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New Yorker Breaks with
Tradition and Endorses Kerry
The New Yorker
Editors
Issue of 2004-11-01
Posted 2004-10-25
This Presidential campaign has been as ugly and as bitter as
any in American memory. The ugliness has flowed mostly in one
direction, reaching its apotheosis in the effort, undertaken by a
supposedly independent group financed by friends of the
incumbent, to portray the challenger—who in his
mid-twenties was an exemplary combatant in both the Vietnam War
and the movement to end that war—as a coward and a traitor.
The bitterness has been felt mostly by the challenger's
adherents; yet there has been more than enough to go around. This
is one campaign in which no one thinks of having the band strike
up "Happy Days Are Here Again.'
The heightened emotions of the race that (with any luck) will
end on November 2, 2004, are rooted in the events of three
previous Tuesdays. On Tuesday, November 7, 2000, more than a
hundred and five million Americans went to the polls and, by a
small but indisputable plurality, voted to make Al Gore President
of the United States. Because of the way the votes were
distributed, however, the outcome in the electoral college turned
on the outcome in Florida. In that state, George W. Bush held a
lead of some five hundred votes, one one-thousandth of
Gore's national margin; irregularities, and there were
many, all had the effect of taking votes away from Gore; and the
state's electoral machinery was in the hands of
Bush's brother, who was the governor, and one of
Bush's state campaign co-chairs, who was the Florida
secretary of state.
Bush sued to stop any recounting of the votes, and, on
Tuesday, December 12th, the United States Supreme Court gave him
what he wanted. Bush v. Gore was so shoddily reasoned and
transparently partisan that the five justices who endorsed the
decision declined to put their names on it, while the four
dissenters did not bother to conceal their disgust. There are
rules for settling electoral disputes of this kind, in federal
and state law and in the Constitution itself. By ignoring
them—by cutting off the process and installing Bush by
fiat—the Court made a mockery not only of popular democracy
but also of constitutional republicanism.
A result so inimical to both majority rule and individual
civic equality was bound to inflict damage on the fabric of
comity. But the damage would have been far less severe if the new
President had made some effort to take account of the special
circumstances of his election—in the composition of his
Cabinet, in the way that he pursued his policy goals, perhaps
even in the goals themselves. He made no such effort. According
to Bob Woodward in "Plan of Attack,' Vice-President
Dick Cheney put it this way: "From the very day we walked
in the building, a notion of sort of a restrained presidency
because it was such a close election, that lasted maybe thirty
seconds. It was not contemplated for any length of time. We had
an agenda, we ran on that agenda, we won the election—full
speed ahead.'
The new President's main order of business was to push
through Congress a program of tax reductions overwhelmingly
skewed to favor the very rich. The policies he pursued through
executive action, such as weakening environmental protection and
cutting off funds for international family-planning efforts, were
mostly unpopular outside what became known (in English, not
Arabic) as "the base,' which is to say the
conservative movement and, especially, its evangelical component.
The President's enthusiastic embrace of that movement was
such that, four months into the Administration, the defection of
a moderate senator from Vermont, Jim Jeffords, cost his party
control of the Senate. And, four months after that, the
President's political fortunes appeared to be coasting into
a gentle but inexorable decline. Then came the blackest Tuesday
of all.
September 11, 2001, brought with it one positive gift: a surge
of solidarity, global and national—solidarity with and
solidarity within the United States. This extraordinary
outpouring provided Bush with a second opportunity to create
something like a government of national unity. Again, he brushed
the opportunity aside, choosing to use the political capital
handed to him by Osama bin Laden to push through more elements of
his unmandated domestic program. A year after 9/11, in the
midterm elections, he increased his majority in the House and
recaptured control of the Senate by portraying selected Democrats
as friends of terrorism. Is it any wonder that the anger felt by
many Democrats is even greater than can be explained by the
profound differences in outlook between the two candidates and
their parties?
