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A 'Kitchen Cabinet' of One
Even many Republicans today recognize Franklin D. Roosevelt as the greatest president of the last century. The anti-Franklin Roosevelt, however, is George W. Bush.From his regressive tax codes and plan to privatize Social Security to his Supreme Court appointments, from his favoritism toward big business to his belief in preemptive war, Bush could hardly be more different in his political, economic and social philosophy from the architect of the New Deal.
The two presidents also differ in their leadership styles. Roosevelt believed in strong, collective leadership. His Cabinet was broad and inclusive. Relishing experimentation and the lively competition of ideas, he took talent where he could find it. His secretary of Agriculture, Henry Wallace, and his secretary of the Interior, Harold Ickes, were progressive Republicans, and Frances Perkins, his secretary of Labor, was an Independent. His secretary of War, Henry Stimson, and his secretary of the Navy, Frank Knox, were Republicans - he even chose Republican Harlan Fiske Stone as chief justice in 1941.
Recent presidencies have seen the Cabinet decline as a vehicle for collective leadership, but under Bush it has reached its nadir because the president prizes above all ideological uniformity. Cabinet meetings are reported to be brief and perfunctory with no deep discussions or exploration of alternative policies. Can you name more than two or three members of Bush's Cabinet?
If Bush doesn't draw upon the collective leadership of a talented, diverse Cabinet, with whom does he share the responsibilities of leadership?
The answer is a device that goes back to the days of Andrew Jackson - the "Kitchen Cabinet," which enabled presidents to work closely with a small group of advisors drawn from their formal Cabinet and from outside it. It can be a most useful tool if it is diverse in point of view and relatively public.
But Bush's Kitchen Cabinet is rather odd. It has only one member, Vice President Dick Cheney, backed up by hard-core conservative White House staffers, working in secrecy. With little question, Cheney is the most powerful vice president in our history. He controls a staff of true believers, issues his own ideological pronunciamentos and maintains his own alliances with key conservatives in Congress. White House watchers speculate that, behind the scenes, Cheney directs policy.
What are the implications of Cheney's enormous vice presidential power - and especially for the selection of future vice presidential candidates?
Historically, the second spot on the presidential ticket has had a dual function. First, it has been used as a peace-offering to the candidate and faction that lost the presidential nomination.
And second, it has been a pragmatic way to give balance to the ticket. FDR chose John Nance Garner as his vice president both as a sop to influential Southern Democrats who supported Garner and as a nod to the political center. In 1940, as World War II approached, he ran with Henry Wallace as a way to win the support of interventionist Republicans. And when Wallace proved too liberal for party centrists, FDR replaced him on the ticket in 1944 with the more moderate Harry S. Truman, who went on to defend Roosevelt's New Deal policies when he in turn ascended to the presidency. Other presidents - such as John F. Kennedy, who chose Lyndon B. Johnson to balance the ticket toward the South and the political center - have used similar strategies. Sometimes, however, this tradition can backfire. William McKinley's assassination catapulted into the White House that charismatic ticket balancer Theodore Roosevelt, who distanced himself from McKinley's policies and set the GOP on a new, radical course.
It is one thing to balance toward the party center, as FDR and JFK did. It is quite different for a staunch conservative like Bush to tilt the ticket toward an even more right-wing Republican. That creates acute imbalance, narrowing the party's electoral appeal and weakening its capacity to win support in Congress.
The Bush-Cheney presidency - shaped and led by ideologues who have rejected the creative, collective leadership that might be supplied by a vibrant, diverse Cabinet - has immobilized itself in its own narrowness and extremism. The test of leadership is not simply calling oneself "the decider." The test is whether leaders can mobilize followers who will sustain them in the tough decisions that lie ahead.
James MacGregor Burns and Susan Dunn teach at Williams College. Burns is author of "Leadership." They are coauthors of "The Three Roosevelts: Patrician Leaders Who Transformed America" and "George Washington"
© 2007 The Los Angeles Times



11 Comments so far
Show AllGeorge W. Bush is the standard by which all future failed administrations will be measured. Even without the threat of impeachment, Bush has already bumped Nixon up several notches.
Rarely is the question asked, is our President learning?
Cheney is the defacto president. W's purpose is to play the virtuous down-home-good-old-boy that appeals to the brain-dead electorate that will drink the punch if he tells them to.
The enabling Democrats keep referring to this administration as "incompetent". There has been no evidence of incompetence. Although Cheney may not have succeeded in looting Social Security, the rest of his looting of America (and many other nations) continues to succeed.
Cutting funding for Iraq would throw Cheney's plan off track.
Cheney has run the show from Day 1. Be afraid. Be very afraid. He (Cheney) has convinced Bu$h that he has been chosen by God to be our President. After gutting the Bill of Rights and Constitution with the PATRIOT ACT, do not be shocked when Bu$h/Cheney declare Martial Law and cancel the next Election. They're ON A MISSION FROM GOD. They will be very reluctant to let go of the REINS of POWER and have already proven themselves capable of totally IGNORING THE LAW(s)-National and International.
This is why the lowest hanging fruit for impeachment must be pursued immediately. There is this small group of kool-aid drinkers in Bu$h the inferior's mafia. The removal of any one of them or the addition of any one from the reality based universe will throw a lot of sand in this fascist regime's gears.
Drawing parallels between Bush & FDR defies logic, FDR had the foresight to prepare us for a war that he knew was inevitible,not a fabricated war. He Implemented the WPA programs (albeit not models of efficiency), but most importantly reinstated the working mans dignity. By contrast Bush's abuses are unprecedented. He has manipulated science at the expence or our planet, to suit his profitering supporters, protected the tax havens for the wealthy, & the list goes on,.
Criticizing Bush and Cheney in terms of ideological balance or imbalance is like criticizing Hitler for failing to appoint a Social Democrat as Vice-Chancellor.
Bush and Cheney are evil men, who have made torture an official policy of the United States for the first time in our history. They are guilty of crimes against humanity. The political spectrum of the United States has never extended to torture. It has always been off our map!
Bush and Cheney are criminals who deserve to be tried and convicted for violations of the Geneva Conventions. They have committed hanging offenses. Questions of "ideology" and balance are ludicrously out of proportion to their crimes!
Bush and Cheney are criminals guilty of crimes against humanity, according to the Geneva Conventions. They are evil men who made torture the official policy of the United States for the first time in our history. Discussing them in terms of ideological balance or imbalance is ludicrously out of proportion to the seriousness of their crimes.
"cabinet" is a metaphor, and most actual cabinets as made by cabinetmakers, had to be built out of strong, straight, knot-free wood.
I defy anyone who's been keeping their eyes open to US politics to justify the word "cabinet" in relation to the Bush "clique", instead of something more appropriate such as "shrubbery".
Anyone yet mentioned that FDR advocated courage during times of war as opposed to GWB who stoops to scare the bejeepers out of everyone?
(With today's medical technology, it's about time to clone FDR, fix his polio then make him president of the world - for life!)
Yes, backed up by a coterie of hard core conservative staffers who have pledged allegiance to George Bush and only George Bush, who will lie and commit crimes to advance their religious agendas. Who seem to consist of 30-something graduates of lower level Christian professional schools, with short resumes who's main attributes are dog-like loyalty and the willingness to break laws when ordered to. And these people are put in control of the careers of older, experienced and valued government appointees in order to ferret out any whiff of disloyalty to the crown.