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Politics : Al Gore vs George Bush: the moderate's perspective -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rarebird who wrote (709)9/19/2000 8:38:22 AM
From: John Carragher  Respond to of 10042
 
The woman who put it together

By Thomas Oliphant, Globe Columnist, 9/19/2000

WASHINGTON

On behalf of the beleaguered targets of presidential politics, meet this year's
heroine - Janet Brown.

A lifelong Republican who works for a Kennedy Democrat, a Reagan
Republican on a bipartisan board, this backstage junkie is the main reason
the country will get three 90-minute cracks at George W. Bush and Al Gore
next month, along with a 90-minute opportunity to study Dick Cheney and
Joe Lieberman.

When it began to look as if the debates were in danger of foundering, it was
her bipartisan wisdom and discipline that rescued them for the rest of us.
Come to think of it, she has been essential to the debates' overwhelming
success in their current form for all 13 years she has been doing her
thankless job.

The key to her work behind the scenes this year can be found first of all in
this critical fact: Governor Bush's position was never criticized, and Vice
President Gore's position was never supported, by the Commission on
Presidential Debates, which she serves as executive director. In the end,
Gore didn't win this tussle; the commission and the public did.

As with all executive directors, Brown's authority is entirely derivative. From
the beginning, when the commission succeeded the League of Women
Voters on the recommendations of two study panels, the Republican
co-chair has been Frank Fahrenkopf, the Democratic cochair has been Paul
Kirk, each at the time their party's national chairman. It may have been
''somebody's got to do this'' at the beginning, but Fahrenkopf and Kirk have
since become passionate about their responsibility and scrupulous about
rejecting the occasional entreaties of partisan buddies.

But someone has also had to walk the point all these years, bringing major
league production values to the debates, opening up the formats, making it
all work. After three successful seasons, this will be the first in which the
commission's entire schedule has survived candidate shenanigans. Don't
think it was easy.

Through a critical period of high-stakes poker, with each side looking for a
reason to brand Brown and thus the commission a tool of the other, she
pressed three points that transcended partisanship and therefore carried the
day:

The commission can put the show together, partly because it has 10 times
previously since 1988 and partly because its criteria for candidate selection
have met legal tests for objectivity.

The public interest is in the largest possible audience for the largest possible
number of debates. The commercial networks can't assemble this, and
neither can one of the candidates unilaterally.

Format is flexible - always has been.

From the moment Bush's people tried to bust the commission's plan to their
own advantage (it could just as easily have been Gore's people in different
circumstances), that was her message. She said it in public, but most
important, she said it in private, when things could have gotten ugly, in
meetings and on conference calls.

Not only was Bush trying to bend things his way; he had de facto allies in the
promotion-crazed networks, two of which (CNN and NBC) actually got in
bed with him for a spell. But the side deals couldn't survive Brown's
arguments on behalf of the public, backed by an astonishing avalanche of
newspaper editorials from all ideologies and all parts of the country.

Brown never gloated, but the rest of us owe this person a deep bow. She's
fourth-generation D.C., sheepskins from Williams College and Harvard
University, and experience in the White House, the State Department of the
late Elliot Richardson, and the office of former Republican Senator Jack
Danforth of Missouri, who is now a commission board member.

When the debates begin next month in Boston, viewers of cable will
probably see her briefly, helping set the scene and warm up the auditorium
audience. They will be seeing the best of which politics in this country is
capable.

They will also learn the truth of her mom's strong view that she should eat
more.

Thomas Oliphant's e-mail address is oliphant@globe.com.

This story ran on page A15 of the Boston Globe on 9/19/2000.
© Copyright 2000 Globe Newspaper Company.



To: Rarebird who wrote (709)9/19/2000 8:55:18 AM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10042
 
<<Sure, the NEA and UFT are garbage. Everyone knows that. >>

Gore supports & gains support from those very(corrupt) unions!