Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,800,168 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Bush's war against wonks: why the president's policies are falling apart.


Strip away the job titles and party labels, and you will find two kinds of people in Washington: political hacks and policy wonks. Hacks come to Washington because anywhere else they'd be bored to death. Wonks come here because nowhere else could we bore so many to death. These divisions extend far beyond the hack havens of political campaigns and consulting firms and the wonk ghettos of think tanks on Dupont Circle Dupont Circle is a traffic circle in the northwest quadrant of Washington, D.C., at the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue, Connecticut Avenue, New Hampshire Avenue, P Street and 19th Street. . Some journalists are wonks, but most are hacks. Some columnists are hacks, but most are wonks. All members of Congress pass themselves off as wonks, but many got elected as hacks. Lobbyists are hacks who make money pretending to be wonks. The Washington Monthly, The New Republic, and the entire political blogosphere The total universe of blogs. See blog.  consist largely of wonks pretending to be hacks. "The Hotline" is for hacks; National Journal is for wonks. "The West Wing" is for wonks; "K Street" was for hacks.

After two decades in Washington as a wonk working among hacks, I have come to the conclusion that the gap between Republicans and Democrats is as nothing compared to the one between these two tribes. We wonks think we're smarter than hacks. Hacks think that if being smart makes someone a wonk, they'd rather be stupid. Wonks think all hacks are creatures from another planet, like James Carville James Carville (born October 25, 1944) is an American political consultant, commentator, media personality and pundit. Known as the Ragin' Cajun, Carville gained national attention for his work as the lead strategist of the successful presidential campaign of then-Arkansas . Hacks share Paul Begala's view that wonks are all "propeller heads," like Elroy on "The Jetsons." Wonks think the differences between hacks and wonks are as irreconcilable as the Hums and the Tutsis. Hacks think it's just like wonks to bring up the Hutus and the Tutsis.

In every administration, wonks and hacks fight it out. The measure of a great president is his ability to make sense of them both. A president must know the real problems on Americans' minds. For that he needs hacks. But ultimately, he needs policies that will actually solve those problems. For that he needs wonks.

President Bush has husbanded some big policy changes through Congress--a testament to his considerable political skills. Unfortunately, his policies seem to be better at causing problems than solving them. The economy can't create jobs despite hundreds of billions of dollars in stimulus. The reconstruction in Iraq is going over like a remake of Ishtar. The price tag of the new Medicare law is soaring even faster than prescription-drug costs. With a record $521 billion deficit, Bush has just presented what might be called the Justin Timberlake budget, ripping off the taxpayers and pretending it wasn't on purpose.

Democrats are understandably eager to blame all these epic failures on ideology,. To be sure, Bush is running perhaps the most partisan and ideological White House in the modern era. His party's longstanding fondness for tax cuts has evolved into a pathological need to reduce every remaining burden on the wealthy. But the longer I watch this White House, the more convinced I become that ideology is just a convenient rationalization for why the president's agenda isn't working. The real reason is darker and more disturbing: The Bush White House is so obsessed ob·sess  
v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es

v.tr.
To preoccupy the mind of excessively.

v.intr.
 with the politics of its agenda that it never even asks whether it will work.

Hack attack (jargon) hack attack - (Possibly by analogy with "Big Mac Attack" from advertisements for the McDonald's fast-food chain; the variant "big hack attack" is reported) Nearly synonymous with hacking run, though the latter more strongly implies an all-nighter.  

Journalist Ron Suskind Ron Suskind is an American journalist and writer. A former Wall Street Journal reporter (1993-2000), he won the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing in 1995. Career  first sounded this warning in January 2003, in an extraordinary Esquire interview with John DiIulio John J. Di Iulio Jr. is a political scientist, Frederic Fox Leadership Professor of Politics, Religion, and Civil Society and Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania and served as the first director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community , the brilliant academic who had resigned from Bush's faith-based initiative the previous year. DiIulio told Suskind, "There is no precedent in any modern White House for what is going on in this one: a complete lack of a policy apparatus. What you've got is everything--and I mean everything--being run by the political arm?' As if to prove the point, the White House got DiIulio to disavow TO DISAVOW. To deny the authority by which an agent pretends to have acted as when he has exceeded the bounds of his authority.
     2. It is the duty of the principal to fulfill the contracts which have been entered into by his authorized agent; and when an agent
 the allegations as soon as they became public.

