home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- 6» ╚NATION, Page 25REPUBLICANSThe Thorn in Bush's Right Side
-
-
- A conservative who speaks his mind, Pat Buchanan stands about
- zero chance of winning, but he is certainly giving the White
- House fits
-
- By MARGARET CARLSON
-
-
- Politicians are candid at their peril; a gaffe occurs
- when one of them inadvertently says what he actually thinks. By
- that standard, presidential candidate Patrick J. Buchanan is a
- veritable gaffemeister, insisting that Watergate was "a bunch
- of Mickey Mouse misdemeanors," Congress is "Israeli-occupied
- territory," and Ollie North is "a hero." Buchanan's pasty face
- crinkles into a smile when he recalls penning phrases like
- "pusillanimous pussyfooters."
-
- Buchanan, 53, has not trimmed his verbal sails since
- beginning his effort to oust the traitorous George Bush, whose
- cave-in on taxes was "the Yalta of the Republican Party." He
- uses Bushspeak a la Saturday Night Live's Dana Carvey to
- lambaste the President for breaking his tax pledge and begs Bush
- to debate him "at the country club of his choice." His regular
- stump speech extolling isolationism, protectionism and fiscal
- stinginess is seasoned with attacks on "boodling" Congressmen,
- upholstered think tanks cooking up cockeyed new programs, and
- softheaded Trilateralists who would bail out Chinese communist
- Deng Xiaoping, the "85-year-old chain-smoking communist dwarf"
- but let Macy's go into Chapter 11.
-
- This may not be the stuff to win over the country, but it
- could be enough to reclaim the Republican right. At first,
- Buchanan says, he thought his America First ideas would inspire
- "something more than a supper club but less than a third party."
- By December, Bush's popularity was moving south, the economy was
- worsening, and Bush wasn't doing anything about it. "There were
- more sightings of Elvis in New Hampshire than ((of)) the
- President," Buchanan said. Buchanan jumped in on Dec. 10, and
- now, two months later, he is clocking in at 25% to 30% on most
- polls, assuring that he will send a message, if not a bomb, to
- the White House.
-
- Buchanan was already well known as former top aide to both
- Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan and as co-host of Crossfire,
- regular on The Capital Gang, occupier of what came to be known
- as the "Yahoo chair" on The McLaughlin Group, and syndicated
- columnist. His monthly newsletter, PJB, sent to 30,000 true
- believers who pay $49 to $98 a year, made him a
- multimillionaire.
-
- But now Buchanan has given up the protective cocoon of
- celebrity life, a world in which he traveled by Mercedes (so
- much for buying American) from his pillared mansion in McLean,
- Va., to the CNN studio where, as one staffer says, "he never
- actually had to come into contact with the bozos who think the
- way he does." He has taken up traveling by minivan, begging for
- donations, and bedding down at Holiday Inns. The speeches he
- used to give at about $10,000 a pop are being delivered free in
- overheated living rooms in New Hampshire.
-
- A little suffering fits the Buchanan Weltan schauung that
- too much happiness in this life could reduce the chances of
- salvation in the next -- and that has helped him pull off his
- aggrieved underdog pose. From inside the Beltway, even before
- there was one (he was born the third of nine children in a
- comfortable Washington neighborhood), he has nonetheless
- successfully positioned himself as a scrappy outsider.
-
- Buchanan's career is a living monument to his father, whom
- he eulogized in 1988 as "quite simply the best man I ever
- knew." The elder Buchanan passed along his devotion to Joe
- McCarthy, Douglas MacArthur and Francisco Franco and his belief
- that a sharp right to the jaw was an excellent way to make a
- point. "Wild Bill" made his sons hit a punching bag 400 times
- a week and cheered when Pat bloodied the nose of a first-grade
- bully. He once held young Pat's hand to a lighted match to
- demonstrate what eternal damnation would be like.
-
- Buchanan's mother, who now lives in a Washington suburb,
- prefers to recall her son's intellectual side. "Pat was still
- in the playpen when he recited the Hail Mary his father had been
- trying to get the older boys to memorize. He was always first
- in his class." After eighth grade, when the fancy sons of
- lace-curtain Irish lawyers and lobbyists departed in tweeds and
- cashmere for Georgetown Prep, Buchanan proudly went off in his
- blue serge suit to Gonzaga, an inner-city school run by tough
- Jesuits, where the basketball nets were made of chain, the decor
- consisted of a crucifix on the wall, and grudges against those
- who had it too easy were encouraged. A nonconformist who dared
- come to school with a day's growth of beard would be collared
- by Father Aloy sius McGonigol and dry-shaved until his face
- bled.
-
- Buchanan missed his best opportunity to escape the
- boundaries of religion and culture drawn by his father by opting
- to go only one ZIP code away to Georgetown University. He was
- suspended for a year after he punched two policemen who stopped
- him for speeding. As he romanticizes the episode, "I was ahead
- on points until they pulled out the nightsticks."
-
- After working in his father's office and at a summer job
- delivering mail (he jokes that he fed people's Social Security
- checks to their dogs), he graduated third in his class from
- Georgetown, got a master's degree at Columbia's Graduate School
- of Journalism and landed his first job at the now defunct St.
- Louis Globe-Democrat, writing ripsnorting editorials that bashed
- bleeding-heart liberals. In 1965 he went up to Nixon at a
- reception and reminded the "old man" that he had caddied for him
- at Burning Tree Country Club (where they relieved themselves in
- the woods) and urged Nixon to run for President -- with his
- help.
-
- In 1969 Buchanan went to work in the White House, where he
- met Shelley Scarney. They married in 1971, and like many
- couples without children, they are inseparable, to the point
- that Buchanan barely ties his shoes without her. His scheduler,
- secretary and chauffeur, she trails along behind him wheeling
- a suitcase full of mail, setting up a mobile office wherever he
- happens to be. When he stopped drinking a few years ago, so did
- she. Loyalty -- to his father, the Latin Mass, Brylcreem and
- the party of Robert Taft -- is all. He socializes mostly with
- his family (his sister, former U.S. Treasurer Angela Buchanan,
- is his campaign manager). He eats out every night (cooking is
- one thing neither of the Buchanans does), and he calls a week
- in Eastern Europe with a group of conservatives such as Richard
- Viguerie a vacation. When he holidays at an unfashionable
- Delaware beach, he spends an hour in the car every day rounding
- up four national newspapers.
-
- It is hard for friends and colleagues to square the
- private Buchanan with the public one: the Rottweiler who has
- turned nostalgia for the days of Ike and Elvis into attacks on
- anyone who is not white, male, Christian and straight. Even
- supporters like National Review editor William J. Buckley Jr.
- found it difficult to defend Buchanan after his comments about
- Treblinka and the alleged dual loyalties of Jews during the gulf
- war. Michael Kinsley, Buchanan's Crossfire co-host for two
- years, points out that it is a pundit's business to spew out
- provocative opinions like an open fire hydrant. But he insists,
- as do most of Buchanan's colleagues, that the candidate is not
- anti-Semitic: "I never heard him make a disparaging remark about
- Jews, never noticed any difference in the way he treats Jews."
-
- When asked whether he's anti-Semitic, Buchanan says no,
- that he tries to be "good" in the Judeo-Christian sense. He is
- absolutely calm about the primary next week, at least in part
- from knowing that on the issue that matters most, neither he nor
- the voters will have the final word.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-