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Death by consulting: Joe Klein's jeremiad against the hired hands of American politics.


Politics Lost By Joe Klein For the basketball player, see .

Joe Klein (born September 7, 1946) is a longtime Washington, D.C. and New York journalist and columnist, perhaps best known for his novel Primary Colors
 Doubleday, $23.95

Let's get one thing out of the way. If you re a political junkie junkie Popular health A popular term for a person, usually an IV narcotic abusing addict, whose life is disorganized vis-á-vis family and societal structure, whose existence revolves around obtaining–often through theft, prostitution or other illicit  who's obsessed ob·sess  
v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es

v.tr.
To preoccupy the mind of excessively.

v.intr.
 with ideology this book might not be for you. On the other hand, if you're a political junkie who's obsessed with how presidential campaigns are won and lost, then Politics Lost, the latest book from Time columnist Joe Klein, is a must-read. Klein gives us behind-the-scenes glimpses of every consequential presidential campaign since 1968, and no self-respecting expert will want to miss it. It's also a lot of fun.

What drives Politics Lost is a wistful idea: Klein is in search of what he calls "Turnip Day" moments. It's a reference to the Democratic Convention of 1948, when Harry Truman gave a feisty off-the-cuff speech in which he promised to call legislators back to Washington on "the 26th of July, which out in Missouri we call Turnip Day." For Klein, 2this unexpected, unrehearsed un·re·hearsed  
adj.
Not rehearsed. See Synonyms at extemporaneous.

Adj. 1. unrehearsed - with little or no preparation or forethought; "his ad-lib comments showed poor judgment"; "an extemporaneous piano recital"; "an
 mention of the deadline for sowing turnips in Missouri (it's actually the 25th of July, for those who might be tempted to procrastinate pro·cras·ti·nate  
v. pro·cras·ti·nat·ed, pro·cras·ti·nat·ing, pro·cras·ti·nates

v.intr.
To put off doing something, especially out of habitual carelessness or laziness.

v.tr.
) is "an appropriately inelegant in·el·e·gant  
adj.
Lacking refinement or polish; not elegant.



in·ele·gant·ly adv.
 shorthand for everything I love about politics? Turnip Days, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, are those spontaneous moments when the politician rakes a break, and a real human being shows through. Unfortunately, they're increasingly rare. And the blame, Klein feels, lies with the rise of political consultants.

Klein chooses to start the book with the ultimate Turnip Day moment: Speaking to an inner-city crowd in Indianapolis one evening in 1968, Robert F. Kennedy had to decide whether or not to pass on the news that Martin Luther King had been killed. His aides, fearing pandemonium Pandemonium

Milton’s capital of the devils. [Br. Lit.: Paradise Lost]

See : Confusion


Pandemonium

chief city of Hell. [Br. Lit.: Paradise Lost]

See : Hell
, hoped he wouldn't. But Kennedy broke the news. He also broke a profound, if unofficial, vow of silence: showing his empathy; he reminded the crowd, "I had a member of my family killed? Then he asked people to return home and pray. Unlike almost every other large city in America, Indianapolis stayed quiet. That's a tough Turnip Day to match, and Klein's disappointment is perhaps inevitable. But it's understandable that he's hooked.

While Klein mentions Richard Nixon's 1968 campaign in passing (famously documented in Joe McGinniss's The Selling of the President), he reserves most of his passion, and exasperation, for Democrats. Among the biggest wrongdoers in Klein's account are Pat Caddell, who came to prominence as Jimmy Carter's pollster poll·ster  
n.
One that takes public-opinion surveys. Also called polltaker.

Word History: The suffix -ster is nowadays most familiar in words like pollster, jokester, huckster,
 in the 1970s, and Bob Shrum Robert M. "Bob" Shrum, (born 1943) is an American political consultant. Shrum was born in Connellsville, Pennsylvania and raised in Los Angeles, and he is a graduate of Loyola High School of Los Angeles, Georgetown University (where he was a top debater) and Harvard Law School. , famous for penning Ted Kennedy's speeches in 1980 (and, more recently, for helping John Kerry Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism.  lose the White House). Klein credits Caddell with the invention of persuasion polling (that is, asking poll questions in order to change opinions) and with writing a memo convincing President Jimmy Carter to give the infamous "malaise" speech of 1979. Klein calls the malaise memo an "intellectual tour de force" and a "total bummer bum·mer  
n.
1. Slang An adverse reaction to a hallucinogenic drug.

2. Slang One that depresses, frustrates, or disappoints: Getting stranded at the airport was a real bummer.
." With Shrum, who emerged as chief consultant on the campaign of John Kerry in 2004, Klein is even tougher. Summing up Shrum's history Klein writes, "[T]here was a whiff of classic know-nothingism to Shrumclone candidates--nativism, isolationism isolationism

National policy of avoiding political or economic entanglements with other countries. Isolationism has been a recurrent theme in U.S. history. It was given expression in the Farewell Address of Pres.
, protectionsm, paranoia. They played three-issue monte, and the issues were all domestic: jobs, health care and education" (Notice, by the way, how Klein writes most of his analysis in the past tense--an obituary of the Democratic Party for the last 30 years, perhaps.)

