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- To: MLUG discussion <EMAIL:PROTECTED>
- Subject: [MLUG - DISCUSSION] GOP Insider Vic Gold Launches a Broadside at the State of the Party
- From: Mike Miller <EMAIL:PROTECTED>
- Date: Tue, 3 Apr 2007 12:55:52 -0500 (CDT)
- Delivery-date: Tue, 03 Apr 2007 12:56:07 -0500
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Here's some analysis from a [former] Bush family friend and GOP insider,
Vic Gold (article below). Quote:
Gold says he felt compelled to write his book because what he considers
the depredations of the Bush administration -- the war, violations of
civil liberties, expansion in government, the politicization of the
Justice Department, to name just a few -- have violated his sense of
what the Republican Party should stand for.
Mike
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/01/AR2007040101211_pf.html
Washington Post
April 2, 2007; C01
Rightist Indignation
GOP Insider Vic Gold Launches a Broadside at the State of the Party
By Michael Abramowitz, Washington Post Staff Writer
Vic Gold heard from Lynne Cheney a few weeks before George W. Bush was
sworn in as president in January 2001. Cheney had an assignment for her
old friend: She wanted Gold to write the profiles of her and her husband,
the new vice president, for the official Inauguration program.
The veteran journalist and GOP campaign operative was a natural choice.
After all, he had shared an office with Lynne Cheney at Washingtonian
magazine before she became chairman of the National Endowment for the
Humanities -- and they even worked on a satirical novel together.
Gold was also an old friend of the new president's father, having worked
with George H.W. Bush on his campaigns and co-written his autobiography.
The association dated back to 1964, when Bush 41 was an unsuccessful
Senate candidate in Texas and Gold a press assistant to unsuccessful
presidential candidate Barry Goldwater.
So Gold was also asked to write the official bios of the new president and
first lady.
"With Texas deep in his heart, America's 43rd president is an optimistic
man of faith and family," he proclaimed in the program.
Gold was equally effusive about Dick Cheney : "A man of gravitas with a
quick and easy wit; a conservative who'll see a road less traveled; a
political realist who sees his country and the world around him not in
terms of leaden problems but golden opportunities."
At a lunch recently at a downtown Washington hotel, Gold, 78, hands over
the program, now an artifact of seemingly ancient history. He is trying to
explain why it was so hard to write his new book, one whose title
encapsulates what he now thinks of his onetime friends: "Invasion of the
Party Snatchers: How the Holy-Rollers and the Neo-Cons Destroyed the GOP."
The two men at the top, he says, were men he knew pretty well -- or at
least he thought he did.
"What I described there was the Cheney we all thought we knew," Gold says
ruefully.
His book, to be published this month by Sourcebooks with an initial print
run of 20,000 copies, offers quite a different assessment of the two most
powerful men in Washington. Under Bush and Cheney, he argues, the GOP has
moved away from principles of small government, prudent foreign policy and
leaving people alone to live their private lives -- all views Gold
associates with his hero, Goldwater. "Invasion of the Party Snatchers"
makes plain Gold's contempt for the direction of his party and the
guidance of its leaders.
"For all the Rove-built facade of his being a 'strong' chief executive,
George W. Bush has been, by comparison to even hapless Jimmy Carter, the
weakest, most out of touch president in modern times," Gold writes. "Think
Dan Quayle in cowboy boots."
Gold is even more withering in his observations of Cheney. "A vice
president in control is bad enough. Worse yet is a vice president out of
control."
For Gold, Cheney brings to mind the adage of Swiss writer Madame de Stael,
who wrote, "Men do not change, they unmask themselves." Cheney has a deep
streak of paranoia and megalomania, Gold suggests -- but he says he did
not see it at first.
"He was hiding who he really was," Gold says. "He was waiting for an
opportunity."
In many ways, Gold's tale of disillusionment is a familiar one. There are
plenty of veterans of Reagan and Bush 41 around town who believe Bush and
Cheney trashed the institutions and party they helped build from the
wreckage of the Goldwater campaign.
But there aren't many who have been on a first-name basis with those they
believe are doing the trashing. There aren't many like Vic Gold.
* * *
One of the first things friends say of Gold, who has the small, athletic
frame of a bantamweight boxer, is that he can occasionally blow his stack.
David A. Keene, the veteran conservative political activist, recalls first
meeting him when the two worked for Vice President Spiro Agnew in the
early 1970s. "This madman comes into the office, screaming and yelling,"
Keene says. "All of a sudden he comes back and says, 'I am Vic Gold.' "
Keene told how Gold later briefly quit the 1980 presidential campaign of
George H.W. Bush, for whom he served as a traveling aide-de-camp, over a
slight involving a speech. Keene, a senior official on the campaign, and
campaign head James A. Baker III persuaded the candidate to call Gold and
apologize. Bush did so grudgingly -- only to come back and complain to his
handlers that the idea had backfired: When Bush reached Gold, the
combustible campaign aide told him off.
Keene said he and Baker found the incident greatly amusing, and the
Bush-Gold relationship survived. Gold came back to work on the campaign,
and the two have remained friendly ever since; Gold helped write his 1987
autobiography, "Looking Forward." He says he still talks to the former
president a couple of times a year.
For his part, the former president indicated continuing affection for his
former aide. "Vic Gold is a friend and always will be," Bush said in a
statement relayed through his spokesman. "I have not read the book, but if
it is as critical of the president as I have heard, I am sure I wouldn't
like it."
