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FROM MSNBC.COM AND NEWSWEEK
http://www.msnbc.com/news/929206.asp
Newsweek Web Exclusive
The long, hot summer has begun in Iraq. American GIs are dying
almost daily. So are Iraqis. But that hasn't stopped President Bush
from embarking on a fund-raising spree premised on his triumphal
role as commander in chief. Who needs reality when you've got spin?
THE PRE-WAR spin was all about weapons of mass destruction and
the price of U.S. inaction. Bush said we couldn't afford to wait
until there was a mushroom cloud. Critics who suspect the intelligence
data about Saddam's nuclear program was hyped are brushed aside
like gnats on an elephant. Bush says they're engaging in "revisionist
history," which is on a par with calling Watergate a third-rate
burglary.
Bush wins the spin for now. The debate over weapons of mass destruction
is an inside-the- Beltway story; it's not resonating with the public.
The bigger question is existential: do the gods punish hubris?
This is the most arrogant administration in memory. Every day brings
another issue where a careful observer of the political scene cannot
believe what's happening. The latest outrage has the White House
spinmeisters editing a report by the EPA on the status of the environment
to omit mounting concern about climate change. The spinners have
already stricken the phrase "global warming" in favor
of the more benign "climate change." The offending line
declared, "Climate change has global consequences for human
health and the environment." In its place, the White House
inserted a bunch of gobbledygook about how the "complexity
of the Earth system" and various "interconnections"
make it a challenge to render scientific judgments.
Howls from environmentalists go unanswered. The administration's
attitude is like the phone company before the breakup of AT&T
when Lily Tomlin, the comedic actress, appeared on stage as a telephone
operator telling irate customers, "We don't care. We don't
have to. We're the phone company."
Karl Rove, the grand wizard of spin, is a smart man with a historical
perspective. He is a student of the American consciousness, and
he knows that the American public is disengaged from politics. That's
the reality that makes voters today uniquely susceptible to such
deceptive spin. Apocalyptic assertions by Bush and other administration
officials in the months leading up to the war created the impression
of such an imminent threat that it's not surprising Americans got
confused. One third of those questioned in a poll taken by the Program
on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland
believe that U.S. forces have found weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq. Twenty-two percent said Iraq actually used chemical or
biological weapons in the recent war.
Most Americans have no idea who the Democratic candidates are,
and Bush's fund-raising blitz is designed to envelop his re-election
in an aura of inevitability. It's summer in Washington even though
the dreary, wet weather feels like April. If by Labor Day, U.S.
inspection teams haven't found WMD and Iraq is looking like a quagmire,
then the public might wake up and credibility could become a serious
issue for Bush. As insurance against that outcome, Bush is shifting
the political conversation to a looming confrontation with Iran,
which will keep war alive as an issue for 2004. An uninformed public
disengaged from politics and an administration that knows no shame
are the ideal conditions for Bush to win a second term.
Democrats once hoped that a return to domestic issues, where they
hold an advantage, would be Bush's undoing. But the White House
spin machine succeeds here, as well. Republicans who ordinarily
deplore big government are cheering the potential expansion of Medicare
to provide a prescription-drug benefit to senior citizens. Never
mind that the Rube Goldberg scheme under discussion in Congress
won't go into effect until 2006 or that millions of seniors would
pay more for their drugs with the benefit than they currently do
without it, Bush will strut like the greatest savior of seniors
since FDR brought us Social Security.
The House just voted to repeal the estate tax permanently, a windfall
for trust-fund kids that was sold on the false premise that it saves
farm families from destitution at the hands of the IRS. Reporters
in the farm belt failed to find a farmer with a hardship story that
would illustrate the GOP's argument. Even the American Farm Bureau
Federation said it couldn't cite a single example of a farm lost
because of estate taxes. The House votes tax breaks for millionaires
while children of low-income families and military families get
left behind.
One of the key strategies of the GOP is to portray Democratic critics
as un-American. Remember the anonymous Bush strategist quoted some
months ago suggesting Sen. John Kerry looks French. There will be
two GOP campaigns: the flag-waving one on the surface that Bush
is involved with, and then the sub-rosa campaign waged by surrogates
that will be less gentlemanly. A very strong point in Bush's favor
is that there hasn't been another attack on U.S. soil. He's kept
us safe, and he's kept us fearful, a potent combination that Democrats
haven't yet figured how to crack.
© 2003 Newsweek, Inc.
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