The Boston Phoenix 
January 28 - February 4, 1999

Bush league


John Ellis may be the Globe's most intriguing op-ed columnist. He's
certainly the best connected.


Don't Quote Me by Dan Kennedy

Last Saturday, John Ellis finally threw in the towel. Ever since the Monica
Lewinsky scandal broke, Ellis had used his op-ed column in the Boston Globe
to excoriate Bill Clinton as a sleazy liar who's demeaned his office -- and
to predict the president's imminent demise. Sneers a critic of Ellis's at a
competing news organization: "Clinton's resignation has been certain every
day for a year now. One of these days it might actually happen."
Which is why the fact of Ellis's surrender was so surprising -- even as his
rhetoric remained true to its incessant Clinton-bashing form. "It's over,"
he wrote. "The votes aren't there for conviction, and they're never going to
be there." A well-considered observation. But then he added petulantly,
"Those of us who believed that principled people in the Democratic Party
might draw the line at immoral behavior and illegal acts were wrong. Those
of us who thought a sense of shame might cause Clinton to resign for the
good of the country were wrong."
So much for matters over which, to quote House impeachment manager Lindsey
Graham, "reasonable people" can differ.
If it sometimes appears there's something personal about Ellis's obsession
with Clinton, well, there is. Clinton, you see, turned Ellis's Uncle George
into a one-term president back in 1992. Of course, one needn't be related to
George Bush to conclude that Clinton is a scumbag; but it doesn't hurt,
either. And the family connections don't stop there. Ellis's late
grandfather, Prescott Bush, was a US senator from Connecticut. A first
cousin, George W. Bush, is governor of Texas and a possible Republican
candidate for president. Another first cousin, Jeb (as in John Ellis Bush),
is governor of Florida. In fact, it's likely that the only journalists in
America more genetically well-connected than Ellis are George magazine
editor John Kennedy and NBC correspondent Maria Shriver.
Unlike Kennedy and Shriver, though, Ellis is not especially well known; his
readers are informed of his family ties only occasionally. When he writes
about George W.'s presidential prospects (as he did most recently last
Thursday), he never fails to note the relationship. But when he whacks
Clinton, be it for lying about sex, botching US policy toward Iraq, or
taking too much credit for the balanced budget, the Bush connection goes
unmentioned. "He's had many, many columns just fucking raking Clinton over
the coals. And the readers need to be reminded that there's a family grudge
with the guy," says a respected Boston Herald writer who asked to remain
anonymous.
It's an issue that both pains Ellis and puts him on the defensive. "I think
the `conflicts' issue is bogus," Ellis said in an e-mail exchange. "My
columns about Clinton have been harsh not because I am George Bush's nephew
but because I find Clinton truly loathsome. . . . My opinions about Clinton
may seem extreme in Boston; they are routine in most editorial boardrooms."
It is also true that Ellis, when judged by his work, appears to be no more
tanked up than (to name one example) his Globe colleague Tom Oliphant, a
notorious White House toady. But Ellis shouldn't be surprised when observers
take a family connection more seriously than mere bias.
Ellis is a guy whose entire career has been entwined with people he grew up
with and people he knows. After a decade-long career as a producer in the
NBC News election unit, Ellis resigned in 1989 to avoid the appearance of a
conflict created by Bush's inauguration as president. For much of the 1990s,
Ellis worked as a business consultant for politically wired dealmaker Larry
Rasky and wrote a weekly freelance column for the Globe, leading to repeated
-- if dubious -- accusations that Ellis used the Globe to reward Rasky's
friends and punish his enemies. (That awkward situation finally resolved
itself last fall, when Ellis left the Rasky/Baerlein Group and joined the
Globe as a full-time staff member.) Ellis has even drawn some
behind-the-back sniping for praising novelist Joseph Kanon (Los Alamos, The
Prodigal Spy), who just so happens to have taught modern literature to Ellis
when he was a senior at Milton Academy. ("A wonderful student," recalls
Kanon, returning the favor.)
Of course, it would be one thing if Ellis were an untalented hack. The
truth, though, is that Ellis is a first-rate talent -- a passionate writer
with a wide-ranging intellect who reports knowledgeably on topics such as
Internet commerce, the decline of network television, technology,
biowarfare, genomics, and culture. With the exception of his one-dimensional
Clinton columns, his political analysis is sharp and to the point. (He was
almost alone, for instance, in predicting then-attorney general Scott
Harshbarger's near-upset of Governor Paul Cellucci last fall.) And if some
criticize Ellis for conflicts and the appearance of conflicts, that may
simply be a function of his having lived an interesting, privileged life
among interesting, privileged people.
On an op-ed page long dominated by such mind-numbingly predictable liberals
as Oliphant, David Nyhan, Ellen Goodman, and Derrick Jackson, offset only by
token right-winger Jeff Jacoby, Ellis's mildly conservative eclecticism is,
on his non-Clinton days anyway, the best thing going. And though Ellis's
network of relationships may be an occasional source of discomfort, it also
offers some insight into a man whose phlegmatic exterior masks considerable
drive and ambition.
"He was a ferocious football player," recalls former congressman Joe
Kennedy, who was Ellis's roommate at Milton Academy and remains his friend.
"He was captain of the football team. A lineman. One of those guys who, when
he put on a football helmet, just became a different personality. John has
the killer instinct in him when he wants it to come out."

