November 15, 2002
View from Lodi, CA: Bush Victory Aftermath: Will Democrats Return to Roots in Run for Rose
Garden?
By
Joe Guzzardi
I simply cannot get a
handle on George W. Bush.
Is Bush the most
brilliant politician of the
modern era? Or is Bush an overgrown adolescent who
dances to the
carefully choreographed script of White House
strategist
Karl Rove?
And whether Bush is a genius or a
simpleton, what will the
2002 results mean two years hence?
I’ve spent a considerable amount of
time since November 5th pondering those very
questions. I’ve developed some interesting theories, if
I do say so myself.
For those who followed Election
Night 2002, you have to stand in awe of the remarkable
outcome. The Republicans recaptured the Senate and won
pivotal gubernatorial races going away. And the
astonishing ease with which it was done can be traced
directly to Bush’s nonstop campaigning in Minnesota,
Missouri, Georgia, South Dakota, Colorado and Florida.
But if you have access to H.B.O.
and saw
“Journeys with George” on that same night, then by
the evening’s end you might have wondered how anyone so
sophomoric could possibly be the leader of the free
world.
In “Journeys with George,”
Alexandra Pelosi, a N.B.C. reporter and the daughter
of Democratic minority leader
Nancy Pelosi, followed Bush for 18 months as he
stumped across the nation in quest of the Republican
presidential nomination.
We see Bush rolling oranges down
airplane aisles, stuff Cheetos into his mouth and give
interviews while still chewing. In a moment of great
candor Bush confesses to Pelosi that he likes nothing
better than a good bologna sandwich.
Let me inject at this point that I
am not a Bush fan. But shortly after watching
“Journeys with George” I developed the most intense
hankering for a bologna on white.
Is it possible that Bush is so
persuasive that he sold me on the merits of bologna? Or
was it that since
childhood, I too have been a fan of a
well-constructed bologna sandwich. Should our common
fondness for bologna bond us?
The answers to those questions are
elusive and certainly not as important as the earlier
questions about the deeper meaning of the
Democratic rout.
How Bush and the Republicans
steamrolled the Democrats is fairly easy to figure out.
When your opponents are represented by the likes of
Tom Daschle,
Dick Gephardt,
Hillary Clinton and
Al Gore, you can only look good.
The current crop of Democrats is a
stiff and colorless bunch. Outshining them is child’s
play.
But equally key to the Republican’s
success is that voters demand so little. In the days
leading up to Election Tuesday, I watched Bush on CSPAN
give the same empty and meaningless speech everywhere he
went.
Sonny Perdue, now Georgia’s
governor-elect
“doesn’t need a focus group to tell him what to think.”
Neither did Minnesota’s Norm Coleman, New Hampshire’s
John Sununu or Texas governor Rick Perry.
Amazingly, all Republicans,
“recognize that
education is the key.” Homeland security is vital
but so are jobs and the economic stimulus that small
businesses provide.
Corporate scandals, on the other hand, are
bad and will not be
tolerated in any Republican administration.
Thunderous applause followed every
Bush platitude.
As invincible as Bush may look
today, the Democrats can rally if they map out a sound
game plan.
First, send Daschle, Gephardt,
Clinton and Gore home. Do not let them show their face
until November 3, 2004.
Then, pick a solid candidate with a
good hook of some kind. Humorist
Andy Borowitz in his New York Times column “
‘Bush’ in 2004” wrote that the Democrats should
fight fire with fire by nominating a Bush. Borowitz
suggests Nancy Bush, a knitting expert with no political
baggage, Bush, the British rock quartet or Busch Light
beer. All, according to Borowitz, poll higher against
Bush, George W. than any Democrat.
Borowitz’s concept is clever but
not very practical.
A better idea is to nominate
someone well known within political circles. I like John
Kerry. He has two of the things politicians need:
money and hair. You may have noticed that the U.S.
has had very few
bald presidents. Dwight Eisenhower and Martin Van
Buren are about it. And Eisenhower was a war hero.
Then Kerry must rent and study “Being
There,” the 1979 Peter Sellers comedy. By
modeling himself after the simpleton Chance the Gardener
(aka Chauncey Gardiner), Kerry could give the people
more drivel than George W.
For example, when questioned about
our economic woes, Kerry can
quote one of Gardiner’s most famous lines.
Gardiner advises, “As long as
the roots are not severed, all is well and all will be
well in the garden.”
Or this gem: “First come spring
and summer, then fall and winter. Then spring and summer
come again.”
In Washington’s most powerful inner
circles, Gardiner was considered a deep intellect.
The Democrats might learn from
Chance the Gardener: to get further, say less.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.