Transition Mania
by
Tom
Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
DIGG THIS
44, The
Prequel
Did you know
that the IBM Center for the Business of Government hosts a "Presidential
Transition" blog; that the Council on Foreign Relations has
its own "Transition
Blog: The New Administration"; and that the American University
School of Communication has a "Transition
Tracker" website? The National Journal offers its online
readers a comprehensive "Lost
in Transition" site to help them "navigate the presidential
handover," including a "short
list," offering not only the president-elect's key recent appointments,
but also a series of not-so-short lists of those still believed
to be in contention for as-yet-unfilled jobs. Think of all this
as Entertainment Weekly married to People Magazine
for post-election political junkies.
Newsweek
features "powering
up" ("blogging the transition"); the policy-wonk website Politico.com
offers Politico 44
("a living diary of the Obama presidency"); and Public Citizen
has "Becoming 44," with
the usual lists of appointees,
possible appointees, but for the junkie who wants everything
"bundler transition team members" and "lobbyist
and bundler appointees" as well. (For those who want to know,
for instance, White House Social Secretary-designate Desiree Roberts
bundled
at least $200,000 for the Obama campaign.)
The New
York Times has gone whole hog at "The
New Team" section of its website, where there are scads
of little bios of appointees, as well as prospective appointees
including what each individual will "bring to the job," how each
is "linked to Mr. Obama," and what negatives each carries as "baggage."
Think of it as a scorecard for transition junkies. The Washington
Post, whose official beat is, of course, Washington D.C. über
alles, has its "44:
The Obama Presidency, A Transition to Power," where, in case
you're planning to make a night of it on January 20th, you can keep
up to date on that seasonal must-subject, the upcoming inaugural
balls. And not to be outdone, the transitioning Obama transition
crew has its own mega-transition site, Change.gov.
Earliest,
Biggest, Fastest
And that,
of course, only begins to scratch the surface of the media's transition
mania I haven't even mentioned the cable news networks which
has followed, with hardly a breath, nearly two years of presidential
campaign mania. Let's face it, whether or not the Obama transition
is the talk of Main Street and the under-populated malls of this
American moment, it's certainly the talk of medialand and at
what can only be termed historic levels, as befits a "historic"
transition period.
Believe me,
no one's sparing the adjectives right now. This transition is the
earliest, biggest, fastest, best organized, most efficient on record,
even as Obama himself has
"maintained one of the most public images of any president-elect."
It's cause for congratulations all around, a powerful antidote,
we're told, to Bill Clinton's notoriously chaotic transition back
in 1992. In fact, we can't, it seems, get enough of a transition
that began to gather steam many months before November 4th and has
been plowing ahead for more than a post-election month now.
It's kind
of exhausting, really, just thinking about that awesomely humongous
transition line-up. Check
out the list of transition review teams and advisors at Change.gov
and you'll find that it goes over the horizon. According
to the Washington Post, 135 transition team members, organized
into 10 groups, all wearing yellow badges, backed by countless transition
advisers, "have swarmed into dozens of government offices, from
the Pentagon to the National Council on Disability" preparing the
way for the new administration. This, like so much else, has been
"unprecedented."
And don't
get anyone started on the veritable "army"
of volunteer lawyers giving "unprecedented scrutiny" to possible
administration appointees in a vetting process that began at the
moment of Obama's nomination, not election. As the Washington
Post's Philip Rucker described it:
"Embarrassing
e-mails, text messages, diary entries and Facebook profiles? Gifts
worth more than $50? Relatives linked to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac,
AIG or another company getting a federal bailout? Obama is conducting
the vetting much as he managed his campaign: methodically, thoroughly
and on a prodigious scale."
That process
includes a distinctly unprecedented invasion of privacy via a seven-page,
63-question form that all potential appointees have had to fill
out. Imagine, for instance, that after 62 "penetrating" questions
on every aspect of your life, you faced this catch-all
63rd question: "Please provide any other information, including
information about other members of your family, that could suggest
a conflict of interest or be a possible source of embarrassment
to you, your family, or the president-elect." (For anyone worried
about privacy issues, what this means practically as Barton
Gelman explained in his book Angler on the vice-presidential
200-question vetting process by which Dick Cheney chose himself
as candidate and then used private information sent in by the other
candidates for his own purposes is major dossiers on about
800 people.)
