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Will the real Howard Dean please stand up? [Joe Klein disses Dean: RECKLESS, CARELESS, ADOLESCENT]
TIME ^ | Jan 11, 2004 | Joe Klein

Posted on 01/11/2004 1:58:28 PM PST by nwrep

Sunday, Jan. 11, 2004

In Indianola, Iowa, last week, Howard Dean said the most amazing thing. He was talking about free trade. He said that if his trade policy—a tax on products from countries that don't meet labor and environmental standards—was enacted there would be some bad news: "Prices will go up at your local Wal-Mart." But, he added, there would be good news too. American jobs would be protected. Immigrants would be less likely to come to America, since their wages at home would probably increase. A stable middle class would be created in developing countries.

Let's leave aside the merits of the argument, which are dubious at best. Let's go back to "Prices will go up at your local Wal-Mart." Citizen Dean is now on record in favor of higher taxes and higher prices. This is either refreshingly candid, remarkably courageous or stupendously boneheaded—perhaps a bit of all three. And it leaves me with a real Dean conundrum. After a year of exposure to rampaging Deaniocracy, I still can't figure the guy out.

On the one hand, Dean is doing many of the things I've always admired in politicians. He is bold; he projects confidence and strength—the latter a quality not often found in Democrats. He is willing, obviously, to tell audiences some unpleasant truths. He is also gloriously free of the rhetorical, demographic and intellectual shackles that come with political consultants, pollsters and the other skittish, spineless purveyors of the conventional wisdom. He not only speaks plain English, he speaks unafraid English. Consequently, he has reopened the Democratic Party—formerly a political nursing home—to idealistic young people. His position on the most important issue, the war in Iraq, still makes sense: there was no immediate threat and therefore no casus belli.

But there is a monumental "on the other hand" with Dean. There is a recklessness about the man, an adolescent screw-you defiance that runs much deeper than the steady stream of gaffes produced by his projectile candor. In Exeter, N.H., last month I watched as he called the moderate Democratic Leadership Council "the Republican wing of the Democratic Party." I could see the "Republican wing" dig occur to him as he was talking about the need to bring Democrats together. His face lit up, his eyes danced, and he couldn't resist the pleasure of the zinger, even though it undercut his intended message and might cost him support down the road. He knew exactly what he was doing.

The carelessness extends to many of Dean's policy statements. His position on trade, for example. Dean assumes that the threat of American tariffs would force countries like China to raise salaries and standards—but such a threat would merely be another form of the arrogant, ineffective unilateralism that Dean has rightly criticized in Iraq. Trade sanctions require global cooperation. Recent history suggests that most countries, including those of the European Union, are more interested in low prices than in human rights (especially in China). In any case, as Bill Clinton used to say, the factory jobs that have gone away aren't coming back, and the only way to create new ones is the hard way—through innovation and a better-educated work force. But Dean's brand of straight talk leaves little room for complexity, and his self-proclaimed "intuitive" style leaves plenty of room for error.

My Dean problem, though, runs deeper than policy. I'm not sure how all the pieces of his personality fit together. I don't know how his almost casual anger and adolescent taunting coexist with the patient idealism inherent in his belated decision to become a doctor. In my experience, even the most arrogant doctors tend to be careful sorts, but Dean is noisy and precipitate.

He has trafficked in rumors, as when he mentioned on National Public Radio that there was "an interesting theory" that the President was told in advance by the Saudis about the Sept. 11 attacks. He quickly disavowed the theory, but no responsible politician, much less a candidate for President, should raise such slander without firm proof. I wonder about his often blatant cynicism—how he could suddenly, after insisting that his faith was a private matter, say last week that God had inspired his decision to allow gay civil unions. I admire his wife's choice not to be involved in the campaign and his own choice not to take a maudlin autobiographical path on the stump, but these decisions leave a void. They make it harder to know what sort of man he is. I wonder how he delivered bad news to his patients.

All this, and a certain amount of journalistic voyeurism, lead me to hope that Dean doesn't wrap up the nomination too quickly. We don't know enough about him yet. I'd like to see how he fares in a crisis. Clinton died half a dozen times in 1992 and always showed a winning resilience. In 2000 George W. Bush was clobbered in New Hampshire and showed a ruthlessness in demolishing John McCain in South Carolina that he later repeated in the Florida ballot dispute. Howard Dean has had a relatively easy ride so far. I want to see how he holds it together if he loses a crucial primary or two.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; dean; howarddean; joeklein; unfit

1 posted on 01/11/2004 1:58:29 PM PST by nwrep
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To: nwrep
Howard Dean: I am standing up!
2 posted on 01/11/2004 2:09:51 PM PST by AZLiberty (Always lurk on the Right side of life -- FreeRepublic.com)
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To: All
Hey, I don't mean to be nosey...
... but I'd really like some bacon,
or some help for FR.