The Bush Administration has had success in carrying out its
policies and implementing its intentions, aided by
majorities—political and, apparently, ideological—in
both Houses of Congress. Substantively, however, its record has
been one of failure, arrogance, and—strikingly for a team
that prided itself on crisp
professionalism—incompetence.
In January, 2001, just after Bush's inauguration, the
nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office published its budget
outlook for the coming decade. It showed a cumulative surplus of
more than five trillion dollars. At the time, there was a lot of
talk about what to do with the anticipated bounty, a discussion
that now seems antique. Last year's federal deficit was
three hundred and seventy-five billion dollars; this year's
will top four hundred billion. According to the C.B.O., which
came out with its latest projection in September, the period from
2005 to 2014 will see a cumulative shortfall of $2.3
trillion.
Even this seven-trillion-dollar turnaround underestimates the
looming fiscal disaster. In doing its calculations, the C.B.O.
assumed that most of the Bush tax cuts would expire in 2011, as
specified in the legislation that enacted them. However, nobody
in Washington expects them to go away on schedule; they were
designated as temporary only to make their ultimate results look
less scary. If Congress extends the expiration deadlines—a
near-certainty if Bush wins and the Republicans retain control of
Congress—then, according to the C.B.O., the cumulative
deficit between 2005 and 2014 will nearly double, to $4.5
trillion.
What has the country received in return for mortgaging its
future? The President says that his tax cuts lifted the economy
before and after 9/11, thereby moderating the downturn that began
with the Nasdaq's collapse in April, 2000. It's true
that even badly designed tax cuts can give the economy a
momentary jolt. But this doesn't make them wise policy.
"Most of the tax cuts went to low- and middle-income
Americans,' Bush said during his final debate with Senator
John Kerry. This is false—a lie, actually—though at
least it suggests some dim awareness that the reverse Robin Hood
approach to tax cuts is politically and morally repugnant. But
for tax cuts to stimulate economic activity quickly and
efficiently they should go to people who will spend the extra
money. Largely at the insistence of Democrats and moderate
Republicans, the Bush cuts gave middle-class families some relief
in the form of refunds, bigger child credits, and a smaller
marriage penalty. Still, the rich do better, to put it mildly.
Citizens for Tax Justice, a Washington research group whose
findings have proved highly dependable, notes that, this year, a
typical person in the lowest fifth of the income distribution
will get a tax cut of ninety-one dollars, a typical person in the
middle fifth will pocket eight hundred and sixty-three dollars,
and a typical person in the top one per cent will collect a
windfall of fifty-nine thousand two hundred and ninety-two
dollars.
These disparities help explain the familiar charge that Bush
will likely be the first chief executive since Hoover to preside
over a net loss of American jobs. This Administration's
most unshakable commitment has been to shifting the burden of
taxation away from the sort of income that rewards wealth and
onto the sort that rewards work. The Institute on Taxation and
Economic Policy, another Washington research group, estimates
that the average federal tax rate on income generated from
corporate dividends and capital gains is now about ten per cent.
On wages and salaries it's about twenty-three per cent. The
President promises, in a second term, to expand tax-free savings
accounts, cut taxes further on dividends and capital gains, and
permanently abolish the estate tax—all of which will widen
the widening gap between the richest and the rest.
Bush signalled his approach toward the environment a few weeks
into his term, when he reneged on a campaign pledge to regulate
carbon-dioxide emissions, the primary cause of global warming.
His record since then has been dictated, sometimes literally, by
the industries affected. In 2002, the Environmental Protection
Agency proposed rescinding a key provision of the Clean Air Act
known as "new source review,' which requires
power-plant operators to install modern pollution controls when
upgrading older facilities. The change, it turned out, had been
recommended by some of the nation's largest polluters, in
e-mails to the Energy Task Force, which was chaired by
Vice-President Cheney. More recently, the Administration proposed
new rules that would significantly weaken controls on mercury
emissions from power plants. The E.P.A.'s regulation
drafters had copied, in some instances verbatim, memos sent to it
by a law firm representing the utility industry.
