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Wednesday, June 27, 2007
4 Lessons GOP Candidates Can Learn From Bush
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 10:58 AM

While Iraq continues to be the defining issue of our time, other issues have also contributed to President Bush’s low popularity ratings. In many cases, these political gaffes could have been easily avoided. In one instance (as I’ll describe below), a major political story might have been avoided merely by offering the complainant some hot coffee.

What is more, several of these negative news stories could have been avoided by understanding the histories of presidents like Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan.  To paraphrase historian Arnold Toynbee, those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.

What follows are four maxims that President Bush failed to adhere to. Perhaps this can serve as a primer for future GOP leaders ...

1. Always Keep a Secure Home Base

Conservative leader Morton Blackwell advises conservative candidates to “Always keep a secure home base.” But in his second term, George W. Bush failed to follow this sage advice. Whether it was nominating Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court, failing to attend the Conservative Political Action Convention (unlike Ronald Reagan, who spoke at CPAC numerous times), or, most recently, his unpopular support of Amnesty, President Bush has recently failed to “dance with the one who ‘brung him.” Any candidate who breaks this tried-and-true political maxim does so at his own peril.

The next GOP President should avoid making similar mistakes. A great, albeit symbolic first step, would be to actually show up at CPAC...

2. Put Away Foolish Pride

During the dark days of the Great Depression, when thousands of World War I Veterans (called the "Bonus Army") showed up in Washington, DC to demand immediate payment of their bonuses, Herbert Hoover foolishly called in the real Army.

A year later, when the Bonus Army returned, newly elected president Franklin Roosevelt sent his wife Eleanor to chat with them. She brought coffee, and convinced many of them to sign up for newly created jobs making roads.

While neither Hoover nor FDR paid the bonuses, FDR got credit for caring. As one veteran reportedly put it: "Hoover sent the army, Roosevelt sent his wife."

One wanders how much trouble Bush would avoided if he had simply met with Cindy Sheehan. Of course, he would argue that he had already met with her – and that, on principle, he shouldn’t cave in to her demands.

But (prior to her proving herself to be mentally unstable) the public was understandably sympathetic to the mother of a fallen soldier (just as the public was sympathetic to the bonus marchers).

The next GOP President must realize that perception is reality, and the saying goes, “Sometimes you’ve got to rise above principle and do what’s right.  Besides, sometimes giving your enemies what they want is the surest way to destroy them, because it deprives them of their "issue" ...

3. Don’t Be an Island

Democrats criticize Bush for failing to build International alliances, but his failure to build Congressional alliances has also hurt the president.

A recent article from The Hill illustrates just how poorly the Bush Administration has handled Congress. In the article, Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.), said:

We had better relationships with the [White House] legislative affairs shop when Clinton was the president — even after we impeached him.

Perhaps even more concerning, Jones said that only one of five colleagues could correctly Candida Wolff, the assistant to the president for legislative affairs.

In his excellent political primer, Hardball, Chris Matthews writes of Ronald Reagan attending a dinner at the House gym:

When I attended my first such dinner in 1981, I was surprised to see two other guests: George (H.W.) Bush and Ronald Reagan. They had come for no other apparent reason than to share a drink and have their pictures taken with members …

Jimmy Carter never attended a gym dinner.

Reagan, whose contempt for government dwarfed Carter’s, was not about to make personal relationships suffer because of personal or philosophical differences. He made an effort to win over that permanent Washington “establishment” that can either help an Administration or grease its decline.

While Ronald Reagan was the consummate “outsider,” he realized the importance of building alliances among the DC and Congressional elite. President Bush has followed a different path.

The next GOP President must also realize that reaching out isn’t “selling out.” From day one, the next GOP President should seek to build alliances with Congress. While there are 535 Members (in the House and the Senate), a little personal attention goes a long way.

4. Show Up

In his fabulous book, Leadership, Rudy Giuliani shares a rule: “Weddings are optional, funerals are mandatory.” His point is that during times of crisis, you absolutely must show up.

When Hurricane Betsy hit New Orleans in 1965, Lyndon Johnson went there. In fact, here is the second line of his speech:

Today at 3 o'clock when Senator Long and Congressman Boggs and Congressman Willis called me on behalf of the entire Louisiana delegation, I put aside all the problems on my desk to come to Louisiana as soon as I could.

Now, I have no doubt that George W. Bush is more compassionate than Lyndon Johnson – but I also do not doubt LBJ was a better politician. The point is that perception is reality, and when it comes to perception, George W. Bush’s failure to immediately go to New Orleans, was a PR disaster. What is more, flying over the site (rather than landing) created an even more aloof image.

George W. Bush’s late arrival in New York (post 9-11) was overlooked. Sadly, I believe this taught him the wrong lesson.

The next GOP President must accept the fact that some Americans already view the GOP as the less “caring” party. As such, we must remember Woody Allen’s saying that, “99 percent of life is just showing up.” He was right. Showing up covers a multitude of sins.