------------------------------------------------------------------------
To a degree that no doubt makes some of his fellow journalists suspicious,
if not envious, John Prescott Ellis, 45, moves easily among those with power
and wealth. During a lengthy interview over breakfast at the Four Seasons,
Ellis comes across as studiously diffident, using exactly the same tone of
voice when he's saying, "I always wanted to be a columnist, since I was a
kid in college," as he does when he's commenting on the poached eggs.
Boston Herald publisher Pat Purcell is at the next table, and he and Ellis
exchange pleasantries. As it turns out, Ellis nearly went to work for
Purcell last spring: he was leaving Rasky's employ, and the Globe had not
yet come through with a staff position. So Ellis approached Purcell about
the possibility of contributing to the Herald. It didn't work out -- the two
sides were far apart on money, and Ellis and editorial-page editor Shelly
Cohen reportedly did not hit it off (Cohen declines to comment). But it's
nevertheless surprising to learn that Ellis nearly left the Globe, given
that his ascendance to full-time pundit status at 135 Morrissey Boulevard
had long been thought to be only a matter of time.
After five years of writing for the Globe once every other week, and later
once a week, Ellis finally got the two-columns-a-week staff job he was
looking for last fall. To make room, editorial-page editor H.D.S. "David"
Greenway bounced WLVI-TV (Channel 56) political reporter Jon Keller, telling
him Ellis would be writing frequently on Keller's specialty, local politics.
(Ironically, Keller landed on the Herald op-ed page, prompting Shelly Cohen
to say, "We definitely got the better end of that deal.") Yet the first
thing Ellis did was move out of town -- to Westchester County, New York, so
that his wife, Susan Ellis, a former Hill Holiday hotshot, could take a
high-paying job as executive vice-president of the BBDO advertising agency.
(Which leads to yet another example of the difficulties of being
well-connected. He says he once had to kill a piece on the future of money
that he'd put 19 hours into after Susan told him that Visa -- which was "all
over the column" -- was a BBDO client.) Greenway says only that he still
expects Ellis to write about local politics occasionally, and that he hopes
Ellis moves back to Boston someday.
John Ellis says he now has most of the couple's responsibility for taking
care of their two young children, although he does pack in a weekly Boston
marathon: he catches the 6:05 a.m. train from Stamford, Connecticut, on
Tuesdays, and doesn't return home until 10 p.m. on Wednesdays. "Having two
full days to do nothing but work is fabulous," Ellis says, explaining that
he uses his six hours on the train to whittle away at an always intimidating
pile of reading. Greenway and former Globe editor Tom Winship (who went to
high school with Ellis's late father, Alexander "Sandy" Ellis, at the
Belmont Hill School) are now sponsoring Ellis for membership at the Somerset
Club so he can take advantage of its $40-a-night rates when he stays over.
"We Yanks are very tightfisted," quips Greenway.
If it all sounds clubby in an impossibly blue-blooded, Cabots-and-Lowells
manner, well, that's the kind of life to which Ellis was born. He, his two
brothers, and his sister grew up in affluent Concord. His father, Sandy
Ellis, was an insurance executive in Boston. His mother, Nancy Bush Ellis,
was the daughter of a senator and the sister of a future president. A family
friend who asked not to be named describes the Ellises as "picture-book WASP
types" and Nancy Ellis, in particular, as "fun, funny. There's a lot of
Katharine Hepburn about her -- a very classy, west-of-Boston dame." She also
remains an important part of John Ellis's life: at the Four Seasons, he
gestures across the Public Garden toward Beacon Hill, where his mother now
lives.
After several years of public school, young John began attending the Fenn
School, a private school in Concord, in the fourth or fifth grade (he can't
remember which), and then went off to Milton Academy for high school. While
Joe Kennedy remembers Ellis's exploits on the football field, it is hockey
that Ellis recalls as his principal athletic endeavor. He was a defenseman
who was named the assistant captain of an American prep-school all-star team
that played in Finland, Sweden, France, and Russia. The highlight: playing
the Russian Army team and losing, 19 to 1. "I got to play against Kharlamov,
which was the high point of my hockey career," he recalls. "The great
Russian centerman. He was a spectacular player. Incredible."
Growing up, Ellis remembers a family that was "huge. Huge and close.
Everybody went up to Maine in the summer. Christmastime was in Connecticut.
So we saw everybody. The Bush cousins, the Walker cousins, etc., etc., etc.
And we really grew up with the George Bush kids. Jebbie and I, because we're
exactly the same age, would go to visit my grandmother and grandfather
together in Washington and Florida. A lot of the boys came up here north to
school. And my mother and dad lived in Lincoln" -- they moved from Concord
when Ellis was 16 -- "so that's where they came with their laundry when they
got the weekend off."
Ellis went to Yale, his Uncle George's alma mater (he says he declined an
invitation to join Skull and Bones, the secret society to which Bush
belonged), and hooked on at NBC as a temporary researcher in 1978. After
leaving to do some advance work for his uncle's unsuccessful presidential
campaign against Ronald Reagan, he came back, rising to become a key player
for the election unit, where he built a reputation for hard work and for
accurately predicting the outcome of state and local races. "He probably
knew more people across the country, talked to more people across the
country, than anyone at any of the three networks," says Republican National
Committee member Ron Kaufman, a long-time operative for George Bush. Ellis
also developed a reputation for being loose and relaxed in a high-stress
environment; Saturday Night Live's headquarters were right down the corridor
from the election unit's, and Al Franken was a frequent visitor to Ellis's
office.
After 10 years, though, Ellis needed a change. His sense of ennui no doubt
was accelerated by his uncle's inauguration as president, in 1989. "It was
uncomfortable for me and it was uncomfortable for them, and it didn't work,"
he says. "It just didn't fit. We were doing the news. We were not doing
opinion."