The path that took Gold from the Goldwater campaign to open revolt with
the current Bush administration is a colorful one. After growing up in New
Orleans, Gold went to law school in Alabama before moving to Washington in
the late 1950s to work for a public relations firm. He voted for Kennedy
in 1960 but "fell off the wagon" with the Bay of Pigs. He was attracted to
Goldwater, he says, because he saw him as a contrarian and liked his tough
anti-communism and libertarian streak.
In his classic narrative of the 1964 campaign, Teddy White described
Gold's work as deputy press secretary as critical to helping Goldwater get
through to a hostile press corps. Gold "carried their bags, got them to
the trains on time, out-shouted policemen on their behalf, bedded them
down and woke them up, and before they knew it, the correspondents, about
95 percent anti-Goldwater by conviction, had been won to a friendship with
the diminutive intellectual which spilled over onto his hero," White
wrote.
Gold went to work for Agnew on the "nattering nabobs" campaign of 1970, in
which the vice president barnstormed the country attacking incumbent
Democratic senators. His association with Agnew helped expand a circle of
exotic friends that have over the years included Frank Sinatra, Alabama
football coach Bear Bryant and baseball Hall of Famer Stan Musial.
He later worked with Lynne Cheney at Washingtonian magazine (he is still
on the masthead and writes occasional articles), where he suggested she
work with him as the co-author of a 1988 novel, "The Body Politic," about
a Republican vice president who dies, as he puts it, "in the carnal
embrace of a curvaceous television news reporter." When controversy
erupted about the book after Dick Cheney was selected as Bush's running
mate, Lynne assured reporters that the pivotal sex scene was written by
her co-author, Gold remembers.
Lynne Cheney declined to comment for this article. But after being
informed about his new book, she called her former co-author on Thursday,
inquiring whether it was just an "April Fool's" joke, according to Gold.
When Gold told that it was not, Cheney merely said, "I am sorry to hear
that."
* * *
On a recent Saturday morning, Gold is sitting on the edge of a reclining
red armchair in the study of his modest home in Fairfax City. He is
surrounded by mementos of his passions -- University of Alabama football,
St. Louis Cardinals baseball and GOP politics.
There's a black-and-white photo of Agnew and then-Attorney General John
Mitchell gesturing at a news conference, in which the vice president has
written in the imagined conversation, "Yes Mr. Attorney General, that is
the voluble pugnacious Victor Gold -- and I agree, he is a tough SOB."
There's also a picture of himself with the future vice president and an
affectionate inscription from Dick Cheney: "The only other man who could
have co-authored a book with my wife!"
Gold writes in this red chair by longhand -- it's been uncomfortable to
work at a keyboard since an auto accident 15 years ago -- and his wife of
55 years, Dale, types up his work on the computer. Today, it is a perch
for Gold's fulminations about the current administration, as he explains
what prompted him to go public with his disillusionment. Words tumble out
profusely, as he describes the different phases of grief -- first
disappointment, then frustration, finally anger.
The war was a big factor. It seemed to Gold to run counter to the
traditionally conservative notion of keeping clear of foreign
entanglements. He was infuriated by Bush-Cheney moves to augment executive
power. And he was disgusted by the Terri Schiavo episode, which to this
old libertarian seemed emblematic of a modern GOP takeover by religious
zealots.
"I really came to the conclusion that there was a threat to our system, to
our way of life, and it was coming from those I thought were my people."
"I knew Agnew personally -- he did not represent a threat to the American
way of life," Gold says. "Nixon, at the bottom of his heart, I am not sure
what he wanted. I was never a Nixon admirer." But, he adds, "I knew the
limitations on what they could do."
Gold is well aware that his conclusions will not sit well with the first
families of the United States, though he seems less worried about the
impact on the Cheneys and the president than on his old friend, the 41st
president. A relationship with the Cheneys, which once included lunches
with Lynne when she was at the NEH, has cooled. Gold and his wife went to
a celebratory party at the Naval Observatory the day after the 2001
Inauguration -- but since then he and Lynne have spoken only occasionally.
"I don't owe them a damn thing," Gold says.
But Gold says he recently wrote a letter to George H.W. Bush explaining
himself and alerting him to the book -- and he says the former president
offered a gracious reply to the effect of "You always called them like you
saw them." On the few occasions they have talked or gotten together in
recent years -- the last time was a "pleasant" lunch at Kennebunkport in
the summer of 2005 -- Gold says he has purposely steered away from any
talk of the current administration and his son, whom he refers to as
"Young George."
"As a father, he's got to feel torn up because he sees this going on and
obviously, obviously he has not been able to influence [the president],"
says Gold. "George W. had one of the greatest resources in foreign
relations and political experience in the world -- his old man! What if he
didn't have this hubris of 'I am going to do it on my own'? If he had
listened to his old man in terms of what to do after 9/11 and everything,
he wouldn't have been in the mess he is in right now, and the country
would not be in the mess it is right now."
Gold says he felt compelled to write his book because what he considers
the depredations of the Bush administration -- the war, violations of
civil liberties, expansion in government, the politicization of the
Justice Department, to name just a few -- have violated his sense of what
the Republican Party should stand for.
"Kennedy said sometimes political loyalty, party loyalty asks too much,"
he says.
Writing the book was hard because of his past associations. But, with a
chuckle, Gold borrows the line that Cheney used after cursing at Sen.
Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) on the Senate floor:
"I feel better for having done it."
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