"I guess you'd say I'm a good steward of the
land,' Bush mused dreamily during debate No. 2. Or maybe
you'd say nothing of the kind. The President has so far
been unable to persuade the Senate to allow oil drilling in the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, but vast stretches of accessible
wilderness have been opened up to development. By stripping away
restrictions on the use of federal lands, often through
little-advertised rule changes, the Administration has
potentially opened up sixty million acres, an area larger than
Indiana and Iowa combined, to logging, mining, and oil
exploration.
During the fevered period immediately after September 11th,
the Administration rushed what it was pleased to call the U.S.A.
Patriot Act through a compliant Congress. Some of the reaction to
that law has been excessive. Many of its provisions, such as
allowing broader information-sharing among investigative
agencies, are sensible. About others there are legitimate
concerns. Section 215 of the law, for example, permits government
investigators to obtain—without a subpoena or a search
warrant based on probable cause—a court order entitling
them to records from libraries, bookstores, doctors,
universities, and Internet service providers, among other public
and private entities. Officials of the Department of Justice say
that they have used Section 215 with restraint, and that they
have not, so far, sought information from libraries or
bookstores. Their avowals of good faith would be more reassuring
if their record were not otherwise so troubling.
Secrecy and arrogance have been the touchstones of the Justice
Department under Bush and his attorney general, John Ashcroft.
Seven weeks after the 9/11 attacks, the Administration announced
that its investigation had resulted in nearly twelve hundred
arrests. The arrests have continued, but eventually the
Administration simply stopped saying how many people were and are
being held. In any event, not one of the detainees has been
convicted of anything resembling a terrorist act. At least as
reprehensible is the way that foreign nationals living in the
United States have been treated. Since September 11th, some five
thousand have been rounded up and more than five hundred have
been deported, all for immigration infractions, after hearings
that, in line with a novel doctrine asserted by Ashcroft, were
held in secret. Since it is official policy not to deport
terrorism suspects, it is unclear what legitimate anti-terror
purpose these secret hearings serve.
President Bush often complains about Democratic
obstructionism, but the truth is that he has made considerable
progress, if that's the right word, toward the goal of
stocking the federal courts with conservative ideologues. The
Senate has confirmed two hundred and one of his judicial
nominees, more than the per-term averages for Presidents Clinton,
Reagan, and Bush senior. Senate Republicans blocked more than
sixty of Clinton's nominees; Senate Democrats have blocked
only ten of Bush's. (Those ten, by the way, got exactly
what they deserved. Some of them—such as Carolyn Kuhl, who
devoted years of her career to trying to preserve tax breaks for
colleges that practice racial discrimination, and Brett
Kavanaugh, a thirty-eight-year-old with no judicial or courtroom
experience who co-wrote the Starr Report—rank among the
worst judicial appointments ever attempted.)
Even so, to the extent that Bush and Ashcroft have been
thwarted it has been due largely to our still vigorous federal
judiciary, especially the Supreme Court. Like some of the
Court's worst decisions of the past four years (Bush v.
Gore again comes to mind), most of its best—salvaging
affirmative action, upholding civil liberties for terrorist
suspects, striking down Texas's anti-sodomy law, banning
executions of the mentally retarded—were reached by one- or
two-vote majorities. (Roe v. Wade is two justices removed from
reversal.) All but one of the sitting justices are senior
citizens, ranging in age from sixty-five to eighty-four, and the
gap since the last appointment—ten years—is the
longest since 1821. Bush has said more than once that Antonin
Scalia and Clarence Thomas are his favorite justices. In a second
Bush term, the Court could be remade in their images.
