Showing posts with label george w bush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label george w bush. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2020

Donald Trump, Richard Nixon and the long radicalization of the Republican Party

One thing that often gets obscured in the entirely justified outrage over Trump's criminal conduct and contempt for Constitutional institutions is that Trump is very much carrying on the radicalization of the Republican Party that has decades-old roots.

There are several ways to break down the trends. Eisenhower's Administration in retrospect is a model of "moderate" Republicanism, although he gets more credit for a peaceful foreign policy than he deserves. His "tripwire/massive retaliation" nuclear policy was a genuinely high-risk position. And he actually threatened to use nuclear weapons against North Korea.

The Goldwater candidacy in 1964 was a major marker in the process. But it did not yet define the national party. The Nixon Administration was path-breaking in authoritarian usage of Presidential power. But his nuclear arms-control policies, his diplomatic bridge-building to China, and even his Vietnamization policy diverged from the positions that the Goldwater right and the John Birch Society types favored. Nixon used wage-and-price controls to limit inflation, and even proposed a limited form of national health insurance that was arguably more comprehensive than "Obamacare".

Jerry Ford established a major precedent for Presidential impunity for serious crimes by issuing a blanket pardon to Richard Nixon. He also elevated the careers of Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney, who have the dubious distinction of being two of the most destructive characters in American politics.

The Presidential candidacy of Ronald Reagan in 1980 was a decisive turning point for the Republican Party, representing a convergence of neoliberal market fundamentalism, a general endorsement of hard right politics, and focused authoritarianism. The Iran-Contra affair was itself a real Constitutional crisis, which the Republicans took in stride and the Democrats didn't dispute as actively as they should have. Old Man Bush expanded Republican official impunity by pardoning Iran-Contra criminals. And Bush's own actual role in the possible (I would say likely) 1980 "October Surprise" dealings with Iran.

The fall of the Warsaw Pact and the decline in the fall of the USSR changed the international picture so dramatically that it makes it hard to describe the nature of the continuity and change during the Bush-Quayle Administration. They initiated a serious of closing military bases that would have seemed like a pacifist dream a few years before. But they also conducted the first Gulf War, which in retrospect was a fateful escalation toward what became the current Middle East situation. In general, the Bush family ties to the Saudi monarchy that Craig Unger ably described in House of Bush, House of Saud (2004) have had serious negative consequences for US foreign policy and the well-being of ordinary people in the Middle East.

But since the 1994 midterms elections which marked the so-called Gingrich Revolution, the radicalization of the Republican Party has seemingly proceeded steadily. They keep getting more authoritarian, more crassly oligarchic and rightwing, more bitterly divisive, and generally more fanatical and sleazy. And this is definitely not a case of Both Sides Do It. Nothing remotely similar has happened on the Democratic side. In fact, one of the most important defining facts of American politics since 1994 has been the asymmetric polarization beteen the two political parties.

But I always want to give Richard Nixon his due in this process. Henry Steele Commager (1902 – March 2, 1998) was a major liberal American historian in the 20th century. He was a classic "Cold War liberal" in the Truman years, very much a supporter of Truman's containment policy against the Soviet Union. During the 1960s, he became an activist critic of the Vietnam War and actually developed a sometimes radical critique of American politics based on his understanding of how Cold War foreign policy was undermining the liberal principles on which the US government and Constitution were based. In other words, an imminent critique founded on his focus on the democratic elements of classical liberal political theory.


A collection of essays published in 1975 under the title The Defeat of America features that perspective, in particular with relation to the Nixon Administration. Including the essay from which the title of the book is derived, which originally appeared in the New York Review of Books (10/05/1972 issue). He had this to say about how Nixon was undermining the system (text from the book):
Basic to an understanding of the usurpations, duplicities, and irresponsibilities of the Nixon era, then, is paranoia, which has a life of its own, and which still lingers on - even after the "end" of the [Vietnam] war and the rapprochement with China - polluting the moral and intellectual atmosphere of the country. Certainly there is little evidence that Mr. Nixon or his underlings think the new relationship with the Soviet Union and China justifies the mitigation of their own paranoia about "national security," or their conviction that any attack upon official policy is itself a potential threat to security. How else explain the vindictiveness of the prosecution of Daniel Ellsberg and the readiness to subvert justice in that prosecution; how else explain the political skulduggery that persisted long after the 1972 election, the persistent use of the FBI and the CIA for political purposes, the readiness to employ provocative agents, the contumacious boast at the POW dinner that reliance on secrecy, even useless secrecy, would go on and on; how else explain the determination to bomb Cambodia back to the Stone Age? ...

Is the crisis of the present so imperative that it requires an unconstitutional revolution - requires, that is, abandoning the separation of powers, discarding limitations on the executive authority, weakening legislative control of the purse, repealing the Bill of Rights, subverting the traditional rule of law, and covering with a fog of secrecy the operations of government? Clearly Mr. Nixon and a good many of his followers think that it is. Now we are back with the phobia about communism and paranoia about national security. [my emphasis]
It is noteworthy that Commager viewed the approach of Nixon to government and politics as an attempted "revolution". Or, as he puts it, "an unconstitutional revolution"; Commager would later describe Nixon's impeachment as a legal and constitutional revolution. But he viewed the Nixon version as being revolutionary in the sense of revolutionary dictatorship as in the Terror during the French Revolution, which both classical liberal and conservative political theory regard as a cautionary tale of arbitrary excess. And which Edmund Burke, a godfather of modern reactionary political thought, used as his prime bogeyman.

