Llewellyn
King
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August 29, 2007
Alberto Gonzales and
the Bush White House ‘Family’
When Karl Rove spoke about them as the “Bush Family,” he did not mean
the president's blood relatives but the band of intimates who have been
with him from the beginning, or at least had advised or campaigned with
him. They included, of course, outgoing senior political adviser Rove,
Alberto Gonzales, first White House counsel and then attorney general,
former White House counsel Harriet Miers, former White House spokesman
Scott McClellan, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Joe Hagin and
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
The family has been unwavering in its loyalty to Bush and he, in turn,
has extended them the same loyalty. Indeed, Bush has often appeared to
have fused loyalty with ability in his mind. Rice was a marginal
performer as national security adviser but moved up to secretary of
state. Harriet Miers, a modest lawyer, got Bush's nod for the Supreme
Court until the rage of the Republican Party derailed that enterprise.
Now Gonzales, promoted to attorney general with a tip of the hat to the
Hispanic community, is leaving in near disgrace – a victim of loyalty
serving loyalty.
Gonzales’s loyalty to Bush and the family was such that he failed to
realize that the attorney general has constitutional and quasi-judicial
responsibilities that could come into conflict with the White House. He
appears to have been so gung-ho to execute what he thought Bush and Rove
wanted, that he failed to caution them when the law was endangered.
Gonzales, in his zeal and loyalty, was always on the accelerator when
the brake was needed. As a friend, as well as the senior legal officer
in the administration, one would have thought Gonzales would have warned
the president that warrantless wiretaps, torture and a list of other
measures designed to combat terrorism, were outside the law.
Also, where was Gonzales when it was bruited that Miers was Supreme
Court material? This misstep sowed seeds of doubt about Gonzales among
conservative Republicans that would only be compounded by the White
House’s stand on immigration.
Yet all of this Gonzales would have survived had it not been for the
firing of eight federal prosecutors. On both sides of the aisle, it is
believed that this was raw politics at work. Unfortunately for Gonzales,
many members of Congress are former prosecutors. They respect the office
of federal prosecutor. Even so, Gonzales would have survived if he had
gotten his story straight. As it was, he did not. He was contradicted in
public by his own subordinates, and was shredded on the witness stand in
Congress by angry members of both parties.
The price of blind loyalty was paid with compound interest by the
president and the attorney general.
The “family” effect in the White House has, particularly in the first
term, produced interesting but surprisingly amiable dynamics. Members of
the family, led by Rove, derived special status because of their access
to Bush. If you understood, as chief of staff Andrew Card did, that
title could be trumped by the familial standing, well life in Bush’s
White House has been, and still can be, quite pleasant.
Former White House speechwriter Matthew Scully, writing in The
Atlantic Monthly, paints a picture of friendly informality with
something approaching sophomoric humor. Although the purpose of Scully’s
piece is to check the ego of his former boss, Michael Gerson, now a
Washington Post columnist, he lifts the curtain a tad on day-to-day
life in this the most opaque of White Houses, and what he reveals is not
a traditional place of feuds and conspiracies. Instead, according to
Scully, it is a place of good humor and collegiate enthusiasm. In
particular, Scully is generous to Bush himself. To his speechwriters he
is full of courtesy and without the ego you would expect.
A family man?
© 2007 North Star
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