PDA

View Full Version : I TOLD YOU SO!



Bassmama
05-28-08, 05:42PM
I've been saying this all along- now the ex press sect. confirms it!


Exposing Washington's spinning permanent campaign
By TERENCE HUNT, AP White House Correspondent Wed May 28, 5:16 PM ET

WASHINGTON - In a White House full of Bush loyalists, none was more loyal than Scott McClellan, the bland press secretary who spread the company line for all the government to follow each day. His word, it turns out, was worthless, his confessional memoir a glimpse into Washington's world of spin and even outright deception.

Instead of effective government, Americans were subjected to a "permanent campaign" that was "all about manipulating sources of public opinion to the president's advantage," McClellan writes in a book stunning for its harsh criticism of Bush. "Presidential initiatives from health care programs to foreign invasions are regularly devised, named, timed and launched with one eye (or both eyes) on the electoral calendar."

The spokesman's book is called "What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington's Culture of Deception."

Governing via endless campaigning is not a new phenomenon, but it accelerated markedly during the tumultuous Clinton White House and then the war-shaken years of the Bush administration. Bush strategist Karl Rove had a strong hand in both politics and governing as overseer of key offices, including not only openly political affairs and long-range strategic planning but as liaison for intergovernmental affairs, focusing on state and local officials.

Bush's presidency "wandered and remained so far off course by excessively embracing the permanent campaign and its tactics," McClellan writes. He says Bush relied on an aggressive "political propaganda campaign" instead of the truth to sell the Iraq war.

That's about right, says Brookings Institution political analyst Thomas Mann, co-author of a book entitled "The Permanent Campaign."

"It was such a hyped-up effort to frame the problem and the choices in a way that really didn't do justice to the complexity of the arguments, the intelligence," Mann said in an interview. Though all presidents try to "control the message," he said, "it was really a way of preventing that discussion. It just had enormously harmful consequences. I think they carried it to a level not heretofore seen."

Each day, underscoring the daily blend of politics and government, Bush and his administration make an extraordinary effort to control information and make sure the White House message is spread across the government and beyond. The line for officials to follow is set at early-morning senior staff meetings at the White House, then transmitted in e-mails, conference calls, faxes and meetings. The loop extends to Capitol Hill where lawmakers get the administration talking points. So do friendly interest groups and others.

The aim is to get them all to say the same thing, unwavering from the administration line. Other administrations have tried to do the same thing, but none has been as disciplined as the Bush White House.

It starts at the top.

McClellan recounts how Bush, as governor of Texas, spelled out his approach about the press at their very first meeting in 1998. He said Bush "mentioned some of his expectations for his spokespeople — the importance of staying on message; the need to talk about what you're for, rather than what you are against; how he liked to make the big news on his own time frame and terms without his spokespeople getting out in front of him, and, finally, making sure that public statements were coordinated internally so that everyone is always on the same page and there are few surprises."

In September 2002, Bush's chief economic adviser, Larry Lindsey, ran afoul of the president's rules by saying the cost of a possible war with Iraq could be somewhere between $100 billion and $200 billion. Bush was irritated and made sure that Lindsey was told his comments were unacceptable. "Lindsey had violated the first rule of the disciplined, on-message Bush White House: don't make news unless you're authorized to do so," McClellan wrote.

Within four months, Lindsey was gone, resigning as part of a reshaping of Bush's economic team.

While message control has been part of many administrations, Mann said that, "They were just tougher and more disciplined about it than anyone else had been."
As spokesman, McClellan ardently defended Bush's decision to invade Iraq and the conduct of his presidency over the course of nearly 300 briefings in two years and 10 months. Now, two years after leaving the White House and eager to make money on his book, McClellan concludes Bush turned away from candor and honesty and misled the country about the reasons for going to war.

It wasn't about Saddam Hussein's supposed weapons of mass destruction, McClellan writes. It was Bush's fervor to transform the Middle East through the spread of democracy.

"The Iraq war was not necessary," writes McClellan, who never hinted at any doubts or questioned his talking points when he was press secretary.

McClellan writes that Bush and his team sold the Iraq war by means of a "political propaganda campaign" in which contradictory evidence was ignored or discarded, caveats or qualifications to arguments were downplayed or dropped and "a dubious al-Qaida connection to Iraq was played up.


"We were more focused on creating a sense of gravity and urgency about the threat from Saddam Hussein than governing on the basis of the truths of the situation," McClellan wrote.

