"A White House misstep on port security has the G.O.P. running away
from its President"
"Trust me" is no longer a viable political strategy. That's because
nervous Republicans don't--at least not when their futures are at
stake. With Bush's bungling of the ports controversy, they are
starting to say privately that they cannot afford to risk their fate
on the agenda and instincts of an unpopular President who never has to
face the voters again."

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1167757,00.html

Sunday, Feb. 26, 2006

The Breakaway Republicans

A White House misstep on port security has the G.O.P. running away
from its President

By KAREN TUMULTY

The closest thing to a  working political antenna at the White House
these days may be the one on Dan Bartlett's car radio. Congressional
anger over President George W. Bush's decision to allow a Dubai-owned
company to operate terminals at major U.S. ports had been at a low
boil for days before the White House got its first inkling of the
furor: Bartlett, the presidential counselor, happened to tune in to
conservative talk-show host Michael Savage on the way home from work.
By the time the President moved to quash it several days later with
assurances that he wouldn't have allowed the deal "if there was any
chance that this transaction would jeopardize the security of the
United States," it was far too late to quell the Republican rebellion.
"This freight train had already left the station," says a Bush aide.
And the President's threat to use his first-ever veto was no obstacle
to its momentum.

If there is any message that Bush should take forward after the
blistering he got last week from virtually the entire Republican
Party, it is that "Trust me" is no longer a viable political strategy.
That's because nervous Republicans don't--at least not when their
futures are at stake. With Bush's bungling of the ports controversy,
they are starting to say privately that they cannot afford to risk
their fate on the agenda and instincts of an unpopular President who
never has to face the voters again. What began months ago as a routine
government-approval process for a business deal--in this case, one
made politically radioactive by the fact that it would allow an
Arab-government-owned company to manage terminals at major U.S.
ports--has exploded into the sharpest and most bitter confrontation
that Bush has had with his party. And it has hastened the declaration
of independence toward which Republicans have been edging for months.
"This is the tipping point," said a House leadership strategist. "No
longer will Republicans sit idle when they have a difference with the
President." A senior Senate aide spoke even more bluntly: "It's every
man for himself."

But let's pause for a moment, if only to note that although security
experts say there are plenty of reasons to be worried about the
vulnerability of the nation's ports, the nationality of the companies
that operate the terminals is not one of them. Only about 5% of the
millions of containers that flow through the nation's ports are
inspected, and there still are no standards for container locks and
seals or for port-worker identification cards. The country has spent
$18 billion on making airports more secure since Sept. 11, but it has
invested only $630 million to safeguard the nation's ports, even
though a study last year by the Department of Homeland Security and
the Coast Guard found that almost 70 of the 361 U.S. ports are
vulnerable to terrorism.

While none of that is particularly comforting, it does make the
outrage directed at Dubai Ports World, which has operated 23
facilities on five continents without a mote of protest, seem a bit
unfair. And it raises the question of how the Administration is
supposed to win hearts and minds in the Muslim world if it presumes
that all businesses there are natural enemies. The President went so
far as to ask, "those who are questioning [the deal] to step up and
explain why all of a sudden a Middle Eastern company is held to a
different standard."

There is also a legitimate strategic concern about alienating the
United Arab Emirates (Dubai is one of the seven emirates), given that
it has been a recent but important convert to the Administration's
campaign against terrorism. "Totally in bed" is how a senior
intelligence official characterized the U.A.E.'s relationship with the
U.S.; Senator John Warner, chairman of the Armed Services Committee,
says, "The U.A.E. is a vital, I repeat, a vital ally."

Whatever the merits of the President's decision to allow the port deal
to go through, what rattled Republicans most was that Bush and his
entire team seemed oblivious to the political problems it created. How
could Bush have failed to foresee the potential public relations
consequences of an agreement to hand over terminals to a company owned
by a country that had been home to two of the 9/11 hijackers, both of
whom laundered their money in its banks? A distraught Republican
summed up the party's problem: the episode was "caviar for Democrats."
And it was a role reversal that must have been most satisfying for
them too, since it put Bush in the position of arguing nuances of
international diplomacy that got lost in the alarmist din over security.

