The vaunted White House communications team, starting way back with Ari Fleischer, came up with a simple strategy when it comes to misleading the country: if you speak with authority, and sound convinced, your lies will have the air of the legitimacy.
Take the missing White House emails flap, for example. This week, the Bush gang’s lawyers acknowledged in a court filing that it re-used backup computer tapes of email before October 2003, meaning that millions of key emails from a critical time period are likely gone forever.
Yesterday, reporters asked White House spokesperson Tony Fratto where the missing emails went. It quickly devolved into a Laurel-and-Hardy Abbott-and-Costello-like routine, with Fratto lying blatantly, though speaking with absolute certainty. (ThinkProgress has the humorous clip.)
Q: [A]re there in fact the emails missing? What’s the likelihood of their recovery versus the —
Fratto: …I think to the best of what all the analysis we’ve been able to do, we have absolutely no reason to believe that any emails are missing; there’s no evidence of that. There’s no — we tried to reconstruct some of the work that went into a chart that was entered into court records and could not replicate that or could not authenticate the correctness of the data in that chart. And from everything that we can tell, our analysis of our backup systems, we have no reason to believe that any email at all are missing.
Q: Where are they?
Fratto: Where are what?
Q: Where are part of —
Fratto: Which email? […]
Q: [I]f you were asked, you would be in a position to comply with a request to produce those documents?
Fratto: Yes, which documents?
For crying out loud, can’t anybody here play this game?
Let’s unpack this a little. Fratto said, authoritatively, that White House officials have “absolutely no reason to believe that any emails are missing.” This comes, of course, after Dana Perino told reporters from the same podium, “I wouldn’t rule out that there were a potential 5 million e-mails lost…. We screwed up, and we’re trying to fix it.”
Confronted with reality as described by his own boss, Fratto said, “I’m not sure what was said on that. I could tell you today, though, that we have no evidence and we have no way of showing that any e-mail at all are missing.”
Look, Tony Fratto was clearly lying yesterday. That’s not even open to any real debate; everything he said on the subject was the opposite of the truth. Bush allies might argue, “Fratto doesn’t know what he’s talking about, and that’s not entirely his fault.” But that doesn’t work at all — he was authorized to speak on behalf of the president of the United States on a pressing subject involving the White House possibly violating the law.
If Fratto didn’t know the truth, he has the option of telling the press corps, “I don’t know; let me find out.” He, regrettably, chose a different path. If Fratto had any credibility left before yesterday, he might be in trouble today. Lucky for him, that isn’t really a problem.
As for the bigger picture, Fratto’s obvious falsehoods were not well received on the Hill.
The White House possesses no archived e-mail messages for many of its component offices, including the Executive Office of the President and the Office of the Vice President, for hundreds of days between 2003 and 2005, according to the summary of an internal White House study that was disclosed yesterday by a congressional Democrat.
The 2005 study — whose credibility the White House attacked this week — identified 473 separate days in which no electronic messages were stored for one or more White House offices, said House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.).
Waxman said he decided to release the summary after White House spokesman Tony Fratto said yesterday that there is “no evidence” that any White House e-mails from those years are missing. Fratto’s assertion “seems to be an unsubstantiated statement that has no relation to the facts they have shared with us,” Waxman said.
That’s a very polite way of saying, “The White House is lying, so I felt compelled to set the record straight.”