Everything
in this "transition" is, in fact, more prodigious and more invasive
than in any previous transition, including, of course, the ongoing
media fascination with all those positions Obama is filling with
"the
best and the brightest." We're not just talking about his vast
economic team or his national
security team, but the presidential liaison to Capitol Hill,
the White House press secretary, the president's
speechwriter, his communications director, and his White
House staff secretary, not to speak of the First
Lady's deputy chief of staff and, of course, that White House
social secretary. And then there's always that bout of "fantasy
football for foodies," the speculation over who will be the
new White House chef.
The Transition
Bulks Up
Talk about
confident and organized, Peter Baker and Helene Cooper of the New
York Times report
that Obama invited former Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Jones
to meet with him and all but offered him a key national security
post "a full 13 days before the election." (He clearly felt that
he had a pretty good idea of who was going to be president-elect
by then.) And the rest of his transition, so efficiently organized
by former Clinton White House Chief of Staff John Podesta, has been
on a (steam)roll ever since. Post-November 4th, it has been rolling
out the key appointments at a historically "unprecedented" pace.
Five weeks
past victory, according to the Times, Obama had announced
13 of the 24 "most important positions in a new administration,"
including Jones as his national security adviser. At the equivalent
moment in their transitions, Jimmy Carter had filled two of these
positions; Ronald Reagan, two; George H.W. Bush, 8 (but his was
largely a carry-over administration); Bill Clinton, one; and George
W. Bush (distracted by an electoral battle wending its fateful way
to the Supreme Court), one.
Bated breath
hardly catches the media mood, facing the thrilling almost daily
roll-outs of new appointments and record numbers of president-elect
press conferences against a backdrop of enough American flags to
outfit a parade and announced from a White-House press-room-style
podium carefully not to say ornately labeled The
Office of the President Elect." At such moments, the Obama transition
can seem anything but transitional.
Given the
overwhelming, largely congratulatory focus on specific appointments
and their attendant drama will the strong personalities of Hillary,
Bob, and Jim clash? Are the Obama-ites in a desperate scramble for
a new CIA Director? Is Larry Summers next in line for the Fed?
the larger architecture of this moment, and what it portends for
the presidency to come, is ignored.
Think of it
this way: After the Imperial Campaign that two-year
extravaganza of bread and circuses (and money) comes the
Imperial Transition. Everything in these last weeks, like the preceding
two years, has been bulked up, like Schwarzenegger's Conanesque
pecs. In other words, since November 5th, what we've been experiencing
in the midst of one of the true
crisis periods in our history has essentially been an unending
celebration of super-sized government. Consider it an introduction
to what will surely be the next Imperial Presidency.
As the transition
events indicate, whatever its specific policies of change, the administration-to-come
is preparing to move, and in force, into an empty executive branch
as it already exists. Wherever there's an opening, that is, Podesta's
guys are rushing to fill it.
The particular
transition moment that caught my eye occurred two weeks ago when
the chief strategist of the Obama election campaign, David Axelrod,
was appointed senior
adviser to the president. To be more specific, he was given
Karl Rove's old slot (and, assumedly, office) in the White House.
As the Boston Globe's Peter Canelos wrote:
"[I]t's
now obvious that there's one part of George W. Bush's political
legacy that Obama and Axelrod aren't eager to change: the very dubious
notion of having the president's campaign strategist rubbing elbows
with all the policy wonks in the West Wing."
True, presidents
have often wanted trusted advisors near at hand, but the institutionalization
of that urge in an actual office in the White House is a new development
that Obama could easily, as well as painlessly, have reversed (and
many would have cheered him for it). So consider it a signal.
Barack Obama
thank goodness isn't George Bush. He doesn't arrive in office
with a crew wedded to a "unitary
executive theory" of the presidency, or an urge to loose the
executive from the supposed "chains" of the Watergate-era Congress,
or to "take off the gloves" globally. He doesn't have strange, twisted,
oppressive ideas about how the Constitution should work, nor assumedly
do visions of a "commander-in-chief presidency" (or vice presidency)
dance in his head like so many sugar plums.