The record is similarly dismal in other areas of domestic
policy. An executive order giving former Presidents the power to
keep their papers indefinitely sealed is one example among many
of a mania for secrecy that long antedates 9/11. The
President's hostility to science, exemplified by his
decision to place crippling limits on federal support of
stem-cell research and by a systematic willingness to distort or
suppress scientific findings discomfiting to "the
base,' is such that scores of eminent scientists who are
normally indifferent to politics have called for his defeat. The
Administration's energy policies, especially its resistance
to increasing fuel-efficiency requirements, are of a piece with
its environmental irresponsibility. Even the highly touted No
Child Left Behind education program, enacted with the support of
the liberal lion Edward Kennedy, is being allowed to fail, on
account of grossly inadequate funding. Some of the money that has
been pumped into it has been leached from other education
programs, dozens of which are slated for cuts next year.
Ordinarily, such a record would be what lawyers call
dispositive. But this election is anything but ordinary. Jobs,
health care, education, and the rest may not count for much when
weighed against the prospect of large-scale terrorist attack. The
most important Presidential responsibility of the next four
years, as of the past three, is the "war on
terror'—more precisely, the struggle against a brand
of Islamist fundamentalist totalitarianism that uses particularly
ruthless forms of terrorism as its main weapon.
Bush's immediate reaction to the events of September 11,
2001, was an almost palpable bewilderment and anxiety. Within a
few days, to the universal relief of his fellow-citizens, he
seemed to find his focus. His decision to use American military
power to topple the Taliban rulers of Afghanistan, who had turned
their country into the principal base of operations for the
perpetrators of the attacks, earned the near-unanimous support of
the American people and of America's allies. Troops from
Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Italy, Norway, and Spain are
serving alongside Americans in Afghanistan to this day.
The determination of ordinary Afghans to vote in last
month's Presidential election, for which the votes are
still being counted, is clearly a positive sign. Yet the job in
Afghanistan has been left undone, despite fervent promises at the
outset that the chaos that was allowed to develop after the
defeat of the Soviet occupation in the nineteen-eighties would
not be repeated. The Taliban has regrouped in eastern and
southern regions. Bin Laden's organization continues to
enjoy sanctuary and support from Afghans as well as Pakistanis on
both sides of their common border. Warlords control much of
Afghanistan outside the capital of Kabul, which is the extent of
the territorial writ of the decent but beleaguered President
Hamid Karzai. Opium production has increased fortyfold.
The White House's real priorities were elsewhere from
the start. According to the former counter-terrorism adviser
Richard Clarke, in a Situation Room crisis meeting on September
12, 2001, Donald Rumsfeld suggested launching retaliatory strikes
against Iraq. When Clarke and others pointed out to him that Al
Qaeda—the presumed culprit—was based in Afghanistan,
not Iraq, Rumsfeld is said to have remarked that there were
better targets in Iraq. The bottom line, as Bush's former
Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill has said, was that the
Bush-Cheney team had been planning to carry out regime change in
Baghdad well before September 11th—one way or another, come
what may.
At all three debates, President Bush defended the Iraq war by
saying that without it Saddam Hussein would still be in power.
This is probably true, and Saddam's record of colossal
cruelty--of murder, oppression, and regional aggression--was such
that even those who doubted the war's wisdom acknowledged
his fall as an occasion for satisfaction. But the removal of
Saddam has not been the war's only consequence; and, as we
now know, his power, however fearsome to the millions directly
under its sway, was far less of a threat to the United States and
the rest of the world than it pretended—and, more
important, was made out—to be.
As a variety of memoirs and journalistic accounts have made
plain, Bush seldom entertains contrary opinion. He boasts that he
listens to no outside advisers, and inside advisers who dare to
express unwelcome views are met with anger or disdain. He lives
and works within a self-created bubble of faith-based
affirmation. Nowhere has his solipsism been more damaging than in
the case of Iraq. The arguments and warnings of analysts in the
State Department, in the Central Intelligence Agency, in the
uniformed military services, and in the chanceries of sympathetic
foreign governments had no more effect than the chants of
millions of marchers.
