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- <text id=90TT1301>
- <title>
- May 21, 1990: Big Bad John Sununu
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 21, 1990 John Sununu:Bush' Bad Cop
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 21
- COVER STORIES
- Big Bad John Sununu
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>He's smarter than you are, and he wants you to know it. That's
- why George Bush prizes his brusque but brilliant White House
- chief of staff
- </p>
- <p>By Dan Goodgame--With reporting by Michael Duffy/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The winds lay calm on the Caribbean that evening, but 30,000
- feet up in a White House jet the President's chief of staff was
- stirring a political storm. Returning to Washington from the
- inauguration of Costa Rica's new leader, John Sununu wandered
- to the rear of the Boeing 707 to schmooze with the traveling
- press. But first he shed his suit jacket, his title and his
- name. At his insistence, Sununu was now a "senior White House
- official."
- </p>
- <p> The conversation quickly turned to the hottest topic of the
- week: Could Sununu reconcile President Bush's campaign pledge
- of "no new taxes" with his invitation for congressional leaders
- to join him in budget talks with "no preconditions"? Sununu
- shook his head impatiently. "We're allowing the Democrats to
- bring their good arguments for taxes to the table," he said.
- "And it is our prerogative to say no. And I emphasize the no."
- </p>
- <p> How, then, asked a reporter, could Bush be sincere about no
- preconditions? Were there any circumstances, another inquired,
- under which he would trade new taxes for cuts in federal
- spending? "You've got a one-track mind on a trivial question,"
- Sununu snapped, his voice rising. "Small minds ask small
- questions."
- </p>
- <p> It says a great deal about John Sununu's reputation for
- rudeness that, when the "small minds" quote appeared on the
- front page of the Washington Post the next morning, half the
- town knew immediately which "senior official" was talking. The
- Democrats whom Bush was trying to lure into budget talks
- accused the Administration of negotiating in bad faith. But
- Sununu had accomplished his goal: reassuring the Republican
- faithful and the voters that Bush remains staunchly opposed to
- any broad new taxes. When the President subsequently dissociated
- himself from Sununu's remarks in a chat with House Speaker Tom
- Foley, the strategy was complete. Bush was able to posture as
- Mr. Fiscal Responsibility, willing to entertain any proposal,
- including higher taxes, to help balance the budget.
- </p>
- <p> This good-cop, bad-cop routine has become a staple of the
- Bush White House. No one plays the heavy better than Sununu,
- and no one takes more heat on Bush's behalf. That is why Bush
- picked Sununu as his right-hand man, and why he prizes him.
- </p>
- <p> When he named Sununu his chief of staff shortly after the
- 1988 election, Bush handed the ultimate insider's job to a
- bumptious outsider with a chip on his shoulder: a
- double-hyphenated Lebanese- and Greek-American, born in Havana
- with a funny name. Bush pointedly ignored the protests of such
- close advisers as Secretary of State James Baker, leading the
- Washington establishment to conclude that he had "done another
- Quayle." Sununu was obviously brilliant: a three-term Governor
- of New Hampshire and former engineering professor with an IQ
- estimated at 180. He had been an invaluable political asset,
- rescuing Bush's faltering campaign by masterminding a victory
- in the New Hampshire primary. But he lacked any experience in
- the clannish world of Washington and was so relentlessly
- abrasive that one wag dubbed him "Morton Downey Jr. with a
- Ph.D." The smart money gave him at most a year in the job.
- </p>
- <p> That was 16 months ago. Today Bush is surfing along at
- 60%-plus public-approval ratings, and much of the credit falls
- to Sununu. His White House displays almost none of the
- backbiting and leaking that roiled the Reagan Administration.