Notes:

The obvious criticism of this piece is that it does not compare the lessons of Vietnam to Iraq. I have consciously chosen to leave the Iraq issue on the sidelines. While it is unclear if Bush’s involvement in Iraq will someday bear fruit, it is highly unlikely that his failure to immediately show up in Hurricane-savaged New Orleans will not begin to look sagacious, over time.

While there are obviously a million things that any president could do differently, this list includes major gaffes that could have easily been solved merely by applying tried-and-true political maxims.

With any luck, our next President will read this list – and hang these rules on his bathroom mirror.



View in ascending order View in descending order
Kram writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 11:30 AM
Low Approval Ratings
I think the reason for the low approval ratings is the following:

1) Iraq War

2) Eager to sign any amnesty bill from congress

3) Liberal Press - Once they see a president is
down, they will really go after him. No one
really touched him after 9/11. The slowdown
in Iraq really gave the press to take
advantage in destroying his image.

The economy is actually doing great compared to other presidents, but the press won't mention it. If we had a fair media...his approval ratings could be around the 40% area - which is still too low.

Mark
http://www.FuzzySnake.com
IfAFrogHadWings writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 11:33 AM
I'm not sure Bush ever had a large base
For the most part, George W. Bush was in the right place at the right time back in 1999. And there's nothing wrong with that, but I don't think Bush was ever a Republican grassroots candidate. Not like Reagan was.

So Bush's biggest mistake may have been thinking that the Republican base picked him. Actually, they picked the most electable Not Al Gore. And the base turned out to have a different idea than Bush, of what President Not Al Gore should be doing.

'Tis Himself writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 12:56 PM
I'm sorry...
... but this is palpably absurd:

One wanders how much trouble Bush would avoided if he had simply met with Cindy Sheehan.
BG writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 12:57 PM
stiffed
Bush has avoided and stiffed the press because he knew he did not have the ability to handle the press the way that Reagan and Clinton did.

Maybe it was his best strategy. He is working around his limitations. Bush was a better option than Gore and Kerry. You get a glass that is 70% full and that is better than nothing.

Your point is well taken Bush could have done a lot more in dealing with the press. He is basically hostile to any one or thing that does not agree with him. He trys to bulldose his opposition until he wins or realizes it is hopeless and then retreats or caves.

It is a bad approach in some cases.
Jeff H writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 12:59 PM
Cynical at best
That's all I can say about some of your suggestions. So, our next GOP president is supposed to simply give in to the stupidity that some people insist he show up every time a house blows over in a still breeze? I want my president spending his time far more productively. That others wish otherwise is just too damned bad.
Virginia Patriot writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 1:18 PM
GOP=WHIG
There may not be another GOP President if this one gets his way on amnesty.

The Republican Party under GWB seems intent on political suicide. Pandering to citizens of other countries illegally in our country while telling us we must be vigilantes if we object to illegal aliens ignoring our borders and laws. Mel Martinez is RNC Chairman to ensure an open borders candidate in '08. The cheap labor express will be kept running, regardless of the consequences, to party or country. GOP-RIP
The Southern Agrarian writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 4:35 PM
Meet with Sheehan
If Jorge had met with Sheehan, the base would have left him sooner rather than later...
soothsayer writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 5:01 PM
Please learn from W
This lifelong Democrat loves the idea of you people learning "lessons" from the abysmal failure that is George W. Bush!
johnf writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 6:39 PM
food for thought
Bush - leader of the Republican Party - failed Leadership 101.
Matt would like to give a leadership primer to the '08 candidates.
Another compelling reason to vote Democratic.
none none writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 7:19 PM
Bush is a mixed bag
Right on 1 - He doesn't seem to care or appreciate the base hanging with him so long.
Wrong on 2 - He was absolutely right not to meet with her under the circumstances. Bush has been great in how handles the issue of lives lost.
Right on 3 - He seems to care more about placating enemies than loyalty to friends - trying to acheive a "new tone" was code for working with the dems against conservative values.
Wrong on 4 - He does not need to show up at every catastrophy - that's Clinton and it's an "I feel your pain" sham.


Kram writes: Wednesday, June, 27, 2007 10:17 PM
Don't Get It
Why is Bush so hell-bent on signing any type of amnesty bill? Is he trying to get the Latino vote? If so, that is going to backfire in years to come.

Mark
http://www.FuzzySnake.com
Bucko writes: Thursday, June, 28, 2007 11:37 AM
Too stupid...
...is George W. Bush, to heed any good advice.