The decision to invade and occupy Iraq was made on the basis
of four assumptions: first, that Saddam's regime was on the
verge of acquiring nuclear explosives and had already amassed
stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons; second, that the
regime had meaningful links with Al Qaeda and (as was repeatedly
suggested by the Vice-President and others) might have had
something to do with 9/11; third, that within Iraq the
regime's fall would be followed by prolonged celebration
and rapid and peaceful democratization; and, fourth, that a
similar democratic transformation would be precipitated elsewhere
in the region, accompanied by a new eagerness among Arab
governments and publics to make peace between Israel and a
presumptive Palestinian state. The first two of these assumptions
have been shown to be entirely baseless. As for the second two,
if the wishes behind them do someday come true, it may not be
clear that the invasion of Iraq was a help rather than a
hindrance.
In Bush's rhetoric, the Iraq war began on March 20,
2003, with precision bombings of government buildings in Baghdad,
and ended exactly three weeks later, with the iconic statue
pulldown. That military operation was indeed a success. But the
cakewalk led over a cliff, to a succession of heedless and
disastrous mistakes that leave one wondering, at the very least,
how the Pentagon's civilian leadership remains intact and
the President's sense of infallibility undisturbed. The
failure, against the advice of such leaders as General Eric
Shinseki, then the Army chief of staff, to deploy an adequate
protective force led to unchallenged looting of government
buildings, hospitals, museums, and—most inexcusable of
all—arms depots. ("Stuff happens,' Secretary of
Defense Rumsfeld explained, though no stuff happened to the oil
ministry.) The Pentagon all but ignored the State
Department's postwar plans, compiled by its Future of Iraq
project, which warned not only of looting but also of the
potential for insurgencies and the folly of relying on exiles
such as Ahmad Chalabi; the project's head, Thomas Warrick,
was sidelined. The White House counsel's disparagement of
the Geneva Conventions and of prohibitions on torture as
"quaint' opened the way to systematic and spectacular
abuses at Abu Ghraib and other American-run prisons--a moral and
political catastrophe for which, in a pattern characteristic of
the Administration's management style, no one in a
policymaking position has been held accountable. And, no matter
how Bush may cleave to his arguments about a grand coalition
("What's he say to Tony Blair?' "He
forgot Poland!'), the coalition he assembled was anything
but grand, and it has been steadily melting away in Iraq's
cauldron of violence.
By the end of the current fiscal year, the financial cost of
this war will be two hundred billion dollars (the figure
projected by Lawrence Lindsey, who headed the President's
Council of Economic Advisers until, like numerous other bearers
of unpalatable news, he was cashiered) and rising. And there are
other, more serious costs that were unforeseen by the dominant
factions in the Administration (although there were plenty of
people who did foresee them). The United States has become mired
in a low-intensity guerrilla war that has taken more lives since
the mission was declared to be accomplished than before. American
military deaths have mounted to more than a thousand, a number
that underplays the real level of suffering: among the eight
thousand wounded are many who have been left seriously maimed.
The toll of Iraqi dead and wounded is of an order of magnitude
greater than the American. Al Qaeda, previously an insignificant
presence in Iraq, is an important one now. Before this war, we
had persuaded ourselves and the world that our military might was
effectively infinite. Now it is overstretched, a reality obvious
to all. And, if the exposure of American weakness encourages our
enemies, surely the blame lies with those who created the
reality, not with those who, like Senator Kerry, acknowledge it
as a necessary step toward changing it.
When the Administration's geopolitical,
national-interest, and anti-terrorism justifications for the Iraq
war collapsed, it groped for an argument from altruism: postwar
chaos, violence, unemployment, and brownouts notwithstanding, the
war has purchased freedoms for the people of Iraq which they
could not have had without Saddam's fall. That is true. But
a sad and ironic consequence of this war is that its fumbling
prosecution has undermined its only even arguably meritorious
rationale—and, as a further consequence, the salience of
idealism in American foreign policy has been likewise undermined.