- He adroitly appeases fellow right-wing Republicans who have
- never much trusted Bush. On the other flank, Sununu exuberantly
- baits environmentalists and others into blaming him, rather
- than the President, when the Administration backslides from
- Bush's gauzy promises. Though he possesses no more "vision"
- than Bush does, Sununu has substituted a quiet and canny
- strategy to attain the President's paramount goal: re-election
- in 1992.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, Sununu has emerged as Bush's most inspired choice
- for any senior post. Amid the bland Washington-retread Wasps
- with whom Bush has peopled much of his Cabinet and staff,
- Sununu adds both spice and balance. His brisk certainty and
- willingness to take bold stands complement his risk-averse
- boss.
- </p>
- <p> The two play off each other like a wrestling tag team on
- late-night cable: Gentleman George and Snarlin' Sununu; the
- King of Kind and Gentle and his Dark Prince. Bush may call
- himself the Environmental President and the Education
- President, but he has Sununu to make sure that this rhetoric
- stays relatively cheap.
- </p>
- <p> Their slap-and-stroke routine extends to Oval Office
- meetings, where Bush is unfailingly gracious, whether with
- earnest junior staffers or craven special pleaders. It is
- Sununu's role to wring useful information out of unctuous
- presentations and rebut one-sided arguments, and he delights
- in it. Bush clearly relishes the edge and the rigor that Sununu
- provides. "He has made a lot of friends for our Administration,"
- Bush says, "on the basis of competence, sheer competence."
- </p>
- <p> But as the President knows, Sununu has also made plenty of
- enemies through sheer insolence. He slammed down the phone
- during a foreign policy argument with Republican Congressman
- Mickey Edwards of Oklahoma. He shouted obscenities at Senate
- Republican leader Bob Dole's press secretary over a routine
- news release. He berated House Republican leader Bob Michel for
- not supporting the President with sufficient enthusiasm, moving
- Michel to note that "sometimes we have to remind Governor
- Sununu that this is not the New Hampshire legislature."
- Democratic Senator Tim Wirth of Colorado says what many
- Washington insiders feel: Sununu "thinks he's the only smart
- guy in town. He shows little respect for anyone else's
- intelligence or point of view."
- </p>
- <p> Nor is Sununu above using double-dealing and deception to
- achieve the President's goals. In March he told Delaware
- Democrat Joseph Biden that Bush would veto the clean-air bill
- the Senate was debating if it included an expensive amendment.
- Meanwhile, he privately told Idaho Republican Steve Symms just
- the opposite. Symms had favored the amendment because he hoped
- it would trigger a veto of the bill, which Symms opposed as too
- tough on polluting industries. Sununu led Symms to believe the
- amendment would only make things worse because Bush was
- inclined to sign the clean-air bill with or without it. Both
- Senators voted against the amendment, and it was dropped from
- the bill--precisely what the President wanted.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu does not think like Bush or any other
- let's-make-a-deal politician. He was trained as an engineer and
- a debater, and it shows. The engineer in him enormously enjoys
- the substantive questions of governance: What kind of pollution
- control is cost-effective? Which jet fighter technologies
- should we share with Japan? To such questions, Sununu brings
- voracious curiosity, a keen analytical gift and near total
- recall. Budget Director Richard Darman, Sununu's only
- intellectual peer in the Bush inner circle, points out that
- "Sununu is trained in fluid dynamics and has a good sense of
- the dynamics of a problem," unlike lesser minds, who "see the
- world in static terms."
- </p>
- <p> But years before he studied engineering, Sununu was whipping
- older boys in high school debate tournaments. Then as now, he
- could argue either side of a question with equal gusto. Unlike
- lawyers, debaters never seek friendly, out-of-court
- settlements: their goal is to intellectually destroy the
- opponent. Sununu wields his prodigious memory like a sword,
- inundating his adversary with data. And he resorts early and
- often to ad hominem bullying. Observes a senior White House
- official: "There is something in Sununu's personality where he
- cannot stay in his seat if someone says or does something that
- he thinks is foolish. He feels obliged to immediately expose
- the person as a fool."