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ellis's years as a political journalist had convinced him that there's more
than a little insanity to the way Americans choose their president. As the
Appleman Fellow at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and
Public Policy, part of Harvard's Kennedy School, in 1990 and '91, and as a
consulting fellow at the K-School's Institute of Politics in '91 and '92,
Ellis was instrumental in drafting a proposal that became known as "Nine
Sundays." The idea was to air 90 minutes of high-toned presidential coverage
-- debates, interviews, and the like -- on network television every Sunday
between Labor Day and Election Day, and to let the networks sell commercial
time to pay for it.
It didn't catch on (Globe columnist Alex Beam at the time lampooned the idea
as "Nine Sundayzzz"). But Marvin Kalb, director of the Shorenstein Center,
who also helped draft the idea (along with then-executive director Ellen
Hume, now with PBS), remains optimistic -- and says it has already
influenced the way CNN and some radio stations cover presidential politics.
"I still think it's a terrific idea," Kalb says.
After a brief post-Harvard stint at his wife's old advertising firm, Hill
Holiday, Ellis hooked up with Rasky, with whom he had formed a friendship on
the campaign trail -- first simply to share office space, later to work on
some joint projects. Around the same time, Ellis began writing for the
Globe. A number of Rasky critics complained that Ellis, a "political
consultant" (in fact, Ellis says he has never worked as a political
consultant), was using his column to further Rasky's agenda -- praising
then-Massachusetts Senate president Bill Bulger in 1994, for example, while
criticizing Bulger challenger Bill Keating (now Norfolk County district
attorney), and flatly predicting that Bill Weld, from whom Rasky was seeking
favors, would unseat US senator John Kerry in 1996.
"He never made any attempt to contact any person on our side," charges
political consultant Michael Goldman, who advised Keating in 1994. But
Rasky, a Democrat whose allies were often skewered by Ellis, ridicules the
notion that Ellis ever used the column to carry Rasky's water. "Every time
John wrote a column, I would get blamed for it," he says. "I can assure you
that his column cost me a lot more business than he ever made me."

