If you read the stories on President Bush's decision today to replace resigning White House Chief of Staff Andy Card with Budget Director Joshua Bolten, you'd think running the government was as easy as selling soap.
"Bush ... gave Bolten authority to make further changes in a White House staff that even Republicans have complained is tired, insular and lacking fresh ideas," the Associated Press
offered.But rather than turn to an outsider -- as many Republicans sought -- Bush went in-house. Bolten has been with the administration since its beginning, spending two years as a deputy to Card, and three heading the Office of Management of Budget. If the White House tries to spin that Bolten isn't as "tired" as others who have been in Bush's White House since 2000, should we assume that's because he hasn't worked as hard?
But how about his other attributes.
"Josh is a creative policy thinker," Bush
said in introducing Bolten. "He's a man of candor and humor and directness, who's comfortable with responsibility and knows how to lead."
Yet, Bolten wasn't able to "creatively" manage the budget, which grew from
$6.59 trillion when he took over OMB in June, 2003, to
$8.36 trillion. The debt grew so quickly with Bolten at the helm that the White House had to ask Congress to
raise its debt ceiling two out of three years.
If he was more creative, maybe Bolten would have come up with a
Luntzian term to describe our out-of-control debt. Something like the "Healthy Budget Initiative" or "Responsible Spending For A New America."
Or, following Bush's lead, he could have called for a "War On Federal Debt."
What about Bolten's "directness?" Bolten twice tried to impose a funding cap on the federal transportation bill (at $256 billion in
2004 and $283.9 billion in
2005.) Congress came up with $286.5 billion in its legislation. When Bolten asked Bush to back up his cap with a veto, Bush said no, giving the go-ahead to one of the most
pork-laden pieces of legislation in the history of the country.
Let's face it. No matter how creative or direct a White House Chief of Staff is, it only matters if the man in charge reacts appropriately.
Card, you might remember, was the one who
whispered to Bush on Sept. 11, 2001: "The nation is under attack." Bush, you might remember, sat in a Florida classroom for seven minutes, doing nothing.
Amazingly, in the coverage of Card's resignation, almost no print media
remembered that piece of history. (Television coverage was more likely to include a clip from the movie
Farenheit 9/11.)
Maybe the White House press corps has become too "tired" and "insular," too.
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This item first appeared at
JABBS.