101st Fighting Keyboarders
An Inside-the-Bushies Mentality
By David Ignatius
Friday, March 23, 2007; Page A17
The Bush political operatives have become the people the Republicans once warned the country against -- a club of insiders who seem to think that they're better than other folks. They are so contemptuous of government and the public servants who populate it that they have been unable to govern effectively. They are a smug, inward-looking elite that thinks it knows who the good guys are by the political labels they wear.This contempt has been evident in many of the administration's failures. The disastrous incompetence of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq in 2003 and 2004 flowed from its status as a clubhouse for ambitious conservatives eager to punch a political ticket in a country they knew nothing about. The political purges that enfeebled the CIA in 2005 were the work of a conservative former member of Congress, Porter Goss, and a coterie of political aides he brought from Capitol Hill who thought they knew more about intelligence than career professionals. The administration's signature failure, its bumbling response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, was the work of a right-wing political appointee who knew almost nothing about disaster management and who scorned many of the bureaucrats who worked for him.
After Katrina, it became clear that the public wanted a change. Americans want to be confident that those in charge of the country's business are members of what I call "the party of competence," whatever their political affiliation. The anguish of Iraq deepened that message, and the 2006 congressional elections codified it. But the Bush administration didn't get it. The purge at Justice came after the November election blowout. They acted as if they were still on a roll.
Here's the challenge for the Democrats: Become the party that fixes things, that solves problems, that respects expertise and professionalism. Let the GOP be the party of smart alecks and know-it-alls and smirking e-mail writers. The Republicans have made a bed of political arrogance; let them sleep in it for a good long while.
Comments
The administration's signature failure, its bumbling response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005
I was over at a friend's house and he was keeping Fox News on just as a "Gotta keep up with what the bad guys are up to" kind of thing and I caught a reference to Bush feeling sorta bad about Katrina and how it affected the African-Americans who lived down in New Orleans and gee, Bush never really intended for all those folks to die, etc.
Problem: Bush has still done little to nothing to see to it that New Orleans was reconstructed. It's not simple incompetence when entire sections of New Orleans are still uninhabitable. That can only be explained by utter, immoral mendacity.
Also, keep in mind that one of the events that distracted Bush from responding was the birthday of "Saint" John McCain. McCain could very easily have informed his good buddy GeeDubya that "Hey guy, we shouldn't be celebrating my birthday when American citizens are furiously battling deep, heavily toxic flood waters." McCain is just as bad as Bush.
Posted by: Rich | March 24, 2007 01:20 AM