But don't
ignore the architecture, the deep structure of the American political
system. Make no mistake, Obama is moving full-speed ahead into an
executive mansion rebuilt and endlessly expanded by the national
security state over the last half-century-plus, and then built up
in major ways by George W.'s "team." Despite the prospect of a new
dog and a mother-in-law
in the White House, the president-elect and his transition team
show no signs of wanting to change the basic furniture, no less
close up a few wings of the imperial mansion (other, perhaps, than
the elaborate prison complex at Guantanamo).
With so many
catastrophes impending and so many pundits and journalists merrily
applauding the most efficient transition in American history, no
one, it seems, is even thinking about the architecture.
The GM
of Governments
The New
York Times's David Sanger recently
reported on what happened when Obama's mini-transition teams
of ex-Clintonistas ventured into the heart of our post-9/11 imperial
bureaucracy. Many of the team members had worked in the very same
departments in the 1990s. On returning, however, they found themselves
to be so many Alices in a labyrinthine new Wonderland of national
security. Sanger writes:
"[S]everal
say they feel more like political archaeologists. 'The buildings
look the same,' one said over coffee, 'but everything inside is
unrecognizable.' And as they dig, they have tripped across a few
surprises… [F]ew can contain their amazement, chiefly at the sheer
increase in the size of the defense and national-security apparatus.
"'For a
bunch of small-government Republicans,' [said] one former denizen
of the White House who has now stepped back inside for the first
time in eight years, 'these guys built a hell of an empire.' Eight
years ago, there were two deputy national security advisers; today
there are a half-dozen, each with staff."
And
don't think for a second that most or all of those half-dozen posts
aren't likely to be filled by the new administration, or that, four
or eight years later, we'll be back to two deputy national security
advisers; nor should you imagine that the Homeland Security Department
that Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano is to run, a vast, lumpy,
inefficient, ineffective post-9/11 creation of the Bush administration
(which now has its own embedded mini-homeland-industrial complex)
will be gone in those same years, anymore than that most un-American
of words "homeland" is likely to leave our lexicon; nor will Barack
Obama not appoint a Director of National Intelligence, another
of those post-9/11 creations that added yet one more layer of bureaucracy
to the 18 departments, agencies, and offices which make up the official
U.S. Intelligence
Community.
Don't hold
your breath for that labyrinthine mess to be reduced to a more logical
two or three intelligence agencies; nor will that 2002 creation
of the Bush administration, the U.S.
Northern Command, another militarization of "the homeland" now
in the process of bulking
up, be significantly downsized or abolished in the coming years.
On all of
this, the Bush administration has gone
out of its way to lend a hand to Obama's transition team and,
in the process, help institutionalize the imperial transition itself.
Like the new money arrangements pioneered in the 2008 elections,
it surely will remain part of the political landscape for the foreseeable
future. From such developments in our world, it seems, there's never
any turning back.
There's nothing
strange about all this, of course, if you're already inside this
system. It seems, in fact, too obvious to mention. After all, what
president wouldn't move into the political/governmental house he's
inheriting as efficiently and fully as possible?
The
unprecedented size of this imperial pre-presidency, however, signals
something else: that what is to come quite aside from the
specific policies adopted by a future Obama administration – will
be yet another imperial presidency. (And, by the way, those who
expect Congress to suddenly become the player it hasn't been, wielding
power long ceded, are as likely to be disappointed as those who
expect a Hillary Clinton State Department renaissance under the
budgetary shadow of the Pentagon.)
On January
20th, Barack Obama will be more prepared than any president in recent
history to move in and, as everyone now likes to write, "hit the
ground running." But that ground the bloated executive and the
vast national security apparatus that goes with it (as well as the
U.S. military garrisons that dot the planet), all further engorged
by George W., Dick, and pals is anything but fertile when it
comes to "change."
Maybe if the
imperial presidency and the national security state worked, none
of this would matter. But how can they, given the superlatives that
apply to them? They're oversized, over-muscled, overweight, overly
expensive, overly powerful, and overly intrusive.
Bottom line:
they are problem creators, not problem solvers. To expect one genuine
"decider," moving in at the top, to put them on a diet-and-exercise
regimen is asking a lot. After all, at the end of the George Bush
era, what we have is the GM of governments, and when things start
to go wrong, who's going to bail it out?
December
9, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who
runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), which is being published this month.
Copyright
© 2008 Tom Engelhardt
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