"W"'s only relevancy is to the damage he will attempt to do to this country until 20 Jan. 2009.
yankee writes: Thursday, June, 28, 2007 3:49 PM
Won't have to worry
for the next generation about giving tips to any GOP presidents...there won't be any for a generation.
Warrior writes: Friday, June, 29, 2007 9:00 AM
Number 5
Fight for what you believe you were elected to fight for. Never be afraid to voice the desires of your party. If your party wants conservative Justices appointed to the courts, appoint them and make it known you will accept nothing else. Meier was a sellout and a fiasco. The failure of the Democrats to confirm judges and Bush's failure to press daily for those appointments was catastrophic and frustrating to the conservative base. Show passion, make the base feel comfortable that the President and the Party have the same level of intent of purpose. Too often Bush was silent when Conservatives needed assurance their desires were known, understood, and being pushed forward by the Executive Branch. Bush came off looking weak of purpose (exception is War on Terror). Conservatives have ideas that become fires in the gut--the President must fan those fires, not p*ss on them as though he is attempting to put them out.
EllisWyatt writes: Friday, June, 29, 2007 9:10 AM
Other Lessons ...
1) If you believe a bill is unconstitutional, VETO it! Don't pass the buck to the judiciary, like W did with Campaign Finance Reform.

2) Be committed to small, limited government. Big Government is not any better just because the GOP pulls the levers. We achived power by showing that there is an alternative to having government fulfill our every need. We lost power when we started trying to play the pork and earmark game. Let Democrats be the party of taxpayer giveaways.

3) Be articulate, be careful what you say and be careful how you say it. The MSM is your enemy. They will use the slightest gaffe to portray as mean-spirited, stupid or both.

4) If you don't know how to fight the Media War, get somebody who can. It's bad enough that W doesn't know how to handle the media, but the problem is magnified by the fact that most of his staff can't handle them either.

5) Don't ever nomimate a member of the Bush family again. We've had two of them, and they have done more damage to the conservative movement than the liberal elites ever could.
Warrior writes: Friday, June, 29, 2007 10:32 AM
Bush's Weakness
Docility is a curse; patience is a pestilence, but the "veto pen" can automatically put the underdog into overtime with the prospect of victory. Bush waited 14 months before he attacked Iraq--too long WMDs disappeared, if there ever was any. Bush has by his decisions and the decisions of the State Dept and Defense Dept fought a 4 year protracted war. This has given Iran time to recruit, train, and arm Al Qaeda and be emboldened by the American MSM and the Democrat Party to the point of becoming a formidable foe with a will to win. Patience and docility are weaknesses were speed and audacity are strengths that lead to victory through capitulation.
johninoregon writes: Friday, June, 29, 2007 5:02 PM
The ratings would be even worse...
Kram writes, "If we had a fair media...[Bush's] approval ratings could be around the 40% area - which is still too low."

I disagree. If we had a fair media, he would have been impeached or forced from office by now. In the blur of Paris Hilton and Britney Spears celebrity news---and the reluctance of "talking heads" shows to bring on the same number of thoughtful commentators from the left as they do from the right---how many Americans know how bad this guy really is? Yes, they give him low ratings, but they would have ridden him out of the White House on a rail if news readers and commentators in the so-called "liberal media" had called him on each of his repeated lies and clearly explained the implications of his brazen and repeated law-breaking (e.g., warrantless wiretapping and signing statements that amount to refusals to enforce the mandates of Congress).
bama writes: Friday, June, 29, 2007 6:13 PM
have another glass of kool aid warrior
surely warrior you are writing in jest! if america goes to war let us go to war against a real enemy an enemy that is a danger to the US ... unlike what we did when we invaded iraq. bush's popularity and the failure of his policies can be attributed to one moral fact ... nothing good ever comes out of a pack of lies.

for the rest of the apologists on this strip ... accept the fact ... you chose a very very flawed man to lead you ... you shall reap what you have sown as the book says.
Warrior writes: Friday, June, 29, 2007 9:29 PM
BAMA
Being a resident of Alabama, I hope you got your moniker from eating the jelly and not living or going to school in my state. You clearly have 2 faults: You cannot read and when you try you understand nothing. I hope you did not see any support for Bush in my comments, nevertheless, you do need to look up the meaning of the word "lie". No one --notice no one--except nuts that just want to vent has ever said Bush lied about anything. Not one official study, not one committee report, not one tell all book by anyone in a position to know--just a few nuts like you. Bush has made many mistakes but he is not a liar.You have him confused with Clinton.
KGK writes: Saturday, June, 30, 2007 3:52 PM
Other lessons from W
1. Communicate far better on why we must face down and defeat Islamofascism. Something the Left will never do or understand. 2. Learn to veto spending bills whether they come from the Dems or Pubs. Remind the public that the Dems are the real,'tax and spend' party. 3. Learn to fight back against Dem lies. The GOP is not known as The Stupid Party for nothing. Dems never miss a chance to smear, lie or stretch policy agendas. Pubs must learn to speak to likely voters like real people not stat keepers or professors. 4. Learn to defend the economic good that comes with tax cuts and a growing economy. Learn to explain why we practice democratic free enterprise capitalism. Kids do not learn it at the university. Boy, could I run the RNC, the SenateGOP or HouseGOP candidate groups seeking funds and new faces better than Ensign, Martinez or Blunt.
American Pundit Fighting writes: Tuesday, July, 03, 2007 8:46 AM
nature or nurture
Is it about avoiding major gaffes, political etiquette or just plain ol' principle? Sure it would have been better if Bush had done certain things, but some things don't need to be dictated by a PR team. They are just done because that is what is right, and what is expected of a leader.
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