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Who Is George W. Bush?

Posted Monday, March 27, 2000, at 11:40 PM ET

Greg--

I agree that there is a disconnect between the up-close George W. Bush we know and the public George W. Bush the rest of the country is now getting to know. Remember when we all interviewed him last spring? He was loose, funny, brash, charismatic. There was nothing ill-at-ease about him: He propped his alligator boots up on the coffee table in his office and talked to us like we were old friends. But he wasn't just about good-old-boy charm: He could also talk like a policy wonk, lecturing us for nearly half an hour on the minutiae of education reform.

I miss the George W. Bush we met last spring. Lately, I find myself watching him—during the Arizona debates, or more recently, when he appeared on Letterman—and wincing. Was the sneer always there? The awkward, nervous laugh? The robotic answers?

In particular, I remember a moment from the Arizona debate when he was asked what he had learned from the Dean Acheson biography. You could hear, in the yawning silence between the reporter's question and the candidate's answer, Bush frantically rummaging around for something, anything, to fill the air. When he hit upon it—"Freedom is our most important export"—I felt relieved for him. It was a fine answer, but nothing more. It was McCain's impromptu speech that followed—on Acheson's great lessons for the nation—that was truly presidential.

George W. Bush, up close, has glimmers of greatness. In the national forum, he is lacking. Why do you all think he doesn't translate to a larger audience? How can he better project the "real" George W. Bush?

Best,

Pam

Posted Monday, March 27, 2000, at 11:40 PM ET
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How conservative is George W. Bush? How capable? This week, the staff of Texas Monthly magazine allows Slate readers to eavesdrop as they discuss what kind of president Bush would make.The participants in this dialogue include Texas Monthly Editor Greg Curtis, Executive Editor Paul Burka, Deputy Editor Evan Smith, Senior Editors Skip Hollandsworth and Joe Nick Patoski, Associate Editor Pam Colloff, and Contributing Editor Patricia Kilday Hart.
COMMENTS

Reader Response from The Fray:



[Note: Should be read after most recent Dialogue entry of the week.]





I find Ms Hart's (perfectly legitimate) complaint [Wednesday] about the "news columns"--ie, that they're showing an abominable if visceral loathing of Mr Bush--quite charming in its innocence. She seems to have somehow managed to avoid realizing that such an attitude has colored reporting of the Clinton administration for years, of Mr Gore, and indeed of just about any gopher who stuck his head up far enough to be hit with a mallet. The sole recent exception---the esteemed Senator from Arizona---avoided this solely by pandering to the reporters' idiot sense of their own moral and intellectual superiority and even he would have been savaged had he had any chance of victory.



I don't particularly like Mr Bush, but he was elected twice by a real state and he did manage to generate an awful lot of money and support among real people. I'm not awfully fond of Mr Gore, but he is pretty smart and well-educated and any sensible analysis of his fundraising activities needs to balanced against a history in which Republicans outspent Democrats dramatically--it's hard not to see Republican complaints about the Clinton/Gore fundraising as analogous to their complaints about many of the administration's policies: how dare they steal our issues/our techniques?



I think they both deserve to be treated seriously, courteously, and dispassionately. The chance of this happening in the current media atmosphere is about equal to the chance I will wake up tall, blonde, and skinny. Why does not a professional journalist realize this as well?



--Alan Kornheiser



(To reply, click here.)



(3/31)





I'm not surprised Governor Bush could impress the Texas Monthly writers with his policy expertise in a friendly, sympathetic small-group discussion. Most journalists hardly study policy at all; very little expertise is required to impress them. And, there isn't a politician alive who does not look more impressive talking to a sympathetic small group than he does to a large audience.



I didn't see any recognition in their discussion that a Governor's education policy, however successful, might not be terribly relevant to the conduct of foreign relations and management of the Pentagon. Yet the next President is very likely going to spend much more time in each of these areas that in education, all campaign rhetoric to the contrary notwithstanding.



Finally, I had to laugh at the comment that a dropped "g" at the end of the word "asking" identifies Bush as a Texan. Here in Wisconsin we have a very successful Governor who uses only two "g's", the one in "Governor" and his middle initial. I promise you that no one will ever mistake Tommy Thompson for a Texan.



--Joseph E Britt



(To reply, click here.)





Uh, who the hell is Joe Nick? And what is he so cranky about? Am I missing something?



--Paul



(To reply, click here.)

[Yes you were. Joe Nick Patoski replied here, filling in with the missing entry that made everyone else think he was cranky.]



(3/28)



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