Wednesday, July 31, 2024

What's A Vice-President To Do? On Harris, Cheney, and Agnew

After Kamala Harris became the de facto Democratic Party nominee for President, the Trump Republicans didn't waste any time launching sexist and racist attacks on her. So far the Trumpublicans have:

The attacks will get much uglier and weirder as Harris rises in the polls and we get closer to election day. 

Vice President Kamala Harris. Will racist and sexist attacks be enough to derail her quest for the presidency? 

There is one meme I've seen online that critiques Harris in a way that is perfectly legitimate. It asks very simply: "What has she actually done as vice president?" That's one of the most basic questions to ask of any candidate seeking an office: what have you done in your current position? 

Now when people ask me about Kamala Harris' accomplishments as vice president, my first response is this: without googling, tell me what Lyndon Johnson, Hubert Humphrey, Spiro Agnew, Gerald Ford, Nelson Rockefeller, Walter Mondale, George H.W. Bush, Dan Quayle, Al Gore, Dick Cheney, Joe Biden, and Mike Pence did when they held the same position. Those were all the vice presidents in my lifetime. 

Some Americans know that Gerald Ford pardoned Richard Nixon, while just about everyone knows Mike Pence almost got himself hanged by Trump cultists upset that he refused to commit treason to keep #45 in power. Even political wonks who follow Washington closely can't tell you much about the other veeps on the list. 

Why don't we know more about what vice presidents do? The simplest answer is that the vice president isn't really charged with doing much. Other than breaking ties in the Senate and presiding over the counting of electoral ballots cast in presidential elections, the veep does not have much formal power. The first Vice President of the United States, John Adams, put it best: "my country has in its wisdom contrived for me the most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived or his imagination conceived." John McCain reportedly said he would never accept the VP spot on a national ticket because, "the vice president has two duties. One is to inquire daily about the health of the president, and the other is to attend the funerals of Third World dictators. And neither of those do I find an enjoyable exercise." 

Absent formal powers, vice presidents are generally at their most effective when they work behind the scenes to help get the president's preferred bills passed through Congress, or when they serve as credible advocates for the administration's agenda. (Just as an aside, if we were to apply a JD Vance weirdness standard in assessing vice presidents, the greatest would have to be John Tyler. By the time he became veep in 1840, he had already fathered 8 children. After his first wife passed, he married again and fathered 7 more for a grand total of 15. On the Vance weirdness scale, Tyler's paternal potency should have entitled him to absolute power!). 

John Tyler fathered 15 children. In the weird world of JD Vance, that might make Tyler the greatest politician in the history of the United States.

Applying the criteria of working behind the scenes and advocating for the POTUS' agenda, Harris has been no worse than any vice president in my lifetime, and probably better than most. She's been a credible voice for reproductive choice after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, she's been outspoken on voting rights, and she's cast a record 33 tie-breaking votes in the US Senate. And while the Republicans' claim that Biden appointed her as the "border czar" is false, she did lead an effort to produce a substantive report on the root causes of migration. Contrary to Mr. Trump's deportation and border wall fantasies, any effort to address immigration meaningfully MUST address root causes.

It's rare for a vice president to make an impact in that office that survives their term. In fact in my life time only two vice presidents have done that: Dick Cheney and Spiro Agnew. Unfortunately, their impact was disastrous. I'll spend a little more space on Agnew, because this is a media rants blog and his impact was on media. 

Let's start with Dick Cheney. NPR's Nina Totenberg called him "a VP with unprecedented power": 

In the first term, Cheney reshaped national security law, expanded the prerogatives of the executive branch and orchestrated secret, warrantless domestic surveillance, circumventing a court set up by Congress specifically to oversee such surveillance. He presented the president with options that led to a shutdown of negotiations with North Korea, and played a major role in persuading President Bush to go to war against Iraq. 

Cheney also had extensive impact on domestic policies, from screening Supreme Court picks to forming tax and regulatory policies that benefited industries he was partial to. I have referred to the years 2001-2021 as two of the most shameful decades in the history of the United States. Dick Cheney's fingerprints are on almost every horrendous policy choice that created misery abroad and division at home. 

From a media criticism perspective, the most impactful vice president in history was Spiro Agnew, who was Richard Nixon's henchman from 1969-1973. Agnew resigned in disgrace so as to avoid being indicted on charges of tax evasion that occurred while he was governor of Maryland in the late 1960s.  

If one role of the vice president is to be an attack dog, no one played that role more effectively than Agnew. Much like a modern day Internet troll, he attacked "The Left" mercilessly, framed every critique of Nixon as being rooted in personal bias against the president, and famously pegged liberals as "nattering nabobs of negativism." 

Vice President Spiro Agnew's attacks on media greatly inspired Roger Ailes' later creation of Fox news and were also an early version of Donald Trump's "fake news" rants. 