McClellan is not the first presidential spokesman to write a tell-all book, but his is certainly the harshest, at least in recent memory. He says his words as press secretary were sincere but he has come to realize that "some of them were badly misguided. ... I've tried to come to grips with some of the truths that life inside the White House bubble obscured."

White House colleagues were stunned, but not lacking for the day's response. "We are puzzled. It is sad. This is not the Scott we knew," said Dana Perino, the current press secretary who was first hired by McClellan as a deputy.
Later in the day, she relayed the reaction of Bush himself: "He's puzzled, he doesn't recognize this as the Scott McClellan that he hired and confided in and worked with for so many years."

JakeD
05-28-08, 05:47PM
You told who what now?

Bassmama
05-28-08, 08:19PM
I told everybody that was within earshot that Bush & Co. were lieing & manipulating. Hey- I don't get to say "I told you so" very often (I'm not so much saying it to you guys as to the people that believed the bullshit in the beginning) so let me have my fun, will ya?

JakeD
05-29-08, 05:20AM
No prob, I was just about to say "Uh, we agreed with you, so there." :p

My main issue with this is that some nitwits are talking about McClelland now like he's doing some honorable thing, and my immediate reaction to their praise is "Well, first off, the fucker's trying to sell his book, and second off if he was such a bastion of moral integrity, why didn't he open his mouth earlier? You know, before the first troop and first innocent Iraqi civilian died."

Bassmama
05-29-08, 08:15AM
No prob, I was just about to say "Uh, we agreed with you, so there." :p

My main issue with this is that some nitwits are talking about McClelland now like he's doing some honorable thing, and my immediate reaction to their praise is "Well, first off, the fucker's trying to sell his book, and second off if he was such a bastion of moral integrity, why didn't he open his mouth earlier? You know, before the first troop and first innocent Iraqi civilian died."
I agree w/you 150%!! That came to my mind also, but figured everyone else thought the same way on here & didn't want to state an obvious fact. I sometimes forget that JQPublic reads this site, too.

I'm not making an excuse for him, but mebbe he was caught up in the BS like everyone else & didn't have the balls to stand up against them. You know- go along with it, don't rock the boat, etc... Like my ex husband with his mother...:D

James
05-29-08, 11:16AM
NO! THE GOVERNMENT AND MEDIA WOULD EVER LIE TO US! *runs away crying*

Amaurote
05-29-08, 11:26AM
White House colleagues were stunned, but not lacking for the day's response. "We are puzzled. It is sad. This is not the Scott we knew," said Dana Perino, the current press secretary who was first hired by McClellan as a deputy.
Later in the day, she relayed the reaction of Bush himself: "He's puzzled, he doesn't recognize this as the Scott McClellan that he hired and confided in and worked with for so many years."

They've over-span this line for two days now in a desperate bid to appear "saddened but unmoved". The real giveaway was when Karl Rove (supposedly independent now, even though he's already working for John McCain) repeated the same line on Fox the other day. They should be scared - if McClellan is correct, Plame's civil suit may succeed and ruin them. The number of criminal charges against this administration is mute testament to its loathsome corruption and arrogance.

trekbugging
05-29-08, 11:32AM
YES! THE GOVERNMENT AND MEDIA EVER LIE TO US!

fixed your quote to reflect the corrrect statement

Bones
05-29-08, 04:19PM
We needed a book to let us know this stuff?

James
05-29-08, 06:49PM
We needed a book to let us know this stuff?

Even though something may be obvious, many people will simply refuse to believe it unless it's printed in a book. Oddly enough, many of those people don't even read books.

JakeD
05-30-08, 03:33PM
Apparently McClellan's happy to testify (http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/05/30/mcclellan-id-be-happy-to-testify-about-bush-white-house/), while the administration lapd...er, Press Secretary Perino vaguely alludes (http://thinkprogress.org/2008/05/30/mcclellan-testify/) to blocking his testimony.

This whole situation could get very, very interesting, but I'm not going to hold my breath. We've seen way too much underhanded bullshit over the last eight-odd years for anything to pan out at this point.

Bassmama
05-30-08, 07:23PM
Yeah, but wouldn't it be great if the shit hit the fan & stuck this time????

Unforgiven
05-30-08, 07:54PM
Nothing short of Bush eating a live baby on a stage in front of cameras will do anything of use. Even then, I wouldn't hold my breath.

Bones
05-30-08, 08:16PM
Nothing short of Bush eating a live baby on a stage in front of cameras will do anything of use. Even then, I wouldn't hold my breath.

MMMMMMM......... Babies.