Suskind's new book about former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill Paul O'Neill may refer to:
  • Paul O'Neill (baseball player), a former Major League Baseball player and current broadcaster
  • Paul O'Neill (cabinet member), United States businessman and government official
, The Price of Loyalty, is one long lament on the same theme: the administration's complete disregard for evidence. O'Neill becomes so desperate for an honest broker that he pleads with, of "all people, Vice President Cheney: "[We] need to be better about keeping polities out of the policy process. We need firewalls. The political people are there for presentation and execution, not for creation." By the time he left, O'Neill actually pined for the less political days of the Nixon White House: "The biggest difference between then and now is that our group was mostly about evidence and analysis, and Karl, Dick, Karen, and the gang seemed to be mostly about politics."

Ironically, putting someone so impolitic im·pol·i·tic  
adj.
Not wise or expedient; not politic: an impolitic approach to a sensitive issue.



im·pol
 in charge of Treasury only strengthened the politicos' advantage. Dick Cheney and Karl Rove The external links in this article or section may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia's content policies.  could not have found an easier adversary to ignore. O'Neill proved to be a hopelessly inept bureaucratic warrior, firing off random memos about subjects far beyond Treasury's purview The part of a statute or a law that delineates its purpose and scope.

Purview refers to the enacting part of a statute. It generally begins with the words be it enacted and continues as far as the repealing clause.
, such as an action plan on global environmental policy. He and his old friend Alan Greenspan Alan Greenspan

Dr. Greenspan is Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Dr. Greenspan also serves as Chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the Fed's principal monetary policymaking body.
 privately wrung wrung  
v.
Past tense and past participle of wring.


wrung
Verb

the past of wring

wrung wring
 their hands over the long-term fiscal consequences of the 2001 tax cut, but publicly (and in Greenspan's case, disastrously) embraced it anyway. Despite a lifelong reputation for blunt candor, O'Neill managed to meet with the president for an hour every week while only once raising the meekest of doubts about the tax cuts. He has famously said of these meetings, "The president is like a blind man in a roomful of deaf people This is an incomplete list of notable deaf people. Important historical figures in deaf history and culture
The idea that a person who was deaf could achieve a notable or distinguished status was not common until the latter half of the 18th century, when Abbé Charles-Michel de
." But what's just as deafening is the apparent silence of those who know better.

Every White House worries too much about politics. What DiIulio and O'Neill most tellingly reveal is how little this White House worries about anything else. As DiIulio puts it, "The lack of even basic policy knowledge, and the only casual interest in knowing more, was somewhat breathtaking: discussions by fairly senior people who meant Medicaid but were talking Medicare; near instant shifts from discussing any actual policy pros and cons pros and cons
Noun, pl

the advantages and disadvantages of a situation [Latin pro for + con(tra) against]
 to discussing political communications This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject.
Please help recruit one or [ improve this article] yourself. See the talk page for details.
, media strategy, etc."

What Rove wove wove  
v.
Past tense of weave.


wove
Verb

a past tense of weave

wove, woven weave
 

Rove and Cheney routinely say, and no doubt believe, that "good policy makes for good politics." We said the same thing in the Clinton White House--and over the long haul Long distance. Long haul implies traversing a state or a country. Contrast with short haul. , it's almost always true. But the real question is much harder and more interesting: What makes for good policy?

The great irony is that the political equilibrium of the nation's capital depends on both wonks and hacks, but the two groups can't even communicate because the hack and wonk dialects have so few words in common. I learned this first as a campaign speechwriter speech·writ·er  
n.
One who writes speeches for others, especially as a profession.



speechwrit
 and later as a White House policy geek A technically oriented person. It has typically implied a "nerdy" or "weird" personality, someone with limited social skills who likes to tinker with scientific or high-tech projects. The origin of the term dates back to the late 1800s. , when I was sometimes called in to translate. In 1993, I went to a meeting with some of the president's top communications strategists to plan the signing ceremony A signing ceremony is a ceremony in which a bill passed by a legislature is signed (approved) by an executive, thus becoming a law.