On November 13, 1969 Agnew delivered a speech before a friendly group of Republicans in Des Moines, Iowa entitled "The Responsibilities of Television." Written by Nixon administration speech writer Pat Buchanan (who went on to run for president himself in 1992 and whose  "culture war" rhetoric became a fixture in GOP politics), the speech attempted to undermine the credibility of Nixon's broadcast television critics by characterizing them as out of touch elitists with no connection to the average American. He said, 

The purpose of my remarks tonight is to focus your attention on the little group of men who not only enjoy a right of instant rebuttal to every Presidential address, but, more importantly, wield a free hand in selecting, presenting, and interpreting the great issues in our nation. . . Of the commentators, most Americans know little other than that they reflect an urbane and assured presence, seemingly well-informed on every important matter. We do know that to a man these commentators and producers live and work in the geographical and intellectual confines of Washington, D.C., or New York City . . . 

For journalist Stephen Khan, in making a populist critique of media Agnew was "Trump before Trump." Khan correctly notes that "Agnew had demonstrated the vulnerability of the mass media to populist attacks, firing some of the first shots in a culture war that persists to this day." I would go even further and argue that, like Trump, Agnew actually made some sensible critiques of corporate mass media: they are not transparent about how ownership effects news and editorial coverage, they privilege controversy in selecting what to report for no purpose other than to drive ratings, and they are detached from working class Americans. But also like Trump, Agnew's purpose for making these critiques was not at all to promote media accountability and improvement, but to make himself (and Nixon) seem like small-d democrats by comparison. For political hacks/con artists like Agnew, Nixon, and Trump to lambast media as elitist and "fake" while situating themselves as being in sync with the "silent majority" of Americans is a kind of higher-order gaslighting that would be funny were it not so destructive to the body politic. 

As Agnew delivered that speech in November of 1969, a young Nixon Administration employee named Roger Ailes was listening very closely. In 1996 Ailes launched Fox News, a station that from day one has been Agnew-esque in how it undermines the authority of mainstream media at the same time asserting its own authority. NYU journalism professor Jay Rosen aptly refers to Fox and its offspring as "resentment news," a style which can be linked directly to Agnew's media critique. 

Kamala Harris might not be the greatest vice president in history, but she most certainly is not a Dick Cheney or a Spiro Agnew. For that we should be thankful. 

Friday, July 19, 2024

Ten Bold Cover Tunes, Part XIV: Summertime Blues Edition

As Robert Plant might say, it's been a long time, been a long time, been a long lonely lonely lonely lonely lonely time since I've done one of these ten bold cover tunes posts. Yes it has. 

Why another right now? 

Well, so far it has not been the greatest of summers. Our country seems to be devolving into political turmoil the likes of which we have not seen since 1968, and with Hulk Hogan's appearance at the RNC we seemed to move into full blown Idiocracy mode. On a personal level, the death of Christina Moodie, one of my all time greatest students, has been very difficult. 

In musical terms, we really are living the Summertime Blues. Eddie Cochran's classic has been helping stressed out humans navigate tough summer seasons for more than 60 years. 

Sometimes I wonder
What I'm-a gonna do
But there ain't no cure
For the summertime blues


Here are my favorite covers of Eddie's classic: 

#10:  Dick Dale's Surf Version.  One of the greatest guitar players of all time (huge influence on Jimi Hendrix), Dick Dale performed Summertime Blues in his set list for pretty much his entire career. 
#9: Blue Cheer's Acid Rock Version. Released in 1968, Blue Cheer's version is a great example of the kind of distorted guitar madness that Jimi Hendrix had inspired at the time. It's almost funny now. 


#8: Johnny Chester's Australian Rock Version. If you remember Johnny Chester, you are officially old. The Australian country/pop/rock star and his band the Chessmen had a hit with a respectable version of Summertime Blues in 1962. A few years later he actually was the opening act for the Beatles on their 1964 swing through Australia. 