Foreign-policy idealism has taken many forms—Wilson's
aborted world federalism, Carter's human-rights jawboning,
and Reagan's flirtation with total nuclear disarmament,
among others. The failed armed intervention in Somalia and the
successful ones in the Balkans are other examples. The
neoconservative version ascendant in the Bush Administration,
post-9/11, draws partly on these strains. There is surely
idealistic purpose in envisioning a Middle East finally relieved
of its autocracies and dictatorships. Yet this
Administration's adventure in Iraq is so gravely flawed and
its credibility so badly damaged that in the future, faced with
yet another moral dilemma abroad, it can be expected to retreat,
a victim of its own Iraq Syndrome.
The damage visited upon America, and upon America's
standing in the world, by the Bush Administration's
reckless mishandling of the public trust will not easily be
undone. And for many voters the desire to see the damage arrested
is reason enough to vote for John Kerry. But the challenger has
more to offer than the fact that he is not George W. Bush. In
every crucial area of concern to Americans (the economy, health
care, the environment, Social Security, the judiciary, national
security, foreign policy, the war in Iraq, the fight against
terrorism), Kerry offers a clear, corrective alternative to
Bush's curious blend of smugness, radicalism, and
demagoguery. Pollsters like to ask voters which candidate
they'd most like to have a beer with, and on that metric
Bush always wins. We prefer to ask which candidate is better
suited to the governance of our nation.
Throughout his long career in public service, John Kerry has
demonstrated steadiness and sturdiness of character. The physical
courage he showed in combat in Vietnam was matched by moral
courage when he raised his voice against the war, a choice that
has carried political costs from his first run for Congress, lost
in 1972 to a campaign of character assassination from a local
newspaper that could not forgive his antiwar stand, right through
this year's Swift Boat ads. As a senator, Kerry helped
expose the mischief of the Bank of Commerce and Credit
International, a money-laundering operation that favored
terrorists and criminal cartels; when his investigation forced
him to confront corruption among fellow-Democrats, he rejected
the cronyism of colleagues and brought down power brokers of his
own party with the same dedication that he showed in going after
Oliver North in the Iran-Contra scandal. His leadership, with
John McCain, of the bipartisan effort to put to rest the toxic
debate over Vietnam-era P.O.W.s and M.I.A.s and to lay the
diplomatic groundwork for Washington's normalization of
relations with Hanoi, in the mid-nineties, was the signal
accomplishment of his twenty years on Capitol Hill, and it is
emblematic of his fairness of mind and independence of spirit.
Kerry has made mistakes (most notably, in hindsight at least, his
initial opposition to the Gulf War in 1990), but—in
contrast to the President, who touts his imperviousness to
changing realities as a virtue—he has learned from
them.
Kerry's performance on the stump has been uneven, and
his public groping for a firm explanation of his position on Iraq
was discouraging to behold. He can be cautious to a fault,
overeager to acknowledge every angle of an issue; and his
reluctance to expose the Administration's appalling record
bluntly and relentlessly until very late in the race was a missed
opportunity. But when his foes sought to destroy him rather than
to debate him they found no scandals and no evidence of bad faith
in his past. In the face of infuriating and scurrilous calumnies,
he kept the sort of cool that the thin-skinned and painfully
insecure incumbent cannot even feign during the unprogrammed
give-and-take of an electoral debate. Kerry's mettle has
been tested under fire—the fire of real bullets and the
political fire that will surely not abate but, rather, intensify
if he is elected—and he has shown himself to be tough,
resilient, and possessed of a properly Presidential dose of
dignified authority. While Bush has pandered relentlessly to the
narrowest urges of his base, Kerry has sought to appeal broadly
to the American center. In a time of primitive partisanship, he
has exhibited a fundamentally undogmatic temperament. In
campaigning for America's mainstream restoration, Kerry has
insisted that this election ought to be decided on the urgent
issues of our moment, the issues that will define American life
for the coming half century. That insistence is a measure of his
character. He is plainly the better choice. As observers,
reporters, and commentators we will hold him to the highest
standards of honesty and performance. For now, as citizens, we
hope for his victory.
— The Editors
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