Unpopular Bill
by digby
Well this is fun.
I’ll just pile on with my own favorite Bill Daley story, which I think fits quite well with the emerging narrative:
This passage from Jeffrey Toobin’s book about the 2000 election recount (in which Daley served as Gore’s campaign chairman) probably illustrates how Daley will be advising the president better than anything else could:
Even though the automatic recount had cut Bush’s lead dramatically in the previous three days, Christopher and Daley offered little hope that the margin could be eliminated completely. “Look you got screwed,” said Daley, “but people get screwed every day. They don’t have a remedy. Black people get screwed all the time. They don’t have a remedy. Sometimes there’s no remedy. There’s nothing you can do about it…
Lieberman did not share the advisers’ reluctance to push forward on all fronts. This became a recurring theme of the post-election period. The Connecticut senator always sounded like a warrior — in private settings. (Much to the frustration of the Hawks on Gore’s team he sounded much different before the cameras.)
Gore too railed against the prophesies of hopelessness he was hearing from Daley. He drew a series of concentric circles on the butcher paper to illustrate what he saw as his responsibilities.Inside the smallest circles were Gore and Lieberman; their closest supporters were in the next circle, then Democrats generally, finally the country as a whole. Gore said his actions had to serve all those groups not just those closest to him. An immediate surrender would be a violation of his obligations to all those who supported him, he said —- all the people in the circles…
In the end Gore thought they shouldn’t make “any momentous decisions.” But it was clear that Daley and Christopher felt any victory for Gore was impossible even though more people had gone to the polls there intending to vote for the Vice President than for Bush. Gore and Lieberman couldn’t wage the battle alone, of course, and their two principle deputies were telling them, in effect, to give up.
This Saturday had begun with Bush and Gore locked in a closer contest than earlier in the week.Indeed, the Vice President had made gains over the past three days. But the day ended with James Baker leading the attack — and Bill Daley and Warren Christopher making the case for surrender.
Who ever could have guessed that he’d be the wrong man for the job?
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