#7: Rush's Ultimate Metal Version. Released in 2004, Canadian trio Rush rocked out in their Summertime Blues cover in a way that called to mind their first album in 1974. This version solidified Alex Lifeson's reputation as one of great Guitar Gods in rock history; the cover even throws in a Hendrix-like Foxey Lady intro as if to emphasize that point. 
#6: Joan Jett's Punk Rock Version. The iconic Joan Jett went full-on Ramones style in her cover. Love it! 
#5: The Hep Stars' Swedish Rock Version. Released in 1965, this rockin' version of Summertime Blues holds up remarkably well. The Hep Stars were one of the most successful Swedish bands ever, but might be best known as the launching pad for Benny Andersson, who went on to have great success with ABBA. 
#4: Johnny Hallyday's French Version. Hey, the French get the summertime blues too, oui? Johnny Hallyday's version, called "la fille de l'été dernier," is nothing if not fun! 
#3: Brian Setzer's Rockabilly Version. Nobody honors and treasures 1950's rock and roll as much as the great Brian Setzer. No surprise that his is a kick-ass cover of Summertime Blues. 
#2: Alan Jackson's Country Version. When I heard Alan Jackson's version in 1994, I immediately loved it. In fact I bet that if Eddie Cochran had lived, this would have been HIS favorite version as it comes closest to the playful spirit of the original. 
#1: The Who Live At Leeds Version. Like many men my age, I consider The Who's Live at Leeds (released 1970) to be instrumental (pardon the pun) in my adolescent development. The passion in Roger Daltrey's voice, the raw power of Pete Townshend's guitar, the controlled chaos of John Entwhistle's bass, and Keith Moon's insane drumming felt--to this teenage boy anyway--like it gave him permission to think of "FUCK YOU" as the appropriate response to everything and everyone pissing him off. I still get a charge out of that album all these years later. Their cover of Summertime Blues will always be my favorite. 

Prior Posts in The Ten Bold Cover Tunes Series:

Monday, July 01, 2024

The Katie Dobbs Debate Principle And Other Post-Debate Musings

I don't have anything particularly profound to say about President Biden's train wreck of a debate performance against the felonious former prez, but here's what I was thinking while suffering through it: 

*Biden Should Have Taken the Katie Hobbs Route: In May, Biden agreed to participate in two debates with Trump. My first thought at the time was, WHY? Given the President's well documented struggles with unscripted events, I feared there was a real chance that we might see the doting Biden on stage. Indeed and tragically, that is what happened. 

But even if Biden were twenty years younger and at the top of his debate game, I still would have advised against participating. His campaign should have followed what I will call the Katie Dobbs debate principle. In 2022, Democrat Katie Hobbs was running for governor of Arizona against Republican Kari Lake. Lake, a MAGA Republican whose allegiance to Donald Trump borders on pathological, spent much of the campaign espousing falsehoods about the 2020 election. Hobbs refused to debate Lake, saying in part: 

How do you debate someone who refuses to accept the truth, who doesn't live in fact? It doesn't do any service to the voters in terms of  . . . looking at the contrast between us in terms of how we're going to govern if all she's going to do is shout over me, interrupt me, and spew lies. 

Democrat Katie Hobbs refused to debate her MAGA Republican opponent Kari Lake in the race for Arizona governor in 2022, claiming that Lake was only interested in creating spectacle and spreading falsehoods. Hobbs won the election. Lake, an extreme election denier, still tells MAGA faithful that SHE is the rightful governor even though her claims of election fraud have been debunked repeatedly in and outside of legal proceedings. 

As a teacher of political rhetoric, and a strong believer in debate as the foundation of civil society, it's not easy for me to urge candidates to avoid participating. But when you have candidates like Kari Lake and Donald Trump, who will continue to lie even in the face of irrefutable evidence against them, the "debate" becomes a mockery of democratic norms; nothing but a "spectacle" that makes voters dumber, as Governor Hobbs correctly noted. 

President Biden would have lost little support by refusing to share a stage with a malignant narcissist bent on filling up 90 minutes with "alternative facts." Even if Biden had been more alert and rhetorically agile, he would have had to spend literally every minute of his speaking time correcting factual misstatements.

Biden also agreed to participate in a September debate. To withdraw at this point would generate the obvious criticism that Biden's campaign managers want to shield him from another embarrassing performance. The Biden campaign needs to weigh that criticism against allowing Mr. Trump another opportunity to share his alternative universe with millions. 

*What If Nikki Haley Had Been The Republican Nominee?  Just about every thinking person now realizes that, for very different reasons, Republican and Democratic primary voters have chosen to put two deeply flawed candidates on the November ballot. (The Republican selection of Trump has to do with the power of a personality cult, while the Democratic Party establishment simply would not allow a serious intra-party challenge to Biden.). 

Nikki Haley proved to be a formidable debater in the Republican primaries. All candidates have flaws, but Haley's baggage does not come close to what Mr. Trump is carrying. Had she been the Republican challenger in the debate against President Biden, she would probably be recruiting her future Cabinet right about now. 

But what if Republicans had done the sane thing and given former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley enough votes to guarantee her the nomination? If Haley had been on that debate stage against Biden, I'm certain that the wealthy donor class on the Democratic side would be much more vocal right now in demanding the Democrats select a new candidate at the August convention. Haley would have come out of that debate with enough confidence to start planning her presidential Cabinet appointments. 

Donald Trump is probably the ONLY Republican that President Biden can defeat at this point, and only because millions of voters will be making a "lesser evil" calculation as they cast their ballot. What a sad and pathetic state of affairs. 