3 posted on 01/11/2004 2:10:48 PM PST by Support Free Republic (Freepers post from sun to sun, but a fundraiser bot's work is never done.)
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To: nwrep
Whoa... This Joe Klein? The Clinton Machine is rolling out the big guns now.
4 posted on 01/11/2004 2:17:34 PM PST by Leroy S. Mort
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To: nwrep
"I'm not sure how all the pieces of his personality fit together."

Simple. It's little guy syndrome.

Not all short men have it, but Howard's got it bad.

Or, to be more precise, it has him.

5 posted on 01/11/2004 2:28:19 PM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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To: nwrep
Compare and contrast:

Clinton died half a dozen times in 1992 and always showed a winning resilience.

In 2000 George W. Bush was clobbered in New Hampshire and showed a ruthlessness in demolishing John McCain in South Carolina that he later repeated in the Florida ballot dispute.

Democrats show "winning resilience"; Republicans show "ruthlessness." But no, the media isn't biased.

6 posted on 01/11/2004 2:32:52 PM PST by NYCVirago
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To: nwrep
The media is completely failing to cover the Civil War in the rat party between the Clintons versus Dean/Gore for control of the DNC. I am rooting for Bill and Hillary, since the corrupt buttbay Terry McAwful is so totally and wonderfully incompetent.
7 posted on 01/11/2004 2:56:16 PM PST by FormerACLUmember (I say the emperor has no clothes. Doesn't anyone else see this?)
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To: FormerACLUmember
Yup, the Clinton Machine is getting into top gear. I'm favoring Dean in this battle -- anything to get the Clinton corruption out of public life for the long term.
8 posted on 01/11/2004 2:59:05 PM PST by expatpat
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To: nwrep
Dean's an egomaniac. Egomaniacs (Clinton, Perot) have an uncanny ability to sense what their audiences want and they give it to them, in spades. And their audiences are mesmerized ("The guy knows EXACTLY what I'm thinking!).

People who aren't self-centered listen to what others are saying and respond to them based on that, so they're not seen as omniscient.

All egomaniacs eventually bring themselves down, some sooner than others. Perot crashed and burned two months after announcing for president in 1992. Clinton's hubris cost him control of both the House and the Senate two years after his election; his selfishness caused his impeachment four years later.

It's only a matter of time for Dean. If he's the nominee, he's already shown himself to be so loose-lipped that the accumulation of gaffes, malapropisms, and hot-headedness will take its toll in the minds of voters (it's already starting to).

We can only pray that Dean is the nominee, with another egomaniac as his VP, Wesley Clark.

9 posted on 01/11/2004 3:02:17 PM PST by sinkspur (Adopt a shelter dog or cat! You'll save one life, and maybe two!)
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To: expatpat
Amazing how once Hillary and Bill give the orders, the press in lockstep ferociously pounces on Dr. Dean faster than a mountain lion on a California jogger.
10 posted on 01/11/2004 3:03:46 PM PST by FormerACLUmember (I say the emperor has no clothes. Doesn't anyone else see this?)
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To: NYCVirago
yes, I'm so glad the media people have told us they aren't biased. I almost got confused and thought they were. It sure beats having to think.
11 posted on 01/11/2004 3:04:01 PM PST by Iowa_Clone (Iowa = beautiful land)
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To: nwrep
Dean is due for a perot like meltdown any minute. The American people don't want a nut in the white house. Unless something bizare happens Dean will lose, and lose big.
12 posted on 01/11/2004 3:23:10 PM PST by Cubs Fan
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To: FormerACLUmember
Journalists seem to be a bunch of wimps who unthinkingly follow the actions of a few press leaders, who get their instructions from the Clinton mafia.
13 posted on 01/11/2004 7:31:26 PM PST by expatpat
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To: expatpat
Dean is a whacko. Award him some non-sensitive post like Postmaster General, where the only harm he can do is misdeliver mail.
14 posted on 01/11/2004 7:38:05 PM PST by Ciexyz
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To: expatpat
Journalists seem to be a bunch of wimps who unthinkingly follow the actions of a few press leaders, who get their instructions from the Clinton mafia.

Absolutely true.

15 posted on 01/11/2004 8:00:08 PM PST by FormerACLUmember (I say the emperor has no clothes. Doesn't anyone else see this?)
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To: nwrep
"Rich kid" jerkiness, never checked by any serious adversity?
16 posted on 01/11/2004 8:10:37 PM PST by 185JHP ( Freedom is my favorite word for "nothing left to prove.")
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To: nwrep
Looks like the Hillary goons are hard at work dissing Dean; Hillary can't allow Dean to win!
17 posted on 01/11/2004 8:41:10 PM PST by CyberAnt ("America is the GREATEST NATION on the face of the earth")
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To: Cubs Fan
The image I like--I heard some radio caller suggest this last week--is the chief of police in the Pink Panther movies, played by Herbert Lom. He's gradually being driven crazy by Clouseau's bumbling ineptitude, and everyone is just waiting for him to snap.

That's how I picture Dean.
18 posted on 01/11/2004 11:06:37 PM PST by Choose Ye This Day (Then: "Ask not what your country can do for you" Now: "You sit down. You had your say.")
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