Hearing just a shout of frustration
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JOSEPH N. BELL
I watched Howard Dean’s concession performance after the Iowa caucus.
Not the sound bytes repeated endlessly afterward. I’m talking about
the whole thing, beginning to end. The setting. The nature of the
audience. The emotional environment. The obvious frustration.
Dean had just been pushed into third place in a popularity contest
that he had been heavily favored to win a few days earlier. This jolt
came after two weeks of relentless acrimonious attacks on him from
every position on the political spectrum. And so in that overheated
atmosphere, he hollered and punched his fist in the air and pointed
his finger. I was briefly startled until I considered the
circumstances -- then shrugged it off.
It wasn’t until the next day that I was told by the media sound
bytes, the talk show hosts, the stand-up comedians and some fevered
editorials that Dean’s performance was a sure sign of an unstable
individual and probably disqualified him as a serious presidential
candidate. All this rhetoric clearly hurt Dean in New Hampshire last
Tuesday. He was supposed to win that one, too.
So as the primary circus moves on to South Carolina, I’d like to
tip a glass in Dean’s direction. The verdict of the voters in the
primaries still to come will, of course, finally decide who goes up
against Bush in November, but the once foregone conclusion that it
would be Dean has deteriorated considerably. How much this has to do
with his post-election performance in Iowa, I have no idea. So I
asked that question of Dr. Joseph Pursch, our friendly neighborhood
shrink, who occasionally breaks bread at our house.
“The negative reaction to Dean’s behavior after the loss in Iowa
simply demonstrates that a large segment of the public doesn’t trust
somebody whose self-control degenerates into behavior they are
capable of themselves -- that under the pressure of campaigning, he
turns out to be no better than they are,” he said.
“This isn’t a problem with young people, who find Dean appealing
because in many ways he acts like them by speaking the truth
immediately without regard to consequences,” Pursch said. “But,
generally, we are unforgiving of people seeking public office who
behave as we do or show human weakness. Dean has to dig out of this
place with humor, and he seemed to do that quite well in New
Hampshire.”
This leads me to wonder at the superficiality of the judgments we
pass on our political candidates. I’m old enough to remember Sen.
Edmund Muskie standing in a New Hampshire snowstorm and shedding a
frustrated tear over an outrageous shot at his wife in a local
right-wing newspaper. This public display of emotion probably cost
him the Democratic nomination against Richard Nixon in 1972.
I find a special sort of irony in noting that while Dean was being
pilloried in the media for his Iowa antics, the vice president of the
United States was making speeches here and abroad hanging on doggedly
to the fantasy of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. At the same
time, his own director of the search for those weapons was saying
publicly -- and emphatically -- that the overwhelming weight of
evidence indicated that no such weapons existed. Dick Cheney’s
near-fanatical state of denial got nowhere near the coverage of
Dean’s hollering -- perhaps because Cheney delivered it in soft,
well-modulated tones.
In the primaries to come, Democratic voters may not see Dean as
the strongest opponent to send out against Bush. If that’s how it
plays out, so be it. They may well be right, but I hope that decision
isn’t based on incidents that speak more to his humanity than his
qualifications for the presidency. I’d much rather support a
candidate capable of shouting his frustration to a group of youthful
supporters than one who softly and calmly denies reality.
No matter what happens now to Howard Dean’s candidacy, I feel I
owe him a debt of gratitude. He brought into the open a whole series
of issues on which the Democratic opposition had been cowed into
silence by the fear of being judged unpatriotic. It took Dean to
break through this cowardice, put Iraq on the table and then speak
out for the multitudes of Americans who opposed this war, both before
it took place and after it turned into a quagmire of violence and
chaos.
While his opponents for the nomination were moving aggressively
into the new territory Dean opened up for them, they beat him up over
several statements too honest to be politically expedient. The best
example was his comment that we are no safer after the capture of
Saddam Hussein. At best, this is a simple statement of fact, and --
at worst -- a certainly arguable position, given the evidence we see
today.
Some of his other statements are more difficult to defend --
especially his floating of an unsupported rumor that Bush was
forewarned of the 9/11 attack. Dean should be held accountable for
such assertions, but he should also be allowed the same slack given
other candidates who take far fewer risks.
Maybe all of the candidates of all the parties should have for
ready reference this statement of Dwight Eisenhower: “Here in America
we are descended in blood and in spirit from revolutionists and
rebels -- men and women who dare to dissent from accepted doctrine.
As their heirs, we may never confuse honest dissent with disloyal
subversion.”
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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