Modern-day signing ceremonies are derived from ceremonies that occurred when the British monarch gave Royal Assent to acts of Parliament.
 for a bill that had just passed the Congress. A wonk had to point out that under the Constitution, if the president fails to sign a bill within 10 days while the Congress is adjourned, the bill is pocket vetoed and does not become law.

On the most politically charged issues, like crime and welfare reform, hacks thought wonks were from Pluto and wonks thought hacks were from Uranus. Near the end of Clinton's first year in office, a series of high-profile murders produced a groundswell ground·swell  
n.
1. A sudden gathering of force, as of public opinion: a groundswell of antiwar sentiment.

2.
 of public support for our crime bill. One group of wonks, terrified ter·ri·fy  
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies
1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten.

2. To menace or threaten; intimidate.
 that the public might get what it wanted, formed a violence prevention task force whose sole purpose seemed to be churning out ideas the public would not support. The task force included one of the most ridiculously named subcommittees of all time, the "Subgroup on Place." Hacks still laugh about it.

Wonks were just as quick to sneer at their adversaries. Every time I brought them a message from the hacks, they made me feel like a wonk without a country. When I co-chaired Clinton's welfare reform working group from 1993-94, every time I won a policy argument, a dissenting member would leak to the press that we were driven by political expediency. Harvard professor David Ellwood, one of two assistant secretaries at the Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979
Health and Human Services, HHS
 who served as my co-chairs, teased me all the time over how little White House politicos knew about welfare. In The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times' tick-tock story on our efforts, Ellwood gleefully glee·ful  
adj.
Full of jubilant delight; joyful.



gleeful·ly adv.

glee
 described my role as "right-wing hack?'

Paul O'Neill is naive to wish for an upstairs-downstairs divide, where wonks make all the decisions and hacks get to spin them. As a wonk, I would be the last to suggest that my fellow propeller heads have all the answers. I spent Clinton's first term across the hall from Ira Magaziner Ira Magaziner (born November 8, 1947 [1]) Ira Magaziner was born in New York City, NY in 1947. After earning notoriety as a student activist and business consultant, Magaziner became the senior advisor for policy development for President Clinton and later served as his , architect of the administration's health care plan. The road to Ira's office was paved with good intentions.

On the other hand, O'Neill is right to worry about the republic if indeed the hacks are in charge. In 1995, when Clinton brought in Dick Morris to get the White House's politics back on track, I was the wonk assigned to shoot down hack ideas if they didn't pass wonk muster. Every week, Morris had at least one notion crazy enough to get us laughed out of town. I especially liked his proposal to put voluntary warning labels on violent toys, so that parents would know, for example, that a toy gun was actually a toy gun. Morris always reminded me of the Tom Lehrer song about the German rocket scientist Rocket Scientist

In the world of finance, these are people with science and math degrees who work in the finance field building highly advanced quantitative finance models. These models help banking, insurance and investment firms to price financial instruments.
, Wernher yon Braun: "Once the rockets are up, who cares where they come down? / That's not my department, says Wernher yon Braun? (For all his faults, though, Morris was often a useful spur to the bureaucracy, because he enabled the White House policy team to deploy our own Madman Theory: If the agencies wouldn't go along with our sensible proposals, we warned them that the president might just listen to Dick Morris. Agency productivity soared as a result.)

Karl Rove may not have Morris's eccentricities. But O'Neill's instincts are correct: Any president who lets people like Rove make the key decisions is sure to get the big ones wrong. Even the most gifted hacks, like Rove and Morris, have an insurmountable blind spot: The only results they understand are polling.

Consider perhaps the most telling example of Roves policy input--Bush's 2002 decision to impose tariffs on imported steel. Bush's economic advisers unanimously opposed the move, on the grounds that it was directly contrary to the president's principles, and would cost more jobs at factories that make products with steel than it would help steelworkers. But Rove insisted that politics should trump principle, and that the steel vote was essential to Bush's hopes in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

And so Rove got a day of headlines in those states, followed by a week of national stories critical of the administration's cynicism. More important, the results of the policy quickly became clear: An International Trade Commission report found that the tariffs were hurting steel buyers nine times more than they helped steel producers. The move nearly sparked a disastrous trade war with the European Union European Union (EU), name given since the ratification (Nov., 1993) of the Treaty of European Union, or Maastricht Treaty, to the

European Community
. In December 2003, the president was forced to reverse himself and abandon the tariffs. The revised political tally sheet shows why Rove is no genius: The president looks unprincipled and foolish, the recovery is slower in key states like Michigan and Florida, and steelworkers are angrier than ever.