------------------------------------------------------------------------
At a time when the Republican Party has devolved into fractious moralizing
and rank hypocrisy, there is something reassuringly grown-up about the brand
of politics John Ellis espouses. (Despite his family pedigree, he is a
registered independent.) His animus toward Clinton aside, he expresses a
brand of moderate politics that used to be associated with the Republican
establishment of his grandfather, Prescott Bush, and that indeed used to be
associated with George Bush -- that is, the George Bush who ran against
Ronald Reagan's "voodoo economics," as opposed to the Reagan sycophant who
once boasted that he followed Reagan "blindly."
Ellis calls himself "a right-winger in Boston and a mainstreamer in Texas,"
"a big First Amendment person and a big Second Amendment person, on the
theory that if we can have the First, they can have the Second." He's not
entirely opposed to government intervention in the economy, believing that
the market can be "as stupid and ridiculous" as government bureaucracies.
And though he claims not to have clear positions on abortion rights and the
death penalty, he supports -- quietly -- the full range of gay and lesbian
rights, including marriage and military service. "Whatever rights I enjoy,
they should enjoy," he says. (Weirdly, he also wrote a column after the
November election in which he praised religious conservatives as "the soul
of the Republican Party, . . . neither intolerant nor unforgiving," although
he also used the occasion to blast most of their leadership -- Jerry
Falwell, Pat Robertson, and Gary Bauer.)
There's a lot of Bush-style solicitousness in John Ellis. New York Times
reporter Jill Abramson, who got to know Ellis when he was at Yale and she
was at Harvard and who later worked with him at NBC, speaks with near-awe
about Ellis's network of friends and the time he puts into maintaining that
network. "He may have a reserved manner, but he is outgoing in terms of
cultivating his friendships," says Abramson, who describes herself as the
frequent recipient of humorous e-mails from Ellis. "I give him the credit
that we're still such good friends." And though Ellis is no doubt sincere
about his friendships, those ties have paid off for him many times as well.
He himself points to that network as the reason for his success as a
business consultant. And one of his ex-clients, former Republican politico
Roger Ailes, head of the Fox News Channel, now employs Ellis part-time, to
crunch the numbers during election season and to write a technology column
for FoxNews.com. (Ellis says he recently tried to find work at Fox for
former Globe columnist Mike Barnicle, but nothing came of it.) "I was a
beneficiary of many friendships over the years," Ellis frankly acknowledges.
Ellis's incessant networking, combined with his reserved manner, rubs some
people the wrong way. A few casual acquaintances describe him as "arrogant,"
a "name-dropper." The truth is that Ellis may serve as something of a
Rorschach test for how people respond to wealth and connections: those who
are naturally suspicious of such things react negatively to the sort of
person they assume him to be. "Somebody at the Globe said to me, `I wish
he'd just eat lunch in the Globe cafeteria now and then,' " says Ellis's
friend Averil Lashley, a Boston public-relations executive. "They see him
coming down the hall and think he's arrogant, but he's not."
Ellis's closest brush with public controversy came last February, at a
Kennedy School forum on media coverage of the Lewinsky frenzy. Under
prompting from moderator Marvin Kalb, Ellis conceded that a tidbit in one of
his previous columns had come from Starr's office -- a faux pas, since other
journalists were careful enough to attribute their leaks vaguely, to
"sources familiar with the investigation" or some such thing. Later, New
York Daily News columnist Lars-Erik Nelson acidly noted Ellis's family ties
and wrote that Ellis's remark was evidence that Starr was using leaks "to