- </p>
- <p> Sununu often discounts the intelligence of those who do not
- debate as ferociously as he. For all his brusque misjudgment
- of individuals, however, Sununu shows astute insight into
- groups. He cleverly divines which arguments will be most
- persuasive to which audiences. And though he is deeply
- conservative on social issues like abortion, Sununu is supple
- and ambitious enough to accommodate the raging moderation of
- George Bush.
- </p>
- <p> In a city of strange bedfellows, Bush and Sununu make one
- of the oddest couples ever: ideologically, temperamentally,
- even physically. A common sight around the White House is the
- 6-ft. 2-in. Bush, his lanky frame impeccably clad in an $800
- suit, trailed by what an admirer calls "this fat little
- pirate," 5 ft. 9 in., 190 lbs., his wavy hair tousled,
- sweating, with tie loosened, jacket off, sleeves rolled up,
- pants sagging beneath his paunch and shirttail sneaking out in
- the back.
- </p>
- <p> The contrast extends to the hours they prefer, even their
- table manners. Bush bounds eagerly out of bed at 5:30 a.m., and
- always has. Sununu is a night owl who, when studying
- engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, would
- organize a marathon bridge game or keep fraternity brothers
- awake while thwokking a lacrosse ball off his wall, then handle
- his homework in an hour or so before class. Bush is so
- exquisitely considerate that at meals, without breaking
- conversation, he will shift his water glass to give the waiter
- more room as he arrives with the soup. When Sununu receives
- guests in his White House office, he will pour himself a cup
- of coffee (he drinks only decaf, which everyone agrees is a
- good thing) and grab a handful of M&M's without offering
- anything to anyone else.
- </p>
- <p> For pop psychologists who believe that politicians play out
- their inner conflicts in public, Sununu is a study in
- narcissism. The world revolves around him. He's O.K.; you're
- probably not O.K. He is smarter than you are, and he wants you
- to know it. Ask Sununu to name an influential teacher or a
- prize student, and none comes immediately to mind. He looms
- larger in others' lives than they do in his.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike Bush, who keeps a Rolodex of his 6,000 closest
- "friends," Sununu reserves his warmth for a handful of close
- friends and his family. Once, after a Bush political dinner in
- Miami that ended well past midnight, a reporter saw Sununu
- heading out to spend three hours, round trip, on I-95, just for
- a brief visit with his parents, now retired in Gulf Stream,
- Fla.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu jealously reserves most weekends for his wife Nancy,
- a fund raiser for the Republican Governors Association, and
- their children at their four-bedroom home in Oakton, Va., 17
- miles northwest of the White House. Asked his greatest
- accomplishment, Sununu replies without hesitation, "Eight great
- kids." An avid softball player, he enjoys taking swings in the
- batting cages with the two youngest sons, Chris, 15, and Peter,
- 10, who still live at home. Sununu plays third base much the
- way he plays chief of staff: setting up almost in the batter's
- face to cut off the bunt and daring him to get one past.
- </p>
- <p> For a time, Sununu wrote stories and poems for children.
- Concord lawyer Ned Helms recalls that when his wife fell ill,
- Sununu gave her a book of poems that he said he enjoyed, by
- Sylvia Plath. A voracious speed reader, Sununu keeps about
- three books going at a time: from a biography of Richard Nixon
- to a thriller by Tom Clancy to a tome called The Theory of
- Numbers, which his executive assistant, Ed Rogers, dryly
- describes as "recreational mathematics." During spare moments
- on Air Force One, he plays with Game Boy, a hand-held Nintendo
- video game.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu's humor runs toward practical jokes (dressing Budget
- Director Darman in a gorilla suit for Bush's birthday),
- physical gags (suddenly flopping like a high jumper over the
- back of his office couch) and, of course, sarcasm. After the
- White House lost a major struggle on Capitol Hill, Sununu
- arrived at his morning senior staff session to find his chief
- lobbyist, Fred McClure, perusing the newspapers. "What are you
- reading, Fred?" Sununu rasped. "The help-wanted ads?"
