George
W. Bush's drunk driving arrest: revelation from the past spotlights
political cynicism of the present
By
David Walsh and Barry Grey
4
November 2000
source:
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/nov2000
The
revelation that Texas Governor George W. Bush, then a private
citizen in the oil business, was arrested for drunk driving in
Maine in 1976 should not come as a great shock. The incident does
not make Bush a criminal. Nor does it add much to what a politically
discerning observer already knows about the man.
It
remains to be seen whether this development will significantly
affect next Tuesday's vote. Much depends on the way in which it
is handled by the media, something the World Socialist Web Site
will follow with great interest.
Such
misadventures befall all sorts of people, in and out of public
life. This revelation, however, emerges within a definite political
context, and sheds light not only on Bush the politician, but
on the Republican Party, the media and the US political system
as a whole.
The
exposure of Bush's arrest and his attempt to conceal it from the
public underscore the boundless hypocrisy of both the Republican
campaign and the media establishment that has labored so intently
to lend it credibility. The nineteenth century British Tory leader
Benjamin Disraeli once called a Conservative Party administration
Òan organized hypocrisy.Ó This damning sobriquet hardly does justice
to the cynicism of the Bush camp, which presents itself to the
public as the embodiment of honesty and integrity and casts its
Democratic opponent as a congenital liar, morally contaminated
by his association with Bill Clinton.
Amid
effusions of religious piety, the Republicans claim, with the
tacit endorsement of the media, that a Bush presidency would represent
the return of ethical values to the White House. The past eight
years are painted in the darkest colors, with Clinton portrayed
as a moral leper, and Gore his more or less willing accomplice.
Now
that an aspect of Bush's own personal failings has come to lightÑin
the home stretch of a very close election campaignÑa starkly different
standard is applied by the very pontificators who have seized
on real or imagined lapses by Democratic leaders to cast the Bush
campaign as something akin to a holy crusade.
The
Texas governor held a brief press conference Thursday night, after
the story of his 1976 arrest had broken, to say he regretted the
incident, but that it had no bearing on the current campaign.
He had kept the incident secret, he claimed, in order to shield
his daughters. Without any proof, Bush insinuated and his spokeswoman
Karen Hughes directly charged that the Gore camp had planted the
news item as part of a Òdirty tricksÓ operation.
The
pundits on the evening television talk shows lost no time in denouncing
the revelation about Bush. Vulgar loudmouths like MSNBC TV's Chris
Matthews and the stable of reactionaries on Rupert Murdoch's Fox
network, as well as their inevitable guestsÑDavid Gergen, Bill
Bennett and the likeÑpronounced it entirely illegitimate to pry
into politicians' private lives and bring up past failings. The
1976 incident had nothing to do with Bush's candidacy or his political
views, they all agreed. Bush was almost certainly the victim of
a conspiracy hatched by Gore, Clinton, or both.
These
scoundrels, whose primary function is to pollute public opinion,
obviously feel no need to account for the fact that they took
precisely the opposite stance in relation to the Clinton-Monica
Lewinsky scandal. Their hypocrisy is not simply repugnant. Within
a certain social context it assumes politically criminal proportions.
How
many hours of broadcast time were devoted in 1998-99 to the issue
of Clinton's ÒcharacterÓ? No talk of privacy rights, partisan
motives, or seamy and reactionary political forces operating behind
the scenes could be tolerated. All such protestations were a diversion
from the real, the only issueÑClinton had pursued an extra-marital
dalliance, and he had covered it up!
When
the self-proclaimed morality czar Bennett and his ilk were told
an elected president should not be hounded from office over a
private sexual relationship, they momentarily left off spreading
salacious gossip to declare that the issue was not sex, but dishonesty.
The establishment media provided them an unlimited field of action.
This
was the climate in which a cabal of right-wing conspiratorsÑlawyers,
judges, prosecutors, reporters, Republican politiciansÑwas able
to engineer the first-ever impeachment of an elected president
and try him, unsuccessfully, in the Senate. The endless efforts
of Clinton and the Democrats to conciliate the witch-hunters,
their refusal to expose the forces involved and the reactionary
agenda that motivated them, was a critical factor in enabling
the attempted coup to proceed as far as it did.