hound the President from office." Ellis's admission has caused him some
problems: he says he can't talk about it "on the advice of counsel," an
apparent reference to the possibility that he'll be (has been?) questioned
in an ongoing investigation into Starr's conduct.
Perhaps every columnist should be conceded one blind spot, and clearly
Ellis's is Clinton. But soon Ellis may be facing an ethical challenge that
will make his Clinton problem look insignificant: George W. Bush's possible
presidential candidacy. Bush is widely considered the front-runner for the
Republican nomination and is running ahead of Al Gore, the likely Democratic
nominee, in early polls. If the Clinton columns raise questions about
Ellis's ability to be fair on matters touching his family, Ellis doesn't see
it that way: he claims he rather liked Clinton the first time he ran, and
wasn't at all bothered when he beat his uncle, whom he describes as
exhausted and in shaky health. "Had he [Bush] served a second term, I
believe it would have taken 10 years off his life," Ellis says. Whatever.
Ellis and George W. Bush share an unusual bond: George, after years of
carousing, stopped drinking when he was 40; Ellis, an alcoholic, has been
sober for 10 years. "I don't have any special insight into this issue,"
Ellis said by e-mail. "And what I did or did not do with Governor George W.
Bush years ago is private and properly so." Still, Ellis knows Bush better
than almost anyone, and he appears to take seriously -- more seriously than
most pundits -- his cousin's statements that he might not run because of the
harm it could cause his 17-year-old twin daughters.
It seems clear that Ellis, though he insists his cousin would make a great
president, would be more comfortable if George W. decided to remain as
governor of Texas for four more years. He insists that he would remain at
the Globe rather than join the campaign. And when asked whether the Globe is
hoping for exclusive insider stuff from the Bush campaign, he replies
tartly: "They'll be sorely disappointed if that's what they want me for.
It's not going to happen. So if that's why they hired me, they ought to fire
me." (More likely that sentiment is mutual: a well-informed Globe source
says Ellis has been "told to be careful" in how he writes about his cousin.)
For Ellis, and for the Globe, it is an unusual situation. When Ellis writes
about topics other than politics, he helps to revitalize a stale op-ed page
-- whether he's defending the soaring stock price of America Online,
reporting on the possibility of a genetically engineered treatment for
hypertension, or proposing that the United States buy Siberia from the
bankrupt Russian government. Along with Joan Vennochi, recently transferred
from the business section, Ellis represents a new breed of opinion
columnist, the kind who reports on a wide array of subjects rather than
merely comments on the news of the day. Yet Ellis's biggest trouble spot is
the area where one might suppose he'd be strongest: politics, and especially
presidential politics, the family business.
"It will be a prime test of his ability to maneuver on tender turf," says
Tom Winship. "I find it rather uncomfortable, and I suspect he will as well.
But that's his problem. I suppose it could be a problem for the paper. But
let's not be premature about it."

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dan Kennedy's work can be accessed from his Web site:
http://www.shore.net/~dkennedy


------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dan Kennedy can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


------------------------------------------------------------------------

Articles from July 24, 1997 & before can be accessed here


------------------------------------------------------------------------

| home page | what's new | search | about the phoenix | feedback |
Copyright © 1999 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group. All rights
reserved. 



Reply via email to