
Lee Bockhorn, associate editor
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A COMMON journalistic trope in recent years held that Bill Clinton was fortunate in his enemies: Whatever his personal or political faults--and they were many and grave--they were always redeemed, or at least diminished in scope, by the tactical bungling and sheer ickiness of people like Tom DeLay, Newt Gingrich, and Ken Starr.
Though the Bushies loathe any suggestion that their man resembles Clinton, it's clear that George W. Bush, too, is lucky in his enemies (with the exception of the crafty Tom Daschle, a more formidable foe than the hapless Trent Lott ever was for Clinton). The latest example of this was the shameless squawking of many Democrats last week, after the revelation that Bush was briefed in August about the likelihood of new al Qaeda attacks, possibly including hijackings.
After floundering for months, trying to find an issue on which to gain traction against Bush, Democrats thought they had received a miraculous gift--an opening to criticize the president for the very thing that has made him so wildly popular: his handling of the war on terrorism. Certainly, we do need to determine how our government failed to see September 11 coming. (And as we suggest in our editorial this week, the Bush administration should take the lead on this, lest Congress turn the investigation into a partisan spectacle.)
But the Democrats overplayed their hand, and wandered perilously close to Cynthia McKinney territory. Dick Gephardt sank immediately to Watergate-era rhetoric: "I think what we have to do now is
to find out what the president, what the White House, knew about the events leading up to 9/11, when they knew it and, most importantly, what was done about it at that time." Hillary Clinton, apparently having forgotten that her popularity is inversely related to her visibility, took to the Senate floor Thursday, brandishing a copy of the New York Post with the headline "Bush Knew": "The president knew what? My constituents would like to know the answers to that and many other questions. Not to blame the president or any other American. But just to know. To learn from our experience."
Sure. Just to know. As Mrs. Clinton's husband once memorably put it, "More rather than less, sooner rather than later"--right?
Most Democrats seem quickly to have recognized the folly of this approach. By the weekend, Gephardt had become the very model of the loyal opposition leader: "This was a failure for all of us," he said Sunday on CNN. "We failed the American people in a very important respect. We did not protect them properly." Senator John Edwards was similarly restrained late last week on PBS's "NewsHour": "I think the focus of this should not just be the White House . . . should not be political, should not be Democrats and Republicans. The focus of this should be, why did this happen, could it have been prevented, and, most importantly, to take the steps necessary to ensure that this doesn't happen again."
Why the sudden switch? It's possible that Democrats saw some polling that changed their minds about the wisdom of thumping the president over this. (Like this MSNBC/Wall Street Journal poll, for instance.) And maybe the White House's counteroffensive, crude as it was, had an impact.
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