Now
we learn that Bush was picked up for driving under the influence
and has lied about it. Dallas Morning News reporter Wayne Slater
writes that Bush replied ÒnoÓ when asked in 1998 if, beyond some
acknowledged run-ins with the law as a college student in 1968,
he had ever been arrested. There is another report that Bush was
asked by Texas newsmen in 1996 point blank whether he had ever
been arrested for drunk driving, and the governor evaded the question.
The
Bush camp denies Slater's claim, but Karen Hughes acknowledges
stating in the past that the Texas governor had never been arrested.
Hughes insists that Òshe was respecting his wishes to keep the
arrest from his daughters.Ó The possibility that Clinton misled
investigators about his (non-criminal, but embarrassing) liaison
with Lewinsky to prevent his family's finding out the unpleasant
truth was never even entertained as a legitimate excuse during
the massive probe headed by Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr.
As
for failings of the distant past, the obscure Arkansas development
company known as Whitewater was founded in 1978, two decades before
Clinton's impeachment and 16 years before the independent counsel's
investigation began. That, however, did not prevent the same forces
who have sprung to Bush's defense from insisting on the need for
a full-scale inquiry into Whitewater, a probe that spanned six
years, cost some $50 million and produced no evidence of criminal
wrong-doing by the Clintons.
One
can only imagine the field day the Republicans in Congress and
the media would have had during the impeachment drive if a story
had turned up about Clinton being arrested for drunk driving 20
years earlier and subsequently concealing the incident. New grand
juries would have been impaneled, new subpoenas issued, and dozens
of additional people would have had their reputations trashed
and their savings frittered away on legal costs.
The
Bush controversy helps put the Starr witch-hunt into perspective,
and underscores the fact that it was about politics and power,
not morality.
There
is another issue, which speaks to Bush's character not only as
an individual, but as a representative of his social class. This
is a man with a troubled, unstable past. Reports of alleged drug
use have widely circulated. Bush acknowledges having had problems
with alcohol. He drifted for a good many years. ÒI made mistakes
in my life,Ó he told a crowd in Grand Rapids, Michigan on Friday,
Òbut I'm proud to tell you that I've learned from those mistakes.Ó
The
question is: what has he learned?
The
most important lesson to be learned from wrestling with the all-too-human
failings shared, to one degree or another, by every member of
society is the need for compassion. An individual whose personal
demons have led him into brushes with the lawÑall the more so
when the individual has prominent family connections and the advantages
of wealth and privilegeÑwould hopefully derive from such experiences
a deeper empathy and greater sensitivity to the problems of others,
especially those who lack his social advantages.
There
is no indication, however, that this lesson has been learned by
Bush. If anything, his own past mistakes seem to have rendered
him more callous. As Texas governor he presides, and proudly so,
over a justice system that, even by American standards, is a symbol
of brutality and inhumanity.
Bush
has personally confirmed the execution of 145 individuals, the
vast majority of them poor, often abused as children and drug
or alcohol-addicted, generally tried and sentenced without the
benefit of proper counsel. There can be little doubt that some
were entirely innocent. Thousands more men and women languish
in Texas jails, sentenced to lengthy terms in prison for drug-related
and often nonviolent offenses.
How
many of the unfortunates in Texas prisons or even on death row
began their descent into a living hell with a run-in with the
police not much more serious than Bush's? Unlike Bush, they would
have lacked a wad of cash to pay a fine and a family name to assure
kid-glove treatment by the authorities. The lives of many victims
of poverty and the violence that pervades class relations in America
have been damaged, if not destroyed, as a result of relatively
minor offenses.
Bush,
who asks that his missteps be forgiven and forgotten, shows nothing
but cruelty to others. Asked in a recent television interview
to recall his most courageous action as Texas governor, he cited
his decision to approve the execution of Karla Faye Tucker. In
this brutality and arrogance one sees not simply a personal trait,
but the ugly face of the American ruling class.
The
1976 arrest is, in and of itself, of little significance. However
the response of Bush, the media and the Democrats to its exposure
is relevant, insofar as it sheds light on the deeply reactionary
program of the Bush campaign and the social forces for which it
speaks, and the decay and cowardice of the Democrats, who speak
essentially for different factions of the same elite.