There was visible relief at the White House when, after Bush's top
strategist, Karl Rove, dropped some hints to Fox Radio's Tony Snow
that Bush might look favorably on a slowdown of the deal, Dubai Ports
World announced it would delay taking over the port operations. That
announcement gave the Administration, should it need one, a
face-saving way to send the deal back to an interagency group for a
45-day review, buying more time to sell it to Congress. Said White
House press secretary Scott McClellan: "We believe that once Congress
has a better understanding of the facts and the safeguards that are in
place, they will be more comfortable with the transaction's moving
forward."

Perhaps, but it wasn't just the unthinkable possibility of appearing
weak on national security next to Hillary Clinton and Edward Kennedy
that drove Hill Republicans to take on the President. It was a feeling
that he was treating them with contempt. Even as McClellan spoke about
appeasement, there was grumbling that the White House still hadn't
contacted Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert directly to talk matters
through, and a House leadership aide noted that "with the veto threat
and then the accusation that members were being xenophobic, [the
President] alienated them even more."

Beyond feelings of personal insult, a look at the electoral map offers
another compelling reason some members might seize an opportunity to
put distance between themselves and Bush. Nine of the 10 most
endangered House incumbents this fall are Republicans, noted
nonpartisan political analyst Stuart Rothenberg in a recent column for
the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call. Bush remains a big draw for the
hard-core Republican faithful, but it was hard not to notice the
absence of Ohio Senator Mike DeWine when the President arrived at
Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport last week to raise
$1.1 million for DeWine at a private event in the tony Cincinnati
suburb of Indian Hill. (DeWine's probable Senate opponent observed
that "DeWine doesn't want to be seen with President Bush in public.")
One of the first to denounce the ports deal was Pennsylvania's Rick
Santorum, a Senator whose re-election battle--already the toughest in
the country--will be even harder to win without improved support in
Philadelphia, one of the affected ports. Close behind Santorum was
Senate majority leader Bill Frist, who is struggling to establish his
identity for a possible 2008 presidential run.

The Republican Congress has been tiptoeing toward this moment for
months, becoming less reluctant to challenge Bush as his approval
rating stays mired in the low 40s. G.O.P. lawmakers are getting more
vocal in challenging Bush's spending priorities, and his modest budget
cuts on programs from farm aid to housing to student loans are running
into election-year resistance, even as the legislators complain about
the costs of his Medicare prescription-drug program. On Friday the
coalition of House conservatives known as the Republican Study
Committee sent a letter to the White House demanding more
justification for Bush's spending requests, specifically the $92.2
billion in emergency money that he wants for the war on terrorism and
Gulf Coast rebuilding, "so that we can intelligently exercise our
constitutional right to appropriate funds."

And things could get a lot worse, even on the national-security issues
that have been Bush's greatest political strength. Already DeWine, a
member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, is planning legislation
to give Congress more say over the National Security Agency's
domestic-spying program, despite Bush's assertions that any hearings
or legislation would help terrorists. And the President was forced to
accept congressionally mandated restrictions on the tactics that
interrogators may use with terrorist suspects. Republicans, their
faith shaken in his ability to protect them politically, may even feel
emboldened enough to press for a sharper drawdown of troops from Iraq
before the November elections. On the domestic front, conservatives
are likely to stiffen their resistance to the guest-worker provisions
in Bush's immigration plan and, with their constituents feeling the
effects of a record trade deficit, could have less patience for Bush's
nonconfrontational stance toward China.

White House officials, recognizing the likelihood that Republicans on
Capitol Hill will go their own way, say they have designed an agenda
that relies on Congress for very little in this election year.
Instead, they say, the President will deploy his bully pulpit for such
issues as overhauling the entitlement programs--Social Security,
Medicare and Medicaid--that eat up half the budget and could balloon
as baby boomers retire. By judiciously asserting his influence, Bush
believes he can set "an agenda that our party and, one would hope, the
country can unite behind," White House communications director Nicolle
Wallace said. But the flap over port security, coming after the
controversy over Vice President Dick Cheney's handling of his
accidental shooting of a hunting companion, shows that the White House
will have to sharpen its game to regain even that much ground. An
Administration official said Bush's aides realize that they'll be
taking more Republican shots "every year that we're closer to being
done." But in the end, the wounds that hurt the most may be the ones
that are self-inflicted.

With reporting by Mark Thompson/Washington, Massimo Calabresi, Matthew
Cooper, Timothy J. Burger, Mike Allen



http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Sections/Newsweek/Components/Photos/Mag/060306_Issue/060225_perspcartoon_wide.hlarge.jpg





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