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Sat 24 Apr, 2004 09:26 am
Perfect Words And Principle
By E. J. Dionne Jr.
Saturday, April 24, 2004
Mary McGrory could write rings around us all. And rather than take the compliment, she would immediately condemn the cliche at the heart of that sentence.
Yes, we'll miss her gift for dissecting whole personalities with a few perfect words. But because McGrory's writing dazzled, her fans often didn't notice that she assessed political reality with the cunning of the best Boston ward heeler. Because her principles were always clear, those who adored her views didn't always notice how skillfully she could fillet anyone on her own side who failed her standards of honesty, grace and style.
She once said that "every baby born in Massachusetts was born with a campaign manager's gene." That was certainly true of her. She spent all her life preparing for this year's presidential brawl. You look back at what she wrote about these guys, George Bush and John Kerry, and you mutter at God for taking her on Wednesday, and depriving us of her judgment.
She had a soft spot for Kerry because of his views on the Vietnam and Central American wars. But when Kerry faced off for reelection in 1996 against Gov. William Weld, she knew which one was the charmer.
"The Republican governor of Massachusetts is a whimsical man, and his people greatly enjoy him," she wrote. "He keeps a portrait of James Michael Curley, a roguish and reprehensible predecessor, over his desk. . . . He's a lot of fun. His opponent, incumbent Sen. John F. Kerry, is not. . . . Weld, lanky, red-headed descendant of a signer, graduate of Harvard, Harvard Law and Oxford, song-and-dance man extraordinaire, plays the Irish like a harp. He has noticed their weakness for entertaining politicians -- Curley was a card -- and he frequents their bars and sings their songs. . . . He is considered a regular guy, while Kerry, a decorated war veteran, is not."
Kerry's only hope? "In the month remaining, he has to persuade Massachusetts voters to turn their backs on the Brahmin charmer and come home to the Democrats. The governor may make them laugh, he will plead, but as a senator he will make them cry." Ward boss McGrory was right.
She would have no use for attacks on Kerry's Vietnam record. When Kerry first ran for the Senate in 1984, she noted that Maj. Gen. George S. Patton III "came to Boston to blast former Vietnam War opponent Kerry for 'probably' causing 'some of my guys to get killed' by his dissidence."
McGrory would have none of this, but she expressed her view by citing the wisdom of a voter who encountered Kerry. "At a working-class fund-raiser in Dorchester sponsored by Mayor Ray Flynn," she wrote, "a World War II veteran was beside himself about the general. 'Listen,' he said, grabbing the candidate's lapels. 'They don't give Purple Hearts for nothing. You know it and I know it.' " Case closed.
But woe to Democrats who betrayed her standards. Here is her fair and balanced description of the second debate between Bush and Al Gore in 2000. "A recovering showoff faced off with a recent graduate of a cram course in syntax and foreign policy in the Wait Chapel at Wake Forest University," she wrote on Oct. 15, 2000. "Al Gore's latest reinvention of himself is by far his best, but George W. Bush has improved, too. . . . The question now is: Did Al Gore wait too long to change from his Boston self -- the insufferable know-it-all? Nov. 7 is almost upon us. It is absurd that the vice president is fighting for his life against a governor who is almost bereft of information and experience."
Oh, will we miss her.
She had her favorites, and was irrepressibly honest about saying so. Here's McGrory on Feb. 10, 2000: "Haley Barbour, former National Republican Committee chairman and present George W. Bush backer, said on a television talk show that the press was 'slobberin' over John McCain'. He is quite right. We are guilty as charged."
And she was prepared to offend entire states. On Feb. 20, 2000, she wrote: "People who complained that New Hampshire was no place for a presidential primary just haven't been to South Carolina. The flinty Granite State has its faults, but it looks like an island of enlightenment and tolerance compared with this capital of implacability, fierce fundamentalism and dirty politics."
Political writers typically make one of two mistakes: They underestimate the role of ideas or they underestimate the role of personalities. Politics was very personal for Mary McGrory, but she always knew it was about things that mattered. That's why she mattered so much.
BBB as luck would have it I was able to met and converse with this fine lady when I lived in D.C. informally. We were at a party, she grabbed me and said do you smoke? I said yes and she said lets go outside.
When we got to the designated smoking area we introduced our selves to each other. I of course fainted, well all most, I had been reading her forever she was the one columnist printed in the San Diego Tribune that was not a member of the John Birch Society.
Of course I started asking her questions, she had just returned from Iowa, it was February 1990, I wanted all the details re Clinton. But all she was only interested in what I thought about Clinton. My guess is she used everyone she ever met to supplement her opinion.
We became friends and she was a jewel I will miss her terribly.