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Former White House speechwriter Michael Gerson has been accused of
self-aggrandizement and taking credit for speeches he did not fully write,
stealing the lines of others and making them his own. The accusations come
from his former speechwriting colleague, Matthew Scully, in the September
issue of the Atlantic magazine.
I have known Mike Gerson for 20 years and have never seen him display
symptoms of the twin viruses of arrogance and pride that often infect people
who work in politics, government and the media in Washington.
Once, at our home for dinner, Mike was asked by a person not as familiar
with the profiles of the well placed and powerful what he did for a living.
"I work at the White House," he said quietly. There is a way to say this,
hoping the questioner will ask for more details so that the person being
asked can appear self-effacing, even while he revels in the prestige of the
job. That was not the case with Mike. As the questioner probed for more
information, which Mike was reluctant to offer, I jumped in and said, "He's
the president's chief speechwriter." Mike appeared to blush. He preferred to
talk about the president, not himself.
When he worked for then-Senator Dan Coats, Indiana Republican, he
occasionally helped me with research for speeches and wrote some. He
declined payment and recognition for them, but after leaving Coats' office,
I insisted on paying him and I recommended him to others. Though he is
married and the father of two, to this day I cannot get him to call me by my
first name. These are not attributes of a man full of himself whose chief
aim is self-promotion.
On my first visit to his White House office, I expected to see pictures of
him with President Bush, testifying to his access and status. There were
none. Instead, he had a cluttered desk in an ordinary-looking office with
bare walls. I heard he later got an "upgrade" and maybe there were pictures
in that office, but Mike never seemed to me to be the puffed-up type.
He quietly campaigned for programs to fight AIDS and poverty, issues not
often associated with a Republican administration and unlikely to gain many
votes for a party that focuses mostly on abortion, opposition to same-sex
marriage and tax cuts. He frequently traveled to Africa to see firsthand the
effects of government programs on victims of AIDS and reported his findings
without fanfare to the president.
All presidential speeches are collaborative efforts. No one person can meet
the needs of a president, who must often speak several times a day to
different audiences. Most major speeches, such as the State of the Union
Address and those about policy initiatives and decisions, must travel
through the cabinet agencies as well as numerous advisers. In Gerson's case,
the issue isn't whether the president's speeches were fashioned by a team,
but whether Gerson took the work of others, made them his own and took the
credit to boost his profile. He has sufficient knowledge and talent not to
plagiarize others.
I have had people plagiarize my work. Rather than saying nothing, or waiting
to write an article like Matthew Scully, I immediately contacted the
individuals and demanded that they publicly repent. Gerson tells me that
Scully never spoke to him about any of the things he writes in the Atlantic
article.
The man Scully has profiled is not the Mike Gerson I know. Over two decades,
one would expect to see signs of an overactive ego and the sin of pride if
they exist. I never did. At the 2000 Republican Convention in Philadelphia,
I saw Mike at a reception sponsored by National Review. Knowing he had
written Gov. George W. Bush's acceptance speech, I asked him if he would be
in the hall for its delivery. He said he would not, preferring to walk alone
outside. He might have embraced the glory. Instead, he deflected it to the
nominee.
That was one of many examples I have witnessed of his humility and
character. I don't know what motivated Scully to write what he did. It can
only help him among the Bush-haters. It can't hurt Mike Gerson, who is a man
of integrity and one whose faith, intellectual curiosity and example I
admire.
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