- </p>
- <p> In February, after cocaine lords threatened to shoot down
- the President's plane as it flew to a summit meeting with South
- American leaders in Colombia, reporters pressed for more
- details about security arrangements. Sununu deadpanned, "We're
- gonna paint the press plane to look like Air Force One, and
- we're gonna send it in ahead of the President." The following
- month, when Bush learned that critics of his AIDS policy might
- try to disrupt a speech he was to deliver, he peevishly told
- his aides, "Well, then I just won't give the speech." Sununu
- raised his eyebrows and said, "This, from the man who braved
- the drug lords of Cartagena?" Bush laughed--and gave the
- speech.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu's most common expression is not a scowl but a
- pixieish, if somewhat smug, little smile. Even his
- characteristic fits of trash-can-kicking fury pass quickly.
- Still, most White House officials have learned not to take bad
- news to Sununu before getting a "weather report" of his mood
- from his deputy, Andy Card.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu, like Bush, grew up in the shadow of a highly
- successful father in a comfortable home in a leafy bedroom
- community, attended private boarding school and displayed nary
- a flicker of rebellion. The crucial difference is that Bush was
- heir to both material and social comfort, while Sununu was
- always an outsider.
- </p>
- <p> He was born in 1939 in Havana, where his father briefly
- distributed foreign films and other imported products. His
- father, whose parents were Lebanese, grew up in Boston. His
- mother hailed from El Salvador, though her parents were
- Lebanese and Greek. When Sununu was an infant, his family
- migrated to the tony neighborhood of Forest Hills, N.Y. Their
- home was filled with letters from relatives in half a dozen
- countries as well as books and conversations in several
- languages. Thanks to his mother, childhood trips to Europe and
- college studies, Sununu is fluent in Spanish, speaks decent
- French and reads German. But all his life he has been teased
- about his name. Even Bush once joked that he picked Sununu
- because his surname rhymed with "deep doo-doo." In Arabic,
- sununu means sparrow, and appears often in poetry and songs.
- </p>
- <p> Almost as soon as he entered Catholic parochial school,
- little Johnny was spotted as something special. He was
- athletic, outgoing and excelled at his studies. He won a full
- scholarship to La Salle Military Academy, a boarding school on
- eastern Long Island. There Sununu rose to lieutenant colonel
- and commanded the other cadets. On graduation day, he won so
- many awards that the headmaster, rather than call him from his
- seat again and again, simply handed him a silver bowl and had
- him stand onstage to collect his loot. Though Sununu insists
- that he displayed no interest in politics until 1969, his
- fellow seniors in 1957 voted him Class Politician, as well as
- Outstanding Senior Student, Outstanding Orator, Most Energetic
- and Most Likely to Succeed.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu went to M.I.T., where he earned a doctorate and
- founded an engineering firm. He met a young woman named Nancy
- Hayes, a tall, fair-haired, Irish American from Boston College.
- She found him smart and funny and "very sure for his age of
- where he was going." They married at age 20.
- </p>
- <p> After graduation, Sununu taught engineering at Tufts
- University. At 27, he was a professor running his own
- consulting firm on the side. In 1969 he moved his family just
- across the state line, to Salem, N.H., in search of lower taxes
- and "a better life-style for my family." There he began his
- political career, winning a spot on the local planning board,
- then a seat as a state representative. He ran unsuccessfully
- for a number of higher offices, including state and U.S.
- Senator, before finally winning the governorship in 1982. That
- victory came at the trough of the Reagan recession. Sununu
- prevailed by promising to balance the state budget without
- broad-based new taxes. New Hampshire is one of the few states
- with no state personal-income or sales tax.
- </p>
- <p> As the nation's economy recovered, New Hampshire's boomed
- by attracting vacationers and high-tech companies. Never a
- Reaganite, antigovernment conservative, Sununu presided over
- an expansion in state revenues and expenditures. He brought
- computerized management to inefficient state agencies,
- increased spending on mental-health programs, expanded prisons
- and set aside more land for parks. Then as now, Sununu took a
- generally dim view of environmental activists, as he championed
- the unpopular Seabrook nuclear power plant. But after careful
- study, he promoted curbs on the air pollutants that cause acid
- rain.