*Shameful Moderating: The fact that Sean Hannity and Elon Musk praised the performance of CNN's Jake Tapper and Dana Bash as debate moderators should tell us something. Tapper and Bash refused to perform any on-the-spot fact checking, which obviously benefits the candidate most adept at lying. Hard to disagree with the Washington Post's Karen Attiah on this: 

"CNN's format of no fact checking, no pushback, no follow-ups was a mistake. The Biden campaign agreeing to this was a mistake. It demonstrates Trump's strength and power. He can bend the media and Biden to play by his rules." She called what CNN did "journalistic malpractice" and said further, "If this is how debates will go--just asking basic questions, no real-time fact checks, context or follow-ups by human journalists . . .. might as well let ChatGPT or AI do the 'job.'" 

*Democrats' Hostility to Third Party Participation Comes Back To Bite Them: Neither of the establishment parties want third party or independent candidates to participate in debates, and they collude with the corporate media to create absurd qualification requirements that are virtually impossible for even wealthy independent candidates to meet. To cite just one example: an independent or third party candidate has to be pulling at least 15 percent support in 4 qualifying national polls. If an independent candidate could participate in the debates, s/he might approach that level of support. The major parties and the media that enable them are fully aware of that, so they do what they can to prevent it. Shameful. 

What if Bobby Kennedy Jr., the independent candidate getting the most support from voters right now, had been on stage with Biden and Trump? If nothing else, it would have resulted in Biden talking less and thus give him more time to gather his thoughts (even though some of his worst moments at the debate were when he was not talking). Kennedy's wild conspiracy theories would have probably created a number of viral social media moments, which also would have helped Biden since the viral moments that DID come out of the debate are hurting him terribly. 

*Is this An Ashcroft v. Carnahan Election? While watching the debate I started thinking of the year 2000 Missouri US Senate race between incumbent Republican John Ashcroft and Democrat Mel Carnahan, who was governor of the state. Ashcroft had been Missouri's governor before Carnahan. Ashcroft had the power of incumbency on his side, but Carnahan had been a popular governor and Missouri was a much more purple state at the time. Pundits called the race a toss-up.  

Three weeks before the election, Mel Carnahan tragically died in a plane crash. So close to the election, Missouri law did not allow the Dems to select another candidate. So they left Mel Carnahan on the ballot, with an understanding that if he were to win, the new governor would appoint Carnahan's wife Jean to the seat until a special election in 2002. Jean Carnahan made one television ad in those last three weeks, essentially asking Missourians to vote for her late husband's aspirations even though he would not be the one to bring them to Washington. Mel Carnahan won the election, and Jean Carnahan went to Washington. She lost the 2002 special election to Republican Jim Talent. 

Governor Mel Carnahan of Missouri was the Democratic candidate for US Senate in 2000 against conservative Republican incumbent John Ashcroft. Carnahan tragically died in a plane crash three weeks before the election. He remained on the ballot, and won as the campaign urged voter to vote their aspirations. The Biden campaign today may have to make similar urgings. 

Obviously Joe Biden is not dead, but after the debate debacle the race is feeling a lot like Ashcroft v. Carnahan. John Ashcroft was not a popular US Senator in Missouri, just as Donald Trump is a deeply unpopular candidate. Mel Carnahan literally could not do the job if elected; after the presidential debate, millions of people are now convinced that President Biden cannot do it. Videos of him speaking energetically at a North Carolina rally the next day were not enough to convince otherwise. Even Biden stalwarts like New York Times columnist Paul Krugman are now urging Biden to step down.(Krugman says, "The best President of my adult life needs to withdraw."). Many others in the punditocracy agree with that sentiment. 

My guess is that Biden will not leave, for a variety of reasons including ego, the messiness of choosing a new candidate at this point, and the very real possibility that a fractured Democratic Party convention could do more to hand the presidency back to Trump than a frail Biden. 

So where does that leave us? First, I think the Democrat establishment needs to stop denying the obvious fact that the president is in decline. Second, the Democrats need to hope that Kamala Harris scores a knockout against whatever sycophantic toady Donald Trump selects to run as VP. Third, the Democrats need to frame the race as a  battle between two seriously compromised candidates, both of whom might not be able to finish their terms or be effective for a number of reasons. As a result, they should ask people to consider the aspirations of each candidate, and vote on that basis. I believe that more people share the aspirations of Biden/Harris than Trump/whoever.  

People worried about another Trump presidency should also pray. I know I'm doing much more of that these days. 

Finally, if the Dems do end up having to select a replacement nominee, I hope Governor Katie Hobbs is given serious consideration. She represents the key swing state of Arizona, has a record of accomplishment as governor even though the Republicans hold majorities in the state house and senate, and she connects well with traditional Democratic constituencies. Equally important, she wants to restore political debate to something worthy of a country that calls itself a representative democracy.