As we begin an election year, the paint-by-numbers politics of this White House is wearing thin. The administration threw over conservatives last fall to get a prescription drug prescription drug Prescription medication Pharmacology An FDA-approved drug which must, by federal law or regulation, be dispensed only pursuant to a prescription–eg, finished dose form and active ingredients subject to the provisos of the Federal Food, Drug,  bill because elderly voters are crucial in Florida. The result: The bill turns out to cost $134 billion more than the White House told Congress, angry right-wingers have forced Bush to cut other popular programs like Even Start, and even though the drug benefit doesn't take effect until 2006, polls show the bill is already unpopular among seniors.

When hacks rule, policies often drool--and come back to hurt hacks' cause. Bush's proposal to grant temporary legal stares to guest workers is another Rove rifle-shot at Hispanics. Unfortunately, Hispanics quickly figured out that the proposal wouldn't actually lead to citizenship, because the White House had bowed to political pressure from another quarter, the far right. Now most Hispanics don't like the idea and the right wing hates it. That manned mission to Mars This article or section needs copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone and/or spelling.
You can assist by [ editing it] now.
, which the White House hoped would lift Bush's appeal for a second term, bombed so badly that the President couldn't even find time to mention it in the State of the Union.

Wonk if you love the issues

The American people are a lot smarter than either the hacks or the wonks give them credit for. For all the talk in both parties about the urgent need to win one constituency or another, most Americans apply the same political yardstick: They vote for what works. There aren't enough hacks, even in Washington, to sell a policy that doesn't.

Hacks and wonks still need each other. In the end, the best leaders are those who can surround themselves with the best advice from both quarters, and synthesize it to find the wisest, straightest course the nation can sustain. As O'Neill puts it, what holds a good administration together is that the president's advisers like "the way the president thinks."

The secret of Bill Clinton's success was that he was the biggest wonk ever to hold the presidency, with political gifts that no hack could equal. He said he would cut the deficit and boost the economy, and he did. He said he would put more cops on the street to lower the crime rate, and he did. He said he would end welfare as we know it in a way that wouldn't hurt those in the system, and he did. (The Census Bureau recently reported that poverty among single mothers had fallen by a stunning one-third from 1993 to 2001, a turnaround The Washington Post credited mainly to the work requirements and child support provisions of Clinton's 1996 welfare reform law.) Clinton was his own best policy adviser, by far, yet he also would have been the greatest political consultant in the history of the world's second oldest profession.

Presidents don't have to be super wonks, and George W. Bush certainly never promised to be one. Long before he expressed any interest in the presidency, he was known as a consummate political hack. He worked on several of his father's campaigns, including as an enforcer in the failed 1992 bid, and even now finds himself dealing with charges that he may have skipped some National Guard duty to work on a Senate campaign.

In the end, Bush's undoing may be that he has planted his flag so firmly on one side of the wonk-hack divide. Sooner or later, the fate of every White House comes down to the way the president thinks.

Bruce Reed, formerly domestic policy adviser for Bill Clinton, is now president of the Democratic Leadership Council.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Washington Monthly Company
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Reed, Bruce
Publication:Washington Monthly
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:2470
Previous Article:Who's Who.
Next Article:Raising hell: how the punishing costs of childbearing imperil us all.



Related Articles
Foreign intrigue: what explains the presidential urge to go global? (Rant).(Column)
Aiding the axis of evil. (Letters to the Editor).(Letter to the Editor)
Not with my children.(The Last Word)
Knight seminar left terrorism questions.
When Kerry was liberal.(The Word from Washington)
Honk if you love wonks.(Letters)(Letter to the Editor)
Crossing party lines.(reader forum)(Letter to the Editor)
Electoral unenthusiasm.(Editorial)
If a deficit falls forest ...(budget policy)(Column)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles