‘People in the White House are talking only to each other’

Matthew Dowd, the chief strategist for the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign, recently broke ranks with his White House buddies and denounced Bush’s leadership. He said he sees a president who only hears what he wants to hear, from those who know not to challenge him with competing ideas. “I think he’s become more, in my view, secluded and bubbled in,” Dowd said.

But what about the rest of the White House? It’s one thing for an insecure leader to block out news that might upset him, but surely the president’s team knows not to insulate themselves, right?

Wrong.

Dowd’s assessment is shared by many Republicans in Washington. “Isolation is inevitable in any White House,” says a former Bush aide who returned to the West Wing recently to chat with former colleagues. Now that he is out of the bubble, the former aide says, he can see an isolation he didn’t recognize before. “People in the White House are talking only to each other, reconfirming each other’s and the president’s perceptions and judgments,” he says.

The groupthink is scary — but it’s also helpful in understanding why the Bush White House is so helplessly inept.

The Bush gang believes it’s doing a great job, and they’re convinced that their critics are wrong. Why? Because everyone they know and talk to — i.e., other loyal Bushies who walk the halls of the West Wing — agrees on their greatness.

Last week, we were reminded of this when we learned the president has embraced a “bunker mentality,” and started to feel sorry himself. During a recent meeting with some visitors from Texas, Bush reportedly offered an “extended whine, a rant, actually, about no one understands him, the critics are all messed up, if only people would see what he’s doing things would be OK…etc., etc.”

One gets the sense that those inside The Bubble can’t imagine why those outside are displeased with the president’s performance.

With that in mind, U.S. News’ Kenneth T. Walsh describes the lame-duck president’s perspective with 20 months to go before giving up his office.

President Bush’s admiration for Abraham Lincoln knows no bounds. In a recent meeting at the White House, Bush told visitors how Lincoln (whose portrait he has installed in the Oval Office) persevered in the Civil War despite many defeats on the battlefield, tens of thousands of casualties, and doubts among Northern voters that the conflict could ever be won. As the campaign of 1864 approached, Bush related, Lincoln admitted privately that he didn’t think he would be re-elected, but pursued his policies anyway. Bush also described how Lincoln pressed on despite his grief when his beloved 11-year-old son Willie died in February 1862. The visitors came away with the conviction that Bush sees himself in Lincoln’s mold more deeply than ever.

To Bush’s critics, the incident is unsettling. Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean, noting that the president has also compared himself to Harry Truman, told U.S. News: “This is delusional-comparing the equivalent of Warren Harding to two of our greatest presidents!” Adds presidential historian Robert Dallek, author of Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power: “He may come across to some people as a man of principle, but a great majority see him as stubborn and unyielding. … And everything he touches turns to dust.” […]

“We’re seeing the very early demise of an administration,” says a former White House adviser to Bush’s father, George H. W. Bush, with considerable sadness. “It usually happens six months before a president leaves office in a second term, but in this case it’s happening now.”

In theory, the Bush gang has time to make use of their last 20 months in office, but to set a direction, they’d have to get some sense of perspective and priorities. To do that, they’d have to step outside The Bubble.

And that doesn’t appear likely.

Well, WE have 20-some months to go.

  • Judging by the article, I think that the Bush Admin has become the Camus play, No Exit. Problem is that the rest of the world is stuck in a hell they created.

  • The only parallel I think one could even argue between Lincoln and The Idiot King is that “character is destiny.” One guy started with nothing but talent, ambition and soul, and ended up a legend; the other started with everything but talent and soul, will end as a watchword for arrogance, incompetence, and abject failure.

  • Lincoln is to Bush as Stephen Hawking is to Paris Hilton.

    Truman is to Bush as George Patton is to Nick Lachey.

  • Modern republicans already exist in a bubble. Working in the WH naturally makes it a double bubble. Bush’s longstanding lack of curiosity and penchant for surrounding himself with brown-nosed yes-men puts them all in triple bubble. Now, having been abandoned by many in his own party and adopting a bunker mentality, Bush could be seen as in a quadruple bubble. Stepping outside would completely shatter his world.

  • No pity. Lying treasonous murderers who have virtually destroyed our Democracy can hardly be labeled misguided and out of touch. They know what others are saying they just don’t want any other opinion. The bubble in their case is there to protect themselves from outside influences so they can accomplish their agenda which is government “for” the people. If they could get it they would want a total dictatorship as Bush said, “it would be so much easier…”. The bubble is intentional not just a consequence of the administration. At this point we would have to drag these people kicking and screaming from the castle. They know exactly what they are doing by their self-isolation.

  • Bush will have great impact on history … as the godfather of global warming, destabilizer of the globe with his neo-con imperialism and destroyer of the American middle class. The question is, will history destroy George before Geroge destroys history.

  • re:#7. I agree. These people are in a self-imposed bubble because their sense of entitlement makes them believe that the rest of the human race is not as important as they are. These bastards lied us into a war and they will carry on until someone stops them. I have no pity for any of them, they all deserve a firing squad or at least prison for treason. They would happily do the same to any one of us if they could get away with it. It’s not their relatives dying in a stupid pointless war, but Halliburton gains whether we win or lose.

  • This insular group-think you speak of sounds very familiar to me. Indeed, I believe it is indistinguishable from the Amerikan Taliban Bot meme.

  • One of the commenters here (Curmudgeon, maybe? Can’t remember, sorry) said a while ago that the structure Bush and the Gang live in is not a bubble, but a nutshell. I totally agree.

    A bubble is something transparent — you can see in as well as out. A bubble is something soft and fragile — you could pop it (as Haik Bedrosian, @5, suggests). A bubble’s function is to isolate its inhabitant from germs, not from the world entirely.
    The WH environment doesn’t exhibit any of those characteristics; it’s hard and unyielding and totally impenetrable; it has no connection to the outside world.

    It’s not a bubble; it’s a nutshell. With a handful of poisoous nuts inside it.

  • Don’t be so quick to judge Bush. The “surge” will succeed. So will the next one. And the next one. And the next one after that.

    Bush comparing himself to Lincoln is downright nauseating.

  • The Bushies started by claiming a mandate when all they had was one vote on the Supreme Court. They promptly ignored, denounced and demonized all their critics. It soon became evident that this administration was more interested in ruling than governing, and as such its style would be to reward its friends and punish its enemies. The self-imposed bubble has always been there.Those who see themselves as entitled are always isolated.

    An insane Hitler in his bunker commanded imaginary armies. A drunk Nixon prayed for divine intervention. A clueless Bush whines. How appropriate.

  • Former Dan nailed it. Just change Hell is Other People, to Hell is Obnoxious Presidents.*

    I have thought of Bush as Garcin before, and Rove is certainly Ines.

    Still not quite sure who I would pick for Estelle, but Cheney is the Valet since he ushered BushBrat into the Oval Office in the first place.

    tAiO

    *Huis Clos is by Sartre, I get him confused with Camus all of the time and oui, je suis un geek!

  • There are people I know who live in the same bubble. Alternative media universe.

  • Rich, #13, you’ve noted something everyone should take note of if they haven’t already: “. . . . this administration was [is] more interested in ruling than governing, . . .” Such UnAmericans the lot of them! -Kevo

  • “Isolation is inevitable in any White House.”

    Yes, every job has its clubby, insular atmosphere, but these guys aren’t victims of their work environment. They have chosen to shut out the rest of the world and to be a circular conga line of yes-men to each other. They’ve forced their closed mindedness on themselves and have embraced ignorance as a virtue.

  • After his failed run for President, Hubert Humphrey, no longer VP, got in touch with the American people again and said that he was surprised at how much they hated the war in Vietnam.

    After Bush is gone, many administration personel will have the same awakening when they start talking to the American people again.

  • I heard a song on XM76 that really captures what’s happening with this corrupt Administration. It’s called “Judgement Day” and it’s by a band called, of all things, Wackiavelli!
    I understand they wrote it in Jan. ’05, before the “wheels started coming off the wagon”. It’s actually prophetic now!

  • Bush might have been a private in Lincoln’s army, assigned to picket horses far in the rear. It’s a coward’s job.

    Gen. George B. McClellan, the wealthy snobbish fop who ridiculed Lincoln and refused to engage the South, is more like Bush than any of the other incompetents Lincoln had to endure before he found Grant.

    As for the Truman comparison, gve ’em hell Harry would have smelled Bush coming a mile away. Truman fired MacArthur for demeaning the office of the president. Bush’s presidency is asswipe for 72 percent of Americans and Bush retaliates by killing Americans and Iraqis.

  • I think George has not been admiring Lincoln so much as the Red Queen.
    …”Alice laughed: “There’s no use trying,” she said; “one can’t believe impossible things.”
    “I daresay you haven’t had much practice,” said the Queen. “When I was younger, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”
    Alice in Wonderland.

  • “…this administration is more interested in ruling than in governing…”

    And it would be foolish to count this gang out just yet. Dick Cheney, our de facto president, has fascist ambitions, and given another 9-11 sometime before the next twenty months expires, he would likely find a frighteningly large constituency for marshal law, for suspending elections, for sending an “obstructionist” Congress home. Impossible, you say? Before 9-11 could you have imagined the Patriot Act? Or the Military Commissions Act of 2006? Could you have imagined a US president being given the power to torture, to imprison an American citizen indefinitely without access to a lawyer or a court of law, to listen to your phone conversations and read your mail with impunity? Beware.

  • “This is delusional-comparing the equivalent of Warren Harding to two of our greatest presidents!”

    Why do we have to go around insulting Harding by comparing him to the Georgie the Constant Fuckup??

    Georgie the Constant Fuckup is in a class entirely of his own. Everything he has ever touched in his entire life has turned to shit.

  • In ten months we are going to know who the democratic nominee is going to be and they are going to be running a shadow government, more then a campaign. By that time, this administration will be in terminal psychoc meltdown, the economy will be staring at a serious recession and the rest of the world will be wondering if it’s time to kick us while we are down and pull the line of credit.

  • At the risk of invoking Godwin’s Law, there is a precedent for Georgie’s behavior: good ol’ Adolf in in his final days was in his own bunker/bubble, ranting to his subordinates about how misunderstood he was and how everyone had failed him, and carrying on with his own blighted vision, no matter how disastrous the course. Oh, and he also had his own hero-leader from his nation’s history on the wall, to remind him that he could still pull a miracle out of the hat — Frederick the Great.

  • This is the Ken Lay action plan. Why in the world is there any debate about who the worst president is?
    He is miles ahead of the others; he leaves no doubts. And the Democrats without backbones have failed to impeach him and the others. Wake up.
    We really can’t let this continue.

  • Bush comparing himself to Lincoln is like Dan Quayle comparing himself to JFK when the latter debated Lloyd Bentsen. Too bad Bush is too isolated to be called on his impertinent idiocy as little Danforth Quayle was.

    No more Bushes. No more, never, never. Ever. To hell with Jeb. To hell with George P., and bonehead fratboy Pierce. May the next generation of Bush-spawn piss away their trust funds, and lower themselves to pumping gas and stocking shelves at Wal-Mart. May these pampered louts, these jackass greedheads, finally get the comeupance they so richly deserve.

  • So where were all of you when we were marching in the streets weeks ago? Are you writing your congressperson? Are you teaching your kids? Virtual activism is just that, virtual, almost non-existent unless you’re on the web. Clever word-smithing means nothing. Gotta break some eggs…

  • How’d that “marching in the street” work out? I must have missed the solutions to all our problems while tap tap tapping away at my computer.

    A little hint: what “worked” 40 years ago (if by “worked,” you mean “helped elect Nixon”) might not be of all that much value today.

    The self-righteousness of old lefties isn’t among the worst, say, thousand problems we face. But it don’t much help either.

  • America is a bubble. The people inside know little about the wider world. Republicans are the most isolated–they live in gated communities and watch Fox propaganda.

  • Marching AND tapping… Everybody has a part to play in cleaning up the disaster known as Bush. It’s going to take a united effort.

  • This fits nicely with the April 21 LA Times Article called GONZALES AND THE ‘HIVE MIND’
    http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-wolf21apr21,0,3497526.story?coll=la-opinion-center
    (subheading: The attorney general’s testimony reveals an administration governed by collective wisdom.)
    What I fear is that Bush and his “mission accomplices” won’t want to leave the bubble when the time comes for them to go in 20 months.
    These people have spit on our constitution and the Geneva Convention, lied to get us into this war for oil (making Cheney, Halliburton, Blackwater, CACI, and other war profiteering “friends” of the administration godzillionaires), have turned our military into prisoners of the civil war with ever-extending terms, and have abused the injured troops who had to come home.

    Is it that much of a stretch to imagine that Bush has no plans to give up his office? What if he really believes (which I doubt) that God would want him to stay president forever?
    I THINK WE NEED A “PLAN B.”

  • RE: #29
    First of all 40 years ago I was 2 years old.
    Secondly the point is/was “tap, tap, taping” get’s “virtually” nothing done compared to joining with others face to face, to connect with others of the “tribe” to make a statement. It gives people a chance to see the faces of their fellow acitvists, a ‘bonding’ if you will.
    Thirdly, smart mouth asses like you seem to be on all the blogs pontificating cliche babble they learn from each other hiding begind annonymous blog names and feeling clever.

  • Wow! The Lincoln comparison certainly shocked my brain…this guy is talking with John Bolton I’d imagine. How much you want to bet Dubya hasn’t read ‘Team of Rivals’?

  • RE: #29
    First of all 40 years ago I was 2 years old.
    Secondly the point is/was “tap, tap, taping” get’s “virtually” nothing done compared to joining with others face to face, to connect with others of the “tribe” to make a statement. It gives people a chance to see the faces of their fellow acitvists, a ‘bonding’ if you will.
    Thirdly, smart mouth asses like you seem to be on all the blogs pontificating cliche babble they learn from each other hiding behind annonymous blog names and feeling clever. This only creates division.

  • That’s what sucks about Lincoln. Every idiot who screws up anything he touches can try to take comfort in what Lincoln was able to overcome, and what he was able to accomplish. But that sitll means you have to accomplish something. The only thing-the only vague thing-Bush has going for him is the idea that trying to liberate an oppressed people as the Iraqis have been can be perceived as noble. If you do it right. He didn’t, and it’s a mistake he can’t fix short of a time machine. For people who enjoy crappy analogies, it’s like having a sister in an abusive relationship, so you install a pipe bomb in the building where her boyfriend works. Sure, THAT problem’s solved, but look how many more problems you’ve caused. Was it worth it in the long run?

  • Dear Slappy Magoo @37, I don’t think that is a crappy analogy at all. It’s perfect–GWB’s war on Iraq is “like having a sister in an abusive relationship, so you install a pipe bomb in the building where her boyfriend works.” Thank you! I intend to quote you frequently.

  • Re: #29…

    I see a lot of this, and quite coordinated too. I suspect dajafi is a paid RNC troll, sent to drive wedges between us.

    By the way, I am one of those who worked the streets 40 years ago – I was at the Pentagon, and at Chicago too – and in case you aren’t a troll dajafi, allow me to point something out:

    We won. We got rid of Nixon and we ended the war in Vietnam. What have you done? And yeah, maybe we got lazy and careless: raising families’ll do that to you. But where was GenX?

    The internet is great, but the trap the Keyboard Kommandos fall into is bigger than party lines. Bodies on the street matter. And my body has been out there again, for awhile now.

    Put up or shut up.

    JF

  • hmmmmm … would that imply an impending yet unforetold meeting with a certain john wilkes boothe??

    nah……..

  • Lincoln was a person who was cursed with constant tragedy.

    Bush *IS* a walking curse who has plunged all of US into this constant tragedy.

  • Perhaps Bush should bring in an outsider.

    You know… someone like Joe Lieberman.
    Someone from the other party.

    Like the name says:

  • The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
    The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
    The best lack all conviction, while the worst
    Are full of passionate intensity.

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