If one or more White House aides are indicted tomorrow, part of the planned response, according to the LA Times, is a conservational detour in which the president would tout new agenda items such as spending cuts, changes to the tax code, and immigration. David Gergen isn’t optimistic.
“Changing the subject will not work,” said David Gergen, a former aide to Presidents Reagan and Clinton. “Giving more speeches about Iraq or the state of the economy doesn’t have the weight that action does…. It’s dangerous for the country to have a disabled president for three years, and we’re getting close to seeing that happen. I worry that they [Bush and his aides] are in denial.”
It’s quite the conundrum. Support for the president is so shallow, and the substance of his presidency so thin, I can’t quite figure out what Bush could do if Fitzgerald has some bad news for the White House.
I’ve been trying to consider the Plame scandal as if I were a member of Bush’s staff (yes, I know it strains the imagination, but it’s just a thought experiment). From where I sit, Bush doesn’t have many options. When Reagan was hit with Iran-Contra, he relied on fairly high approval ratings to withstand the pressure. When Clinton had the Lewinsky matter, he could point to a record of accomplishment and a corrupt investigator on a witch hunt. Bush has the Plame Game and can lean on … nothing in particular.
Paul Begala wrote a terrific item for TPM Cafe yesterday, offering his insights about what it’s like to be in the White House in the midst of a challenging scandal and making some suggestions for his successors.
This is when a White House staffer earns his pay. The pressure of a federal criminal investigation — especially one in the media spotlight — is bone-crushing. My guess is that the strain is taking a gruesome toll. Already we hear rumors of President Bush exploding at his aides, at the President blaming Vice President Cheney, Karl Rove, and anyone else in sight for his woes. […]
Mr. Bush would do well to augment his current staff, a C-Team if ever there was one, with some stronger characters. But to read the Bush-Miers correspondence is to gain a disturbing insight into Mr. Bush’s personality: he likes having his ass kissed. Ms. Miers’ cards and letters to the then-Governor of Texas belong in the Brown-Nosers Hall of Fame. You can be sure the younger and less experienced Bush White House aides are even more obsequious. The last thing this President wants is the first thing he needs: someone to slap his spoiled, pampered, trust-funded, plutocratic, never-worked-a-day-in-his-life cheek and make him face the reality of his foul-ups.
In other words, what Bush needs most is what he’s least likely to get.
Bush can’t just change the subject; it’d be transparent and ineffective. Bush can’t just pretend nothing’s wrong, because his White House would be consumed with scandal. Bush can’t lash out at Fitzgerald, because the prosecutor has too much credibility. Bush can’t count on his record and popularity to see him through, because he has neither. Bush might be tempted to go hide in Crawford, but that would only make things worse. And Bush can’t just bring in a stronger staff, because he prefers an atmosphere of ignorance and fear.
It’s a standing joke among the president’s top aides: who gets to deliver the bad news? Warm and hearty in public, Bush can be cold and snappish in private, and aides sometimes cringe before the displeasure of the president of the United States, or, as he is known in West Wing jargon, POTUS. […]
Bush can be petulant about dissent; he equates disagreement with disloyalty.
David Gergen, to his credit, touched on the one approach that makes sense.
Gergen said problems went deeper than the CIA case. “This story’s going to have legs if somebody gets indicted,” he said. “I think the president has to lance the boil directly…. It starts with facing reality, accepting your share of responsibility without blinking.”
If Bush’s best shot at making it through the Plame scandal is facing reality and accepting responsibility, he’d better hope there are no indictments on the way.