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IT'S HIS BIPARTY.(The Talk of the Town)

The New Yorker

| December 04, 2006 | Hertzberg, Hendrik | COPYRIGHT 2006 All rights reserved. Reproduced by permission of The Condé Nast Publications Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

According to the "Backwards Bush" countdown clock, available on the Web and in key-chain and desk-accessory form at selected novelty and toy stores around the nation, the sitting Administration in Washington will, as of this writing, be in office for another seven hundred and eighty-nine days, five hours, twenty-three minutes, and 36.2 seconds. But, if present trends continue, it's going to feel like forever. On November 8th, the day after the midterm election, President Bush vowed to "find common ground," "work with the new Congress in a bipartisan way," and "overcome the temptation to divide this country between red and blue." By way of launching "a new era of cooperation," he announced a personnel change: Donald Rumsfeld was out as Secretary of Defense, to be replaced by Robert Gates, widely viewed as a member of the reality-based community. A day later, on November 9th, Bush had Nancy Pelosi, the incoming Speaker of the House, over for a nice lunch and an Oval Office photo op. "We've had a--I would call it a very constructive and very friendly conversation," the President said, graciously. "We both extended the hand of friendship," the Speaker-designate replied, graciously. "Thank you all," the President concluded. Graciously.

While they were having lunch, the White House Press Office dropped the news that the nomination of John R. Bolton "to be the Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations, with the rank and status of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary," had been resubmitted to the Senate. The new era of cooperation may or may not be definitively dead, but at the moment it appears to have been not so much an era as a news cycle.

The first time that John R. Bolton's name was sent up to Capitol Hill, in March of last year, the nomination got nowhere, even though the Senate was in Republican hands. The Administration waited till Congress adjourned and then gave him a recess appointment, which will expire in January. Bolton is by all accounts a clever and energetic fellow, but cleverness is not competence, and energy can amplify vice as readily as virtue. At the U.N., Bolton has earned a reputation--in the not very diplomatic words of sixty-four former American Ambassadors and diplomats who recently signed a letter opposing him--for "egotistical intolerance," "arrogant actions," and a "hard-core, go-it-alone posture" that "has alienated the bulk of the diplomatic community and cost the United States its leadership role." ("With so much at stake, our country cannot afford to permit John Bolton to continue his destructive course during the next two years," the diplomats wrote.) "He has succeeded in putting almost everyone's backs up, even among some of America's closest allies," last week's issue of The Economist quotes a "senior Western diplomat" as saying. To put it another way, the man's resemblance to Yosemite Sam does not end with the mustache.

There is little chance that the lame-duck Senate will confirm Bolton and no chance that the new one will. So the Administration is toying with the idea of giving him another recess appointment (which would enable him to keep the job without drawing the salary) or naming him to a deputy position without filling the top spot (which would enable him to stay on as "acting" Ambassador without the extraordinary and plenipotentiary title). Nor is the renomination of Bolton the only personnel-related sign that Bush's commitment to comity may have already peaked. On November 14th, the President renominated Kenneth Y. Tomlinson, a former editor-in-chief of Reader's Digest and a close friend of Karl Rove, to be chairman of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, which supervises the Voice of America and other government radio and television operations aimed at ...

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