- </p>
- <p> He also emerged as a prominent spokesman for Arab Americans,
- a role that prompted suspicion from pro-Israel groups. Those
- doubts grew in 1986 when Sununu refused to sign a proclamation
- denouncing the U.N. resolution that equated Zionism with
- racism. He has since met with many supporters of Israel and
- convinced them that he means no harm to their cause. At the
- same time, in speeches to Arab-American groups, he has spoken
- forcefully of the "spleen" and "frustration" he feels over
- anti-Arab prejudice.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu cemented his relationship with Bush during the
- darkest moment of the 1988 campaign. Bush had just been
- clobbered by Bob Dole in the Iowa caucuses. And his lead in the
- polls was evaporating only a week before the primary in New
- Hampshire, where Sununu was running the Bush campaign. A friend
- who stopped by to cheer up Sununu found him staring out the
- window in the Governor's office. "I just heard the news from
- Iowa," said the friend, "and thought you might like to talk
- about it." Sununu turned from the window with a wolfish grin
- and replied, "Yeah, isn't it great?" Then, seeing his visitor's
- puzzlement, he explained that the Iowa defeat had left Bush
- desperate for a win. "Don't you see," he confided, "how much
- good I'm going to be able to do for the next President of the
- United States?"
- </p>
- <p> Sununu delivered on his boast. He persuaded Bush to become
- at once more folksy among voters and more slashingly negative
- toward his opponents--particularly in TV ads that attacked
- Dole as a closet taxer. The shift in tactics propelled Bush to
- victory in New Hampshire and dramatically revived his campaign.
- </p>
- <p> The one Washington job besides chief of staff that
- interested Sununu was Vice President. Bush asked him to submit
- disclosure forms as a potential running mate, and some of his
- supporters were so encouraged that they brought BUSH-SUNUNU
- placards to the Republican Convention at the New Orleans
- Superdome. Bush's selection of Dan Quayle badly disappointed
- Sununu, who pretended to return a pair of expensive suits,
- folded up, to a haberdasher friend in Manchester. He explained,
- only half jokingly, that "they didn't get me the nomination,
- so I want my money back."
- </p>
- <p> As his chief of staff, says a presidential adviser outside
- the government, Bush wanted someone "who would not get along
- too well with the Congress, too well with the press, too well
- with the staff." That conviction hardened as Bush watched, with
- deepening wariness, the performance of his close friend Jim
- Baker as Ronald Reagan's chief of staff. Baker expertly
- ingratiated himself with lawmakers, journalists and others,
- often at the expense of Reagan. He distanced himself from
- unpopular decisions and took credit for those that worked out
- well. The pattern, Bush felt, carried over from the Reagan
- White House to the 1988 campaign.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu, on the other hand, is a natural lightning rod. He
- is not only willing to take heat for the President but "loves
- to take heat--and gives as good as he gets," says New
- Hampshire G.O.P. Senator Warren Rudman, a Sununu friend. As
- Bush's bad cop on environmental issues, Sununu drew the fire
- of the Sierra Club and other activist groups, which denounced
- him for consistently siding with corporate polluters. They
- scarcely mentioned Bush, even though Sununu was only carrying
- out the President's policies. Such loyalty is prized by all
- chief executives, but especially by George Bush. Moreover,
- Sununu's unorthodox political calculations have often been
- vindicated, most impressively when he has stood against the
- consensus of more seasoned Bush advisers.
