[Mb-civic] When Partisan Venom Didn't Rule - David S. Broder -
Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Jan 28 05:28:16 PST 2006
When Partisan Venom Didn't Rule
By David S. Broder
Sunday, January 29, 2006; B07
The stench of partisanship is so strong in Washington these days that it
is difficult to remember that it was not always the case that
Republicans and Democrats were at each other's throats. But, in truth,
there was a time when friendship and simple human compassion were far
more powerful than any political differences.
A wonderful reminder of that fact can be found among the oral histories
compiled by two dozen of Ronald Reagan's main associates that are being
released Sunday by the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University
of Virginia. The transcripts are available at http://www.millercenter.org .
One of the tapes was furnished by Max Friedersdorf, who ran the White
House congressional liaison staff for Reagan. Friedersdorf recounts in
the interview what happened while the president was recovering at George
Washington University Hospital after the assassination attempt outside
the Washington Hilton hotel on March 30, 1981.
Reagan was seriously wounded by John Hinckley, and the day after the
shooting, Friedersdorf got a call in the White House from James Baker,
Reagan's chief of staff, who was at the hospital. "Get over here," Baker
commanded.
"I went over to GW Hospital and went up to the president's room,"
Friedersdorf said, "and Jim was outside the room with Mrs. Reagan and
her Secret Service agent. Baker said, 'I want you to stay here until I
tell you to leave.' "
What had happened, Friedersdorf learned, was that Nancy Reagan "was all
upset," because Sen. Strom Thurmond had come over to the hospital a few
hours earlier and somehow had talked his way through the lobby, up the
elevator and into Reagan's room, where he attempted to chat with the
gravely wounded president.
"Mrs. Reagan was outraged, distraught," Friedersdorf said. So Baker
directed him to take up the watch, and "if any congressman or senator
comes around here, make sure the Secret Service doesn't let anybody up,
even on this floor."
Friedersdorf said he remained on duty during daylight hours for the next
three or four days, and then word came from Baker that the president had
recovered enough to start to see people.
The first person to be admitted, Friedersdorf said, was Thomas P. "Tip"
O'Neill, the speaker of the House.
When the Massachusetts Democrat arrived, Nancy Reagan slipped out of the
room and Friedersdorf retreated to a corner of the suite where he could
remain unobtrusive. "Tip got down on his knees next to the bed, and said
a prayer for the president, and he held his hand and kissed him and they
said a prayer together . . . the 23rd Psalm.
"The speaker stayed there quite a while. They never talked too much. I
just heard him say the prayer, then I heard him say, 'God bless you, Mr.
President, we're all praying for you.'
"The Speaker was crying. The president still, I think was a little, he
was obviously sedated, but I think he knew it was the speaker because he
said, 'I appreciate your coming down, Tip.' He held his hand, sat there
by the bed, and held his hand for a long [time]."
When I reached Friedersdorf last week at his retirement home in Florida,
I asked him how it happened that Reagan's first guest was the leading
Democrat on Capitol Hill. "Well," he said, "Tip was third in line of
succession [after the vice president] and the fact he was a Democrat
didn't bother anybody. We didn't even think about it. Tip had been
calling constantly to see how the president was doing. And there was a
bond there.
"I remember," Friedersdorf continued, "the first dinner the Reagans had
in the private residence was for Tip and his wife, and my wife and I
were there. Tip and the president had a drink or two and started
swapping Irish stories.
"Often, after that, Tip would say pretty harsh things about some of our
legislative proposals, and the staff would want Reagan to answer him.
But they trusted each other, and the president would say, 'That's just
Tip,' and let it go."
I asked Friedersdorf if he could imagine that sort of relationship
flourishing now between the Republican president and the top Democrats
in Congress.
"Absolutely not," he said. Sadly, I think he is right.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/27/AR2006012701429.html
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