Pubdate: Wed, 25 Aug 1999 Source: Guardian Weekly, The (UK) Section: Washington Diary Copyright: 1999 The Guardian Weekly Contact: 75 Farringdon Road London U.K EC1M 3HQ Fax: 44-171-242-0985 Website: http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/GWeekly/ Author: Julian Borger BUSH STUMBLES AS MEDIA SNIFF SCANDAL The dissection of personal scandals has become as intrinsic to United States presidential campaigns as bumper stickers and corporate finance, and so it was last week that the 2000 campaign began in earnest with a storm over what had or had not been up George W Bush's nose. The issue is cocaine this time. Had it been sex again, it would arguably not have won so much attention from a public sated by Bill Clinton's Oval Office escapades. For the time being at least, drugs are more politically interesting than sex. Marijuana is no longer a problem. Clinton claimed he had smoked but "didn't inhale", which nobody believed, though that did not stop him winning the presidency. Al Gore, the likely Democratic nominee this time, admitted 11 years ago that he had smoked pot, and most Americans still think he is stiff and boring. Cocaine is another matter. Using it is a serious crime, punishable by a prison term -- especially in Texas under Bush's governorship, where possession of even a gram could land you in jail. So if it turned out that Bush once tried it, there is a hypocrisy charge lurking behind the questions of morality and criminality. The cocaine question emerged out of the haze enveloping his Texas bachelor days in the 1960s and 70s, when he was, by all accounts, a party animal. He boozed and went out with a lot of women, but it is unclear what, if any, drugs he took. The affair brought the media pundits and the pollsters back to familiar ground - the struggle between the personal and the political. Clinton pushed the frontier back by winning the impeachment battle in the Senate and in the public arena. But the Bush cocaine furore has demonstrated that the matter is unresolved. The frontier has not held, and his attempt to draw a line in the sand failed to stop scrutiny of his past. The stone-walling platitudes - such as "When I was young and irresponsible, I was young and irresponsible" - that got him to the governor's mansion in Austin are not good enough to get him to the White House. That is a rockier road, guarded by more ferocious watchdogs. The Bush privacy defence worked for the first few weeks. He presented himself as a prince who had learned from the mishaps of youth and was now ready to assume the throne. The nature of his past mistakes was therefore irrelevant. But the strategy fell apart on the campaign trail, largely because of Bush's mishandling. First, he volunteered the fact that, unlike Clinton, he had been faithful to his wife, thus putting the character issue on the table. It was open season on his private life, and the press wanted to know what other sins could Bush swear he had not committed. All other 11 Republican candidates in the presidential race had had no hesitation in denying any use of cocaine, unlike the well-financed front-runner. Then, when Bush was on the road last week without his chief media adviser, a reporter asked whether he would be able to pass the FBI background checks required for government workers, which demand a seven-year drug-free period before employment. It was a relevant question to anyone seeking public office, Bush reasoned, so he was happy to respond that, yes, he could pass muster. It probably seemed a reasonable decision at the time, but it opened the floodgates. The news lead the next day was that he had not taken drugs for seven years, giving the impression that before 1992 he had wallowed in a drug-addled haze. The damage limitation only made matters worse. The next day Bush said he could not only pass current FBI tests, he could also pass the tests that were in force during his father's term in office as president, which required 15 years of clean, drug-free living. In other words, he had not snorted since 1984. His aides then pushed the cutoff year back further still, telling journalists their candidate meant that he could have passed the more stringent test at the time George Bush Sr was sworn in as president in 1989. So the new threshold became 1974, when Bush Jr was 28. But the salami-slicing proved pointless. What about before 1974, came the inevitable inquiry. Could he swear, like all prospective White House staff, that he had not touched cocaine since he was 18? Bush belatedly rushed to lock the stable door, but the horse had gone and was riding roughshod over his team's efforts to control it. Even though no shred of evidence had materialised to prove he had taken drugs, it was widely assumed he had snorted cocaine (otherwise why else go through such contortions?). Bush believes he can sit out the storm. He remains in a dominant position in the polls, where he leads Gore by 17 points. As many as 84% of Americans questioned on the drug issue believe that a person's cocaine use in his 20s would not affect his electability. And 58% say the press should not pursue the matter. But the public is as confused as its media about all this. A clear majority believes that Bush should come clean about his drug past. In effect, the voters are promising him that if he tells all, they will forgive him, just as they more or less forgave Clinton for his sexual transgressions. Bush's dilemma is whether to trust them. Admitting cocaine use would be a hostage to fortune at the start of the Republican primary process, but further prevarication could remind the electorate of Clinton's weasel way with words. With a handful of exceptions, those same Republicans who were righteously indignant about Clinton's moral failings are now most defensive about Bush's right to privacy, and the need to forgive. Meanwhile those Democrats who staunchly guarded the border between personal and political during the impeachment want payback. Staunch Republicans and Democrats among the voting-age population have followed suit, backing the person rather than the principle. What counts seems to be whether the candidate is perceived as "one of us" or "one of them". That perception in turn is based on policy stands on a range of issues, from taxation to gun control and abortion. In other words, sex and drugs may provide colourful battlefields, but the war is fought over the "real issues", after all. The Guardian Weekly 26-8-1999, page 6 - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D