March 11, 2004
NO FDR:
Would FDR Run Those 9/11 Ads? (David S. Broder, March 11, 2004, Washington Post)
[I]s it, as supporters of John Kerry and other critics suggest, wrong for Republicans to convert the emotions of that national tragedy into grist for a political campaign?To answer that question, I went back, with help from Washington Post researcher Brian Faler, to 1944, when Franklin D. Roosevelt, almost three years after Pearl Harbor, was running for reelection. What you learn from such an exercise is that Bush is a piker compared with FDR when it comes to wrapping himself in the mantle of commander in chief.
Item: FDR did not go to the Democratic convention in Chicago where he was nominated for a fourth term. A few days before it opened, he sent a letter to the chairman of the Democratic Party explaining his availability for the nomination. And what an explanation!
"All that is within me cries out to go back to my home on the Hudson River, to avoid public responsibilities and to avoid also the publicity which in our democracy follows every step of the nation's chief executive."
But, he wrote, "every one of our sons serving in this war has officers from whom he takes his orders. Such officers have superior officers. The President is the Commander in Chief, and he, too, has his superior officer -- the people of the United States. . . . If the people command me to continue in this office and in this war, I have as little right to withdraw as the soldier has to leave his post in the line."
Item: Roosevelt delivered his acceptance speech to the convention by radio from where? From the San Diego Naval Station, because, he said, "The war waits for no elections. Decisions must be made, plans must be laid, strategy must be carried out."
FDR also accused poor, inept Tom Dewey of borrowing his political tactics from European fascists at a time when we were at war with same. Posted by Orrin Judd at March 11, 2004 6:08 PM
No, that was Truman in '48. The ten commissions rising out of Pearl Harbor, didn't do much but
stigmatize two Navy Admirals. while absolving
Roosevelt. Much like Kennedy's brave move to
fire Dulles, Cabell, & Bissell, for his own
incompetence. Most of the actual staFF work in FDR's administration was in the hands of fellow travellers like Hopkins, Currie, Hiss, Duggan & and their patron, Henry Wallace; the persistence
of dots not being connected, and outright fiascoes
is what prompted McCarthy's scrutiny of George Marshall
No, that was Truman in '48. The ten commissions rising out of Pearl Harbor, didn't do much but
stigmatize two Navy Admirals. while absolving
Roosevelt. Much like Kennedy's brave move to
fire Dulles, Cabell, & Bissell, for his own
incompetence. Most of the actual staFF work in FDR's administration was in the hands of fellow travellers like Hopkins, Currie, Hiss, Duggan & and their patron, Henry Wallace; the persistence
of dots not being connected, and outright fiascoes
is what prompted McCarthy's scrutiny of George Marshall
The idea that politics in the U.S. today are singularly bitter and vituperative is about as idiotic an idea as we have.
Posted by: Paul Cella at March 12, 2004 8:18 AM