Chicken Little couldn’t have said it better: The sky is
falling, really falling, on the White House. They can’t seem to get it right.
They can’t tell which issues are important, which need top priority, what the
citizenry ought to know. Even when something is clearly top priority, they can’t
seem to staff it right by putting highly skilled people in a position to give
the president good advice or do the work.
When a Republican Congress issues a blistering report challenging the competence
and truthfulness of a Republican White House, a Republican president could not
be in worse trouble.
I refer to the report last week documenting in humiliating detail the
shallowness of White House efforts in trying to rescue the storm victims of
Mississippi and Louisiana.
Only the Cheney shooting debacle kept this report from being the top news.
The truth is that events go by so fast that the average citizen, and even those
of us who are paid to keep up with the news, can hardly get a grip on any one
thing.
I call it the merry-go-round effect. Remember as the Revere Beach “Flying
Horses” turned, you could try to reach out and attempt a capture of a brass ring
entitling you to another ride.
Lots of luck; it wasn’t easy. And neither is it easy to remember the failures of
a month ago. Old news vaporizes on the TV. Last week’s newspapers and their
once-big stories are recycled and put out with the trash.
How’s this for a short list of barely remembered White House blunders: the
on-ship speech declaring victory, the refusal to allow pictures of soldiers’
caskets to be photographed, the scuttled nomination of a White House aide for
the Supreme Court, the Valery Plame-Scooter Libby saga, Hurricane Katrina, and
wiretapping of American civilians.
Well, let me add some specificity to the list of mistakes at 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue by telling you about the White Houses’ Hamas election fiasco, a story
that has been lost on the news carousel. Believe me, our attention will refocus
on this issue as Hamas takes office in the Palestinian Authority government.
Let’s go back a month. Remember how surprised the White House was by the Hamas
victory? What was seen in pre-election polls as a 65-70 percent victory for
Fatah over a 30-35 percent showing for Hamas turned out to be just the opposite.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said at a press conference, “I’ve asked [the
staff] why nobody saw [the Hamas victory] coming … It does say something about
us not having a good enough pulse.”
Pulse, Madame Secretary? How about common sense?
College undergrads taking Political Science 101 know that polls work best (or
only) in a first world country where a representative sample of likely voters
can be queried, and where the likely responses won’t be driven by fear and
secrecy.
The Palestinian territories don’t have a wide network of landline telephones.
Phone directories, not listing cell phones, are grossly inaccurate. How do you
find a representative sample in crowded urban areas or refugee camps? If you
ever visited the nooks and crannies of the Muslim quarter of the Old City of
Jerusalem, you understand the problem.
More important, the Palestinian people know that keeping their mouths shut and
their opinions to themselves is not only wise, but life preserving. Vigilantes
shoot or hang those accused of having wrong opinions, wrong friends, or wrong
actions
The State Department, CIA, and White House should never have assumed the
pre-election poll numbers were reasonably accurate. That is why our nation was
not prepared to respond in a planned and useful way to the Hamas victory.
Perhaps the president should not have insisted on holding an election when both
Palestinian and Israeli officials urged delay.
We, all of us, Republican and Democrat, need better people and policies in our
White House.
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