[Mb-civic] Senior White House Staff May Be Wearing Down - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Mar 13 03:57:04 PST 2006
Senior White House Staff May Be Wearing Down
By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, March 13, 2006; A04
Andrew H. Card Jr. wakes at 4:20 in the morning, shows up at the White
House an hour or so later, convenes his senior staff at 7:30 and then
proceeds to a blur of other meetings that do not let up until long after
the sun sets. He gets home at 9 or 10 at night and sometimes fields
phone calls until 11 p.m. Then he gets up and does it all over again.
Of all the reasons that President Bush is in trouble these days, not to
be overlooked are inadequate REM cycles. Like chief of staff Card, many
of the president's top aides have been by his side nonstop for more than
five years, not including the first campaign, recount and transition.
This is a White House, according to insiders, that is physically and
emotionally exhausted, battered by scandal and drained by political
setbacks.
"By the time you get to year six, there's never a break . . . and you
get tired," said Ed Rollins, who served five years in President Ronald
Reagan's White House. "There's always a crisis. It wears you down. This
has been a White House that hasn't really had much change at all. There
is a fatigue factor that builds up. You sometimes don't see the crisis
approaching. You're not as on guard as you once were."
To Rollins, the uproar over an Arab-owned firm taking over management of
some American ports represents a classic example. Bush and his staff did
not know about the arrangement approved by his administration, and after
congressional Republicans revolted, issued an ineffective veto threat
that only exacerbated the dispute, which climaxed with the collapse of
the deal last week. "This White House would not have made this mistake
two years ago," Rollins said.
Bush's problems go beyond the fatigue factor. An unpopular foreign war,
high energy prices and the nation's worst natural disaster in decades
have dragged his poll ratings down to the lowest level of any
second-term president, other than Richard M. Nixon, in the last
half-century. Lately it seems to many in the White House that they
cannot catch a break -- insurgents blow up a holy shrine in Iraq,
tipping the country toward civil war; Vice President Cheney accidentally
shoots a hunting partner; a former top Bush adviser is arrested on theft
charges.
But at a time when Bush needs his staff to be sharp to help steer past
these political shoals and find ways to turn things around, he still has
the same core group working since he turned his sights toward the White
House. That group includes Card, deputy chief of staff Karl Rove, senior
adviser Michael J. Gerson, counselor Dan Bartlett, budget director
Joshua B. Bolten, press secretary Scott McClellan and national security
adviser Stephen J. Hadley.
The succession of crisis after crisis has taken its toll. Some in the
White House sound frazzled. While there are few stories of aides nodding
off in meetings, some duck outside during the day so the fresh air will
wake them up. "We're all burned out," said one White House official who
did not want to be named for fear of angering superiors. "People are
just tired."
White House officials are never genuinely away from the job. Tied to
their BlackBerrys and cellular telephones, they are often called to duty
even during rare vacations. Weekends are often just another workday.
Hadley, for one, schedules a full day of meetings every Saturday. Card
comes to the White House on days off to go bicycle riding with Bush.
While other professions demand 14-hour days and six- or seven-day weeks,
few involve as much consequence, much less the intense scrutiny of the
Internet age. A former Bush aide said, "You don't really realize until
you're gone" just how exhausting it really is.
For the record, White House officials reject the suggestion that
exhaustion has dulled their political instincts or contributed to the
spate of trouble. "People work very, very hard," said White House
communications director Nicolle Wallace, and "I'd be lying to say that
there aren't some people on some days" who are weary. But "the other
side of being here six years is incredible wisdom and steadiness and
experience." Moreover, she added, "there's been enough turnover that
there's new energy."
Any discussion of the fatigue factor in Republican circles invariably
turns to Card, a low-key, self-effacing and well-liked Washington
veteran who has been managing Bush's White House team since three weeks
after the November 2000 election. Card brought considerable experience
to the task, having worked in the Reagan White House, then serving
President George H.W. Bush as deputy White House chief of staff and
later transportation secretary.
In his current role, Card has proved to be a marathon man, capable of
enduring the most brutal hours in perhaps the most brutal job in
Washington for longer than anyone in modern times. Only one other person
has served as White House chief of staff longer, Sherman Adams, the top
aide to President Dwight D. Eisenhower in a far less frenetic, wired
era. And if Card makes it to Nov. 1, he will surpass Adams's record,
according to the Eisenhower library.
Card retains enormous respect inside and outside the White House, but
some Republicans whisper about his judgment in the ill-fated selection
of Harriet Miers for the Supreme Court and the handling of Hurricane
Katrina, to name two examples. Card declined to be interviewed, but has
publicly dismissed concerns that his schedule has sapped his energy.
"All my life I have worked kind of this schedule," he told C-SPAN last
fall. "When I was in college, I delivered newspapers early in the
morning and worked at McDonald's late at night. So even when I was in
high school, I would get up in the morning and get the newspapers ready
for the paper boys early in the morning. So I've had this kind of
lifestyle of early-to-bed and early-to-rise -- and so far seem to be
doing pretty well."
Speculation among Republicans that Card would leave at the beginning of
the year proved false or premature. Bush has resisted emulating Reagan,
who brought in a fresh team led by Howard H. Baker Jr. when his second
term was threatened by the Iran-contra scandal. Reagan and Clinton
accepted Washington figures outside their own circles, and each had four
chiefs of staff during their tenures. Bush emphasizes loyalty and
surrounds himself mainly with people he knows.
Many Republicans were struck by the relative lack of ambition of Bush's
State of the Union address, a program including alternative energy
research, science education funding and health care tax breaks but
nothing of the scope of last year's plan to reinvent Social Security.
But some saw that as a reasonable response to the death of the Social
Security effort, a recognition that it would be hard to enact dramatic
domestic initiatives in a time of war. Others wondered if the White
House was running out of ideas.
Grover G. Norquist, head of Americans for Tax Reform and an adviser to
Rove, said he thinks the situation owes not to fatigue but to political
realism at the White House. "What they don't have are unreasonable
expectations of what can be moved through Congress," he said. "It's not
a question of coming up with new ideas. Sometimes you just don't have
the votes."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/12/AR2006031200821.html?nav=hcmodule
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