August 5, 2004

A DESTROYER NOT A UNITER:

The Anti-war Hero: Opposition and protest, not mature leadership, have defined John Kerry’s political career. (Howard Husock, 30 July 2004, City Journal)

One thing that just about everybody seems to accept about John Kerry is that he was a “war hero.” Kerry’s staged arrival in Boston for the Democratic convention in a water taxi, surrounded by some of his old crew from the Mekong Delta; the introduction to his nomination acceptance speech by his “band of brothers,” and the first lines of that speech—“I’m John Kerry and I’m reporting for duty”—followed by a snappy salute, all made clear that, in a time of war, his military service is his calling card. In reality, however, Kerry was something else, unique in American history (and in the annals of presidential candidacies). For though he indeed served valiantly in Vietnam, his service wasn’t of the Audie Murphy type—known and celebrated immediately at the time for its own sake. Rather, Kerry’s Vietnam valor became important only as a prelude, a bona fide that gave weight to his true debut on the public stage: as the galvanizing figure of Vietnam Veterans against the War—not so much a war hero as an anti-war hero.

Kerry’s protest stance is no mere footnote to his biography; it has defined his political career, lies at the heart of his appeal, and constitutes a crucial flaw in his fitness to lead. It is a flaw that his generation (my own) has struggled with, often unsuccessfully: recognizing that it is long past time for us to outgrow the self-righteousness of protest and, instead, make the difficult decisions of adult leadership. Kerry’s career offers little assurance that he is ready for the heavy responsibility of the White House; it is a career, rather, conducted very much in the spirit of the Volvo owners’ bumper stickers that I often see here in his home town of Boston: middle-aged executives and parents of grown up children still urging others to “Question Authority.” [...]

Kerry’s Senate career has followed a similar path of critique rather than constructive proposal. Whatever one thinks of the other ultraliberal senator from Massachusetts, Edward Kennedy’s congressional career can show genuine legislative accomplishment—putting his name on consequential bills from the widespread establishment of health maintenance organizations to the requirement that employers offer family and medical leaves to employees. Kerry, though, has “in the majority made his name as an investigator,” note Michael Barone and Grant Unjifusa in their Almanac of American Politics.

In some of Kerry’s Senate work—such as a probe of the corrupt Bank of Credit and Commerce International—he’s struck some pay dirt. But he was also “spending some time up blind alleys with klieg lights,” Barone and Unjifusa observe. The key point here, however, is not whether Kerry the investigator was on solid ground but that his career preference has been that of the critic, not the sponsor, the tearer down rather than the builder up. Even some of his limited legislative accomplishments—for instance, his 1994 fight to limit development of nuclear breeder reactors—have been fundamentally negative.


Harry Truman and Richard Nixon likewise had reputations largely based on their congressional investigations and both were disastrous presidents.

Posted by Orrin Judd at August 5, 2004 12:17 PM
Comments

What makes Truman a "disastrous president"?

Posted by: Brandon at August 5, 2004 12:58 PM

Brandon:

Only two important tasks faced the US at FDR's death--defeating totalitarianism and undoing the welfare state. Truman failed at both, launching us on a five decade Cold War and locking in big government.

Posted by: oj at August 5, 2004 1:06 PM

Gee, if those are the criteria....

Posted by: Barry Meislin at August 5, 2004 2:06 PM

Was there a 'welfare state' in 1945? Was there a 'welfare state' in 1952? How about 1968? Whom to blame?

Would Dewey have hastened its creation, had he been elected in 1944 (or 1948)? Did Eisenhower?

Truman was a good President, especially when compared to his rivals and what they would have become (Dewey, Wallace, Thurmond, etc.). After 12 years of FDR, it was good just to have a common man in the White House.

Nixon was a disaster, but only because he governed on the fly, like FDR and Clinton. He had few friends on the Hill, no real relationship with the public, and enough arrogance to get into real trouble. Of course, if the economy in 1973/74 had been as strong as 98/99, Nixon would not have been forced out, and his "legacy" would be a little different.

Posted by: jim hamlen at August 5, 2004 2:26 PM

You could make that same argument about Kerry against Churchill, and Graham Stewart has, convincingly, in 'Burying Caesar'

Posted by: Harry Eagar at August 5, 2004 4:46 PM

Churchill had been a successful cabinet secretary--maybe the only good one of WWI.

Posted by: oj at August 5, 2004 6:00 PM

And he was run out of office.

Posted by: jim hamlen at August 5, 2004 6:42 PM
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