Log-In Email:    Password:    
  Remember me
Register  |  Forgot Password?  |  Change Password  |  Update Email
A Good and Impressive Man
Remembering Tony Snow.
by Fred Barnes
07/12/2008 4:30:00 PM

Increase Font Size

 | 

Printer-Friendly

 | 

Email a Friend

 | 

Respond to this article



Tony Snow, who died Saturday morning at the age of 53, was that rare individual in Washington, a big shot who didn't act like a big shot. He succeeded brilliantly in both journalism and politics, yet barely changed at all in the nearly quarter century I knew him. The reason, I suspect, was that Tony's life was grounded firmly in his family and in his Christian faith. His humility never wavered.

I first met Tony at the Republican convention in Dallas in 1984 when he was an editorial writer for the Detroit News. He struck me as smart, quite conservative, and amiable--but not someone soon to reach the highest levels of journalism and politics. Obviously I underestimated him.

Tony mastered the job of writing editorials before he came to Washington to work at the Washington Times. When he began writing a syndicated column, he quickly succeeded at that too. The fact is Tony was a very good writer. He knew how to make a point succinctly but powerfully.

Handsome and notably well spoken, Tony went where most ink-stained wretches don't even dream of going. He was an anchor at Fox News Channel. He was the first host of Fox News Sunday. Later, he hosted a talk radio show. He was extremely popular on the speaking circuit.

But I think Tony will be especially remembered for something else: his time as White House press secretary for President Bush. Tony did the job differently. Most press secretaries are uninformative and defensive, none more so than Tony's predecessor,
Scott McClellan. Reporters grow to dislike them, at least at a professional level.

During some of the toughest days of the Bush presidency, Tony was on offense. He not only could articulate and explain Bush's foreign and domestic policies, he could promote them. At the pressroom podium, Tony was an ardent and effective polemicist. When reporters argued with him, they usually lost. Yet Tony was so nice and civil and informative that the press hounds generally liked him while loathing his boss.

After 20-plus years of writing columns and yapping on TV, Tony knew a lot. He knew much more about policy and politics and the ideological wars in Washington than the vast majority of the reporters covering the White House. He had thought through and come to (mostly conservative) conclusions about nearly everything on the agenda. This gave him a distinct advantage. More often than not, he was a step ahead of the reporters.

Tony was press secretary during the darkest days of the Bush presidency. The Iraq war had turned into a sectarian bloodbath in 2006, but Tony understood how critical Iraq was to winning the war on terror and transforming the Middle East. He defended the president's Iraq policy before and after the surge, never blinking or backing down. He was better at this that the president was.

In his professional life, Tony was sometimes disorganized, and sheepish when that caused a problem. When several of us in journalism started a bi-weekly Bible study, Tony signed up but came, as I best I can recall, only once. It turned out the Bible study had to go to him.



CONTINUED
1 2  Next >
Print This Article

  More Anger from the Left
Today, 10:53 AM
 
  Palin Slams Obama's Pro-Abortion-on-Demand Record
Yesterday, 5:49 PM
 
  Three Makes it a Trend: The Angry Left
Yesterday, 2:00 PM
 
  Biden Smears Obama in New Ad
Oct 10, 08 06:22 PM
 
   




 



Search   Subscribe   Subscribers Only   FAQ   Advertise   Store   Newsletter
Contact   About Us   Site Map   Privacy Policy