- </p>
- <p> Example: the Senate in late January sought to override
- Bush's veto of a bill that would have allowed Chinese students
- who feared persecution in their homeland in the wake of last
- year's Tiananmen massacre to remain in the U.S. The bill had
- passed the Senate overwhelmingly, and most of his advisers
- recommended that Bush not invest his prestige in an uphill
- battle to uphold his veto. Sununu strongly disagreed. He
- persuaded Bush to put a full-court press on every Republican
- Senator, promising to protect the students by Executive Order
- without offending the prickly Chinese leadership. What was at
- stake, Sununu stressed, was the President's ability to conduct
- foreign policy without congressional meddling. The argument
- worked and the veto stuck.
- </p>
- <p> Example: on the eve of the Nicaraguan election in February,
- "everyone here hoped the resistance would win, but only Sununu
- really believed it and said so," recalls Robert Gates, the
- deputy national security adviser. When intelligence experts
- predicted victory for the Sandinista government, Sununu argued
- that they must be missing something: Nicaraguans had to be fed
- up with their crashing economy, even though under such a
- repressive regime they would be afraid to tell pollsters the
- truth. During Bush's morning intelligence update on the Friday
- before the election, a CIA briefer again predicted a
- Sandinista victory, and Sununu puckishly bet him an ice-cream
- sundae that he was wrong. On the following Monday morning, the
- CIA man had to pay up.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu is consolidating his role as the Administration's de
- facto chief political officer. Last week, after Jim Wray,
- director of the White House political office, took a new job
- at the Republican National Committee, Sununu put his executive
- assistant, Ed Rogers, in charge. From the beginning, Sununu has
- served as a key political liaison to right-wing Republicans.
- He assiduously solicits their views and appoints their
- candidates to key second-level posts in the Administration: for
- example, placing staunch opponents of abortion at the Department
- of Health and Human Services.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu is quietly shaping a handful of issues on which Bush
- can run for re-election. On one front--clean air, child care,
- education reform, help for the disabled--Sununu and Bush are
- stealing popular issues that traditionally belong to the
- Democrats. On another the White House is preparing "wedge"
- issues to sharply distinguish Republicans from Democrats. These
- include opposition to broad new taxes, support for a
- constitutional ban on flag burning, and aggressive brandishment
- of the presidential veto to hold down government spending.
- Mindful that voters are more inclined to trust Republicans than
- Democrats on law-and-order issues, Sununu has pushed to define
- the drug issue to his party's advantage. In his view, curbing
- drug abuse is more a matter of hiring cops and building prisons
- than of education and treatment. The latter, says a senior
- Republican, are things "any fool Democrat can do."
- </p>
- <p> It is a sound political strategy. But the question remains
- whether Sununu will be around to see it implemented. Those who
- know him best say there is no limit to his abilities or
- political ambitions. When a well-wisher at Sununu's
- inauguration as Governor remarked to his mother that she must
- be very proud, she replied, "Oh, Governor is nice, but
- President--now that would really be something."
- </p>
- <p> For his part, Sununu says he wishes only "to serve George
- Bush as long as he wants me"--for eight years, he hopes. That
- would be a feat never accomplished since the advent of the
- modern chief of staff. Yet for Sununu to survive two full
- terms, he might have to temper the fire-eating act that wins
- him Bush's respect and trust, which are in turn the source of
- his power. As a senior White House official observes, "Although
- there appears to be mortal combat in Washington, most people
- here treat one another with extraordinary respect. There is a
- lot of continuity, and people have to live and work together
- for a long time. So the Sununu approach would be better for a
- short-timer than a longtimer."
- </p>
- <p> The early defeat Bush and Sununu suffered in the Senate over
- the nomination of John Tower as Defense Secretary is an object
- lesson in the perils of arrogance. Tower was for years a power
- in Washington as chairman of the Senate Armed Services
- Committee--but like Sununu, he made enemies he did not need
- to make, including fellow Senators. And, though it took a
- while, Tower got his payback when his colleagues denied him his
- crowning glory at the Pentagon.
- </p>
- <p> A Lebanese proverb holds that "one kisses the hand that one
- cannot yet bite." John Sununu doesn't work that way. The rest
- of Washington does.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-