Although Klein is hard on Democrats, he takes his shots at Republican strategists, too. Recounting the volatile relationship between Ronald Reagan and his on-again, off-again on-a·gain, off-a·gain
adj. Informal
Existing or continuing sporadically; intermittent or occasional: an on-again, off-again correspondence. 
 campaign manager John Sears John Patrick Sears is an attorney and a Republican political strategist.

He was born July 1940 in Syracuse, NY, son of James L Sears and Helen M. Fitzgerald. Sears attended Christian Brothers Academy in Syracuse.
, Klein blames Sears for everything that went wrong in 76 and everything that almost went wrong in '80. (He was fired on the day Reagan won the New Hampshire primary The New Hampshire primary is the first of a number of statewide political party primary elections held in the United States every four years, as part of the process of the Democratic and Republican parties choosing their candidate for the presidential elections on the subsequent .) Sears was notorious for trying to keep bad news from Reagan, fearful the candidate wouldn't know how to handle it. In doing so, Klein says, Sears failed to "let Reagan be Reagan," a phrase that would become Reaganaut mantra. Permitted to be himself--to stop posing as a moderate--Reagan triumphed. (He'd never been entirely comfortable with Sears anyway, complaining that Sears always "looks me in the tie" and not the eye.)

Intriguingly, Klein also cites the Bush campaign of 1988 as a failure. "[T]he Bush 1988 campaign remains, to this day, best known in the political community as an example of how a brilliant group of political consultants could succeed with a candidate who was mediocre on his best days," Klein says. "But the real lesson of What [consultant Lee] Atwater Wrought may be just the opposite: how difficult it is to succeed as president after you've campaigned as someone you're not."

I enjoyed many moments in this book. My favorite My Favorite is an independent synthpop band from Long Island, New York. They released two CDs: Love at Absolute Zero and Happiest Days of Our Lives. My Favorite broke up on September 14, 2005, when singer Andrea Vaughn left the band.  might be a scene in which the consultants Caddell, Shrum, David Doak David Doak is a video game designer originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland. Doak first worked with Rare where he worked on games including GoldenEye 007 and Perfect Dark. At the end of 1998 he left Rare to help start Free Radical Design.

The fictional character Dr.
, and Joe Trippi Joe Trippi (b. 1956) is a long-time American Democratic campaign worker and consultant. A mainstay in presidential politics, Trippi has worked on the presidential campaigns of Edward Kennedy, Walter Mondale, Gary Hart, and Dick Gephardt.  are all riding in a van with California Senator Alan Cranston. Prompted by Shrum's remark that something is "the stupidest idea I ever heard," Doak replies that Shrum's ideas are "stupider." Soon, four enormous egos are in a shouting match over who was stupidest. Imagining these supposedly sober-minded experts descending to infantile taunts, I can only wish I'd been a bug on the windshield. Sen. Cranston, for his part, turned pale.

Klein makes some strong points. He relates how Al Gore, whose best--and perhaps only--Turnip Day moment wound up being the "Twenty-Point Kiss" with Tipper at the Democratic Convention, chose to give a major speech on global warming and the environment after securing the nomination in 2000. Because Gore's consultants felt such a speech would be unhelpful with swing voters, however, they refused to help publicize it. When it landed with a thud, the consultants used it as evidence to persuade Gore to lay off the environmental theme. Years later, Klein asks Tad Devine, a Gore consultant, whether Gore wouldn't have been a better, warmer candidate if he'd been allowed to talk about issues he really cared about. Devines answer: "That's an interesting thought." Interesting, indeed.

Nevertheless, this doesn't mean this book is as good as it could have been. I would have liked an explanation of how the rise of political consultants came about in the first place. The book would also have benefited from a mention of the effect of consultants on statewide and congressional elections, in which their influence is, arguably, far greater. (Ironically, presidential campaigns are where consultants are least important.) As it is, the book reads more like an extended column with a bit of history than a satisfactory examination of the problem, something Klein himself admits.

In part, Klein's book is an attempt to explain to candidates how to tell good consultant advice from bad. In fact, Klein probably hopes this book becomes necessary reading for any future presidential candidate. (Klein holds up Reagan and Clinton as examples of candidates who properly used consultants, and Gore, the first President Bush, and, most egregiously, John Kerry, as examples of ones who didn't.) But many of the examples cited in the book are of bad candidates who took bad consultant advice which, in turn, made them even worse candidates. The truth is, not all consultants are bad. In fact, I'd argue bad candidates are apt to seek out bad advice even from a good consultant.

At the end of the day, no matter how powerful consultants might become, they are people for hire. What Klein leaves unsaid is that some candidates might just be too weak or insecure to shun a consultant's advice. Sure, consultants can be lousy, and Klein's take on Shrum is particularly devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
. But John Kerry was hardly an ideal candidate, and he made plenty of bad choices without Shrum's help.

Klein doesn't offer solutions to the problems he cites, but he does seem to think voters would prefer a presidential candidate who won't listen to them too closely--who won't pore over polls or focus-group results. That idea is about as naive as they come, but that's part of what I liked about the book. It's good-natured, too. While Klein may be upset, he didn't write an angry tome. In fact, he even likes many of the consultants he's criticizing. He just thinks they're ruining the scene. Skeptics might not be persuaded, but Klein makes sure they'll at least be thoroughly entertained.

Chuck Todd is editor in chief of The Hotline, National Journal's daily briefing on American politics.
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Title Annotation:Politics Lost
Author:Todd, Chuck
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book review
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:1381
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