Bush’s selective taste in company

As he is inclined to do, the president assembled a group of sycophantic media guests to boost his ego at the White House yesterday, the latest in a series of gatherings between Bush and like-minded allies who enjoy telling him exactly what he wants to hear — and agrees with every word he says.

At yesterday’s press gaggle, Press Secretary Dana Perino read the names of the invited guests:

Michael Barone (U.S. News), Tony Blankley (Washington Times), David Brooks (New York Times), Ron Kessler (NewsMax), Charles Krauthammer (Washington Post), Bill Kristol (Weekly Standard), Larry Kudlow (CNBC), Morton Kondracke (Roll Call), Kimberly Strassel (Wall Street Journal), Kathryn Lopez and Kate O’Beirne (National Review).

When she was done, some White House reporters literally laughed. Out loud.

At the same gaggle, one journalist reportedly asked, “Regarding the columnist roundtable, was there any logical standard used in issuing the invitations?”

This, too, drew laughs.

It has come to this. The Bush Bubble is so strong, and the president is so loath to talk to people who might confront him with ideas that conflict with his own, that the White House press secretary draws laughter by reading the lists of “reporters” (read: sycophantic media allies) Bush is willing to hang out with.

Of course, all of this paid off, just as it always does. The president felt better after being around those who told him how great he is, and the conservative writers got to head back to the office to document how impressed they were with their ally in the White House.

Dan Froomkin documented some of the results:

Kathryn Lopez and Kate O’Beirne quickly turned around a summary of the meeting for the National Review Online yesterday. Their startling conclusion: “[T]he president is optimistic about the U.S. military’s ability to accomplish its mission.”

William Kristol writes for the Weekly Standard: “Much of what the president said was, naturally, familiar; and some of his most interesting comments and reflections he put off-the-record. But there was at least one on-the-record answer by the president that should make news. For the first time, President Bush weighed in on the debate over the MoveOn.org ad.”

Kristol quotes Bush as saying: “When I saw the ad by the far left-wing people, I was incredulous at first and then became mad.” Then Bush continued, using almost the exact same words he used this morning.

Ronald Kessler writes for NewsMax about his attempt to get Bush to take swipes at the two top Democratic presidential contenders: “As noted in a recent NewsMax article, even though it could be their greatest vulnerability in the general presidential election, the media have virtually ignored Clinton’s and Obama’s votes against revising FISA,” Kessler complains. “Referring to the two presidential candidates’ nay votes, I asked Bush, ‘What does that tell you about someone who would do that?’ “‘Well, the American people are going to have to figure that out themselves,’ said Bush.”

In a blog post on National Review’s Corner, Lopez writes that “the president was in a serious but confident mood — clearly sending the message that this administration is not close to over.”

Kessler e-mails me that “everyone behaved except the president, who kept tormenting Kim Strassel of the Wall Street Journal editorial board, whose baby was due yesterday, about whether she was about to give birth in the Roosevelt Room.”

Morton M. Kondracke writes in Roll Call (subscription required): “Bush may be a lame duck. And he showed he knows that his credibility is low. He said, ‘People listen to Petraeus, not to me.’ Still, like Frank Sinatra in what became his signature song, Bush seems determined to go out doing it ‘My Way.'”

Kondracke’s description of Bush’s thoughts about children’s health insurance got his piece touted in the White House press office’s morning e-mail to the press corps.

And if all of this seems kind of familiar, it’s because these invited-flatterers-only gatherings seem to be increasingly common. Last October, Bush arranged a gathering of conservative luminaries — including Sean Hannity, Neil Boortz, Laura Ingraham, Michael Medved, and Mike Gallagher — for a mutual-admiration confab. In July, it was time for another meeting of the conservative minds, when Bush invited pundits like David Brooks, Rich Lowry, and Kate O’Beirne over for a chat. In August, Bush hosted another gathering, this time with Glenn Beck, Bill Bennett, Boortz, Scott Hennon, Ingraham, Lars Larson, Mark Levin, Medved, Janet Parshall, and Hugh Hewitt.

The latest example came late last week, when Bush chatted with milbloggers who support his Iraq policy.

And now, this week, it’s a who’s who of partisan media personalities.

The Bubble remains very much intact.

What a waste of taxpayer money. Can’t the Acting President use his own money for these adult massage sessions?

  • Good.

    Stay in that bubble, dumbass. The entire planet needs you to drag your infernal party of moronic criminals into the abyss.

    Stay the course.

  • Here’s a novel idea. Rather than refer to the impregnability of Bush’s Bubble, let’s view this from an out-of-the-box perspective. Turn the Bubble inside out—and observe that Bush and his psychophantic props are actually on the outside of the Bubble, looking in. Then—if you’ve had a really hard day, and need a bit of good cheer—just try to imagine that the Bubble is really the planetary ozone layer—and that “Stupid George” is having to hold his breath, trying to get back inside. He’s turning about thirty shades of blue—certainly not the color that his “deadstate” allies would have him be.

    Think he can hold his breath long enough?

  • The kiss of death list. Bush won’t be there much longer and these stenographers have lost all credibility. “Oh yeah, you were on Brat’s good dog list right…good dog…good dog…hahahahahahah.”

    Move ons ad was not “far left” it was middle of the road…and oh yeah, people are listening to Petraeus alright…you just keep ignoring those polls that say the political landscape on Iraq after Petraeus is unchanged. We still don’t support your “mission” and want troop withdrawal and this is a centrist position. Your so far right that Bambi looks left to you. And the press yes men may be able to tell what your breath smells like from the inside but they don’t have a clue about the American public. The far left doesn’t believe in impeachment at this point…the far left would have you lined up and shot for treason and mass murder. Thanks to the horrors Bush has shown us the American public has definitely changed and they want Bush out and as many Republicans as we can vote away despite of the DieBold vote stealing. This also includes the 25 republican senators posing as Democrats. I joined move on org and sent them money and recommend everyone send $1 dollar to moveon in protest of the GOP and Presidents PR circus using Petraeus as lead pony.

    Sooner or later you and your loyal press core we now have to “endure” will be no more and the truth will have you all out…sooner or later.

  • Well, after all, what self-respecting demogogic emperor wouldn’t prefer to surround himself with people who wouldn’t tell him he has no clothes?

  • Cowards hide and make lots of noise. This is the guy who hid out on 911. Speaking out against moveon.org….getting his republican base in the senate to vote on a censure of a moveon ad, instead of dealing with real things like habeus corpus (they didn’t let that ancient right even get to the floor) tells me they all have to go.
    All incumbants have to be voted out. They all make me sick, and the fact they let bush go on his reckless path with no oversight shows me we are being led off the cliff by fools. Asshole bush needs impeaching, and why people aren’t screaming is beyond me.
    I am sick of the idiots running our nation into the ground. Even worse is the apathy shown by average citizens. What will it take, the Gestapo at their front door? By that time, it is too late.

  • In my mind’s eye

    Bush has his fingers stuck in his ears, with his eyes wide open, singing, “lalalalalala” really loud.

  • Whats nice is that the folks in the press corps actually carved on the whole process by laughing and questioning his greatness by asking questions. Unheard of in the past but the joke is over.

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