCain attacked the power of big money in politics. Clinton broke
all records to date in brining big money into American politics. So
McCain was the hero. His problem was he couldn't find a party that would
nominate him because he insulted conservatives. He said the Republican
Party cannot win as a conservative party, it has to turn itself into
a reform party. And conservatives listened to that and said, "We
have fought and suffered and sacrificed for decades to win control of
the Republican Party, we're not turning it over to you."
So
the result is McCain could have easily been elected; instead there was
a choice between Bush and Gore, and as I've said, most voters didn't
see a big difference.
Eventually
they did see something in George Bush that they thought was valuable,
they saw good character, which was the brand name Bush. Bush meant good
character, because his father was always regarded and honored as a man
of character and decency and they saw that in the governor of Texas.
Not
only that, but they saw a guy in George W. Bush who was remote from
the evil, mean-spirited politics of Washington. He wasn't part of Newt
Gingrich's contract with America. He had nothing to do with impeachment,
and he governed Texas with Democratic coalitions. So they thought, "This
is a guy who can fulfill the promise that George Bush made in the 2000
election."
Remember
when George Bush ran for president? He said "I'm running to be
a uniter and not a divider." And after Bill Clinton, that's what
Americans wanted.
I
submit to you that as president the country is much more divided than
it's been in decades. He took a divided country under Bill Clinton,
and after the Iraq war brought out all the old divisions, the country
is more divided than ever.
What
were Americans looking for this year? They were looking for a candidate
who could fulfill the promise that Bush made in 2000, and did not deliver,
to be a uniter and not a divider. That's how Kerry could win, to run
as a uniter. And he promised all the time, "I will be a president
who unites our country," he said in rally after rally. He knew
that that's what voters wanted, that's what there was a market for this
year.
But
Bush and Rove had gotten to him first. It is difficult for people -
for voters to see you as a uniter if they see you as wavering and inconsistent.
That was the image that Carl Rove worked hard to create and he did it
in full view of the media radar screen. It wasn't an evangelical army,
it was to portray Kerry was wavering and inconsistent, which immediately
undermined any effort he might make to present himself as someone who
could unite the country.
There
are some candidates out there who could unite this bitter partisan culture.
John McCain who got re-elected with almost 80 percent of the vote this
month in Arizona, is still regarded as a heroic figure and unifier.
I
can think of another one. Early on in this year I said the way Kerry
can win this election is to find his inner Arnold. Arnold Schwarzenegger
has emerged in a very strong Democratic state, California, and has been
a remarkably successful governor. On Nov. 2, when Californians were
voting 54 percent for John Kerry, we asked the voters of California
"What do you think of Arnold Schwarzenegger?" Sixty-nine percent
of California voters, the same ones who were voting for John Kerry,
69 percent approved of the job Arnold Schwarzenegger is doing as governor.
The problem is, of course, at the moment he can't run for president,
although as you probably know, there is an Amend for Arnold movement
going on right now starting in California.
Schwarzenegger
could be the great uniter of American politics but at the moment he's
ineligible.
Rudy
Giuliano? Maybe, But he's not much of a team player. Colin Powell could
unify the country, but he's shown he's not really interested in politics.
Any of them could be elected in a moment. Interestingly, they're all
Republicans. Isn't that interesting? The great uniters in American politics.
There
is a theory, which I'll just leave you with, that in 2008 we could have
a very interesting election, the first election since 1952 in which
there is not incumbent president or vice president on the ballot. If
the incumbent president can't run like Reagan, the vice president usually
runs, Bush. Clinton, Gore. This could be the first time since 1952 in
which there is no incumbent president or vice president on the ballots,
because Dick Cheney is not expected to run for president.
So
it could be wide open in both political parties, unless - and this is
all the gossip in Washington - unless Dick Cheney decides that his age
or his health do not permit him to serve out his term as vice president,
in which case if he leaves the ticket, George Bush will be able to name
a new vice president, who then has to be confirmed by a majority vote
of the House and Senate.
He
will then have the opportunity to name his designated successor, who
would then be the Republican nominee. And I can tell you that in Washington
there are lots of names being floated around, who will replace Cheney
as vice president and be the Republican candidate in 2008?
And
at the top of the list is a man, who though he disagrees with Bush on
many issues, is acceptable to conservatives, he's anti-abortion, he
calls himself a conservative, who would be the great unifier of American
politics, who campaigned loyally for George Bush this year and gave
a dramatic speech at the Republican Convention. So many, many smart
people are saying if Bush is smart he'll designate John McCain as his
vice president and then he would sew up the nomination for 2008 and
the country could at least find a unifying figure who could heal the
bitter divisions that were created in this country in the 1960s and
made worse by Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.. Thank you very much.
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