Nov. 21, 2000 | By attempting to stir up resentment in the military
ranks and impugn
Vice President Al Gore's patriotism over the weekend, the closest associates
of
Gov. George W. Bush demonstrated their unfitness to exercise the power
they seek so avidly.
To the extent that the sequestered Republican candidate himself approved
such questionable
tactics -- as he presumably must have done -- the same description
applies to Bush personally.
There is, of course, nothing wrong with Republican attorneys arguing
on behalf of any absentee
ballot they feel should be tallied in support of their candidate --
whether it originated at a military
installation or elsewhere. Nor is it unfair for them to point out that
Americans serving abroad may
face special difficulties in meeting the requirements of election law,
including timely postmarks.
On its face, that is a position that engenders natural sympathy among
most Americans
(as the Gore campaign ought to have immediately realized).
But as with so many complaints voiced by the Bush campaign in recent
days, there was scant
evidence to support their claim that Democratic Party or the Gore campaign
was seeking to
target absentee ballots sent in by military personnel for disqualification.
The Republicans pointed
to a memorandum on overseas absentee ballots prepared by a Democratic
lawyer in Tallahassee
that, on closer examination, merely explains technical aspects of Florida
election law -- in much
the same fashion as a memo reportedly sent out by the GOP. And by Sunday,
Gore's running mate,
Sen. Joe Lieberman, had supported the idea that the nixed military
ballots should somehow by
counted, as did, on Monday, Florida's attorney general, also a Democrat.
Lawyers on both sides are well advised to examine each one with care.
But the vaunted Republican admiration for the rigid "rule of law"
apparently fades
whenever their partisan interests are threatened: Ironic,
considering reports of Republican
manipulation of absentee ballots both in this election and in past
Florida races.
Bush's lieutenants, however, went much further than their usual sniping
when they promoted the
inflammatory statements by Gov. Marc Racicot, R-Mont., and retired
Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf.
Their manipulation of patriotic fervor was typically cynical, but far
worse was their disgraceful effort
to alienate service personnel from the second-highest official of the
existing civilian government.
That doesn't seem to have mattered much to Schwarzkopf, who now regularly
lends his illustrious
presence to Republican publicity. At the behest of his Kennebunkport
cronies, Stormin' Norman
suggested that "men and women of the armed forces" were being unfairly
denied "the right to vote
for the president of the United States who will be their commander
in chief," while "other ballots
... have already been counted twice and are now being counted a third
time." Schwarzkopf's remarks,
echoed more harshly by Bush communications director Karen Hughes, set
up the frothing Racicot
-- who declared that "the vice president's lawyers have gone to war
in my judgment against the
men and women who serve in our armed forces."
This certainly isn't the first time Republicans have misused their advantage
among the uniformed
ranks for partisan purposes. Such schemes are an intermittent temptation,
dating to the coup-plotting
against Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1930s, and the attempt to destabilize
Harry S Truman by
right-wing forces rallying around Gen. Douglas MacArthur in the 1950s.
Remember when
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., warned President Clinton not to visit a military
base in North Carolina
because he might not be safe there? In a democracy, that kind of rhetoric
gives off a sinister smell
of sedition. It is one reason why the most rabid GOP partisans, like
Racicot, seem to deserve to
be nicknamed Banana Republicans.
Until recently, the avuncular Schwarzkopf wouldn't seem to fit that
unflattering description.
Since his retirement, the salty old soldier who became famous for his
televised press conferences
during the Gulf War has gone about making his fortune as an author,
inspirational speaker
("Leadership: From the War Room to the Board Room" is his usual theme,
rallying the troops
of bankers and salespeople from coast to coast), and corporate director
(Home Shopping Network,
Remington Arms). He also serves on the boards of charities dedicated
to conservation and sick children.
Yet in his current devotion to the ambitions of his old boss' son, Schwarzkopf
has gone a bit overboard.
So it has seemed since last summer, at least, when he appeared on the
deck of the USS New Jersey,
while that vessel was being tastelessly deployed to celebrate the Republican
Convention in Philadelphia.
Having endorsed George W. Bush and his old friend Dick Cheney, the
retired general later showed
up in a controversial "public service" commercial, created at the behest
of Florida Secretary of
State Katherine Harris, urging viewers to get out and vote. (He didn't
need to say for whom.)
Using his celebrity to push Bush is Schwarzkopf's right as an American,
of course, even though it
looks tacky whenever a military figure exploits public reverence for
partisan aims. (It looks even
sillier to anyone familiar with the Texas governor's own military record,
but that's another story.)
And if the former general feels that the votes of servicepeople are
being unfairly excluded, then surely
he has a right to speak out about that, too. Where Schwarzkopf may
have crossed a line was in allowing
himself to be used to damage the reputation and authority of the second
in line to the presidency.
Even so, he seems entirely innocent when his behavior is compared with
the demagogic conduct of
the Banana Republicans who used him and his good name. The closer that
Bush gets to the Oval Office,
the uglier his campaign's tactics are becoming. Should he eventually
take over, he will be trailing a faint
but still offensive whiff of the jackboot.