It was from reading Commager among others that I first became aware of the pragmatic criticism that a big problem for US foreign policy has been a failure to understand revolutionary processes, even losing sight of the revolutionary traditions in the US itself. That is still true today, for both parties. But the Republicans have long since become accustomed to thinking and talking in terms of revolution, or "unconstitutional revolution" in Commager's somewhat awkward phrase: the Reagan Revolution, the Gingrich Revolution, the Tea Party, today's armed protests by Trump cultists in favor of unrestricted spread of the COVID-19 virus, the lunatics of QAnon, even Alex Jones' advocacy of murdering and eating his neighbors. (On the latter, see: Oliver O'Connell, Alex Jones says he'd kill and cook his neighbours to feed his kids Independent 05/01/2020. Though I don't recall ever hearing that cannabalism was a feature of the French Terror.)

Meanwhile, on the "other side of the aisle," when Bernie Sanders talked about having a "revolution" involving broader voter participation and national health insurance of the type that is standard in European democracies, conservative Democrats professed to see vision of guillotine blades dropping. A good illustration of how asymetric partisan polarization works in American politics.

But going back to Tricky Dick, his administration established a practice of authoritarian illegality that took deep roots in the Republican Party. It also established a defensive mentality among Nixon's hardline fans that the law should be just another political tool in the partisan war. One used only by Republicans, of course. The rabid allegiance of Trump's cult followers is the most recent flowering of that attitude. It won't be the last. And it won't be eliminated by Democrats chasing a chimera of Bipartisan harmony with today's extremist Republican Party.

A more radical critic of the Nixon Administration, the Frankfurt School philosopher Herbert Marcuse, whose perspective was not restricted to the liberal political tradition, formulated this view of the situation at the time of Commager's observations quoted above (Countervrevolution and Revolt, 1972):
The Western world has reached a new stage of development: now, the defense of the capitalist system requires the organization of counterrevolution at home and abroad. ...

The counterrevolution is largely preventive and, in the Western world, altogether preventive. Here, there is no recent revolution to be undone, and there is none in the offing. And yet, fear of revolution which creates the common interest links the various stages and forms of the counterrevolution. It runs the whole gamut from parliamentary democracy via the police state to open dictatorship. Capitalism reorganizes itself to meet the threat of a revolution which would be the most radical of all historical revolutions. It would be the first truly world-historical revolution. [my emphasis in bold]
For anyone who is wondering, by "world-historical revolution" Marcuse had something more drastic in mind than simply national health insurance. Which, as I mentioned, was an entirely respectable idea in 1972, even among some senior Republicans, and not seen as remotely "revolutionary" in the then-mainstream of both parties.

Monday, May 4, 2020

Revisionist history and memory formation on the Cheney-Bush Administration

His failure in his duty to see that the crimes of the Cheney-Bush regime - especially the torture program - were fully investigated and prosecuted according to the law is the most significant contribution of his Administration to creating the condition that would up with Donald Trump in the White House.

And now Bush gets to play the kindly elder stateman, to the sycophantic praise of not only NeverTrumper Republicans but also by Democrats who are afraid or unwilling to fight for their own side.

George W. Bush kept the Republican Party on its path to authoritarianism and accelerated it.

Rodayah Chamseddine's Rehabilitating a Monster: George W. Bush and the Bankruptcy of Civility Politics In These Times 09/6/2018 maintains its relevance.
... a former president, who oversaw an apocalyptic shock and awe campaign, was rehabilitated as a homely and wholesome painter. George W. Bush, whose administration wantonly poisoned Iraq with nearly 10,000 rounds of depleted uranium, and gave license to torture and indefinite incarceration without due process in offshore detention sites like the notorious Guantánamo Bay, was invited last year to sit across from Ellen DeGeneres and share self-deprecating barbs with Jimmy Kimmel to the benefit of his promotional book tour. Missing were the images of children suffering the aftermath of U.S.-made radioactive weaponry and the haunting photographs of Iraqi men languishing in Abu Ghraib. There was no meaningful discussion of the global surveillance apparatus that targeted and racialized Muslims. The body politic has not even come to terms with the full extent of this bloodbath. One would think that history would have long destroyed any semblance of nostalgia for George W. Bush, but the political fanfiction abounds—in spite of it. [my emphasis]
Another former President, Jimmy Carter, is someone whose post-Presidential contributions to American public life and to the cause of international peace I regard as more constructive and important than those of his Presidency. Carter talked about the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld torture program in his book Our Endangered Values: America's Moral Crisis (2005):
Physicians for Human Rights reported in April 2005 that "at least since 2 002, the United States has been engaged in systematic psychological torture" of Guantanamo detainees that has "led to devastating health consequences for the individuals subjected to" it. The prisoners' outlook on life was not improved when the Secretary of Defense declared that most of them would not be released even if they were someday tried and found to be innocent. ...

The terrible pictures from Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq have brought discredit on our country. This is especially disturbing, since U.S. intelligence officers estimated to the Red Cross that 70 to 90 percent of the detainees at this prison were held by mistake. Military officials reported that at least 108 prisoners have died in American custody in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other secret locations just since 2002, with homicide acknowledged as the cause of death in at least 28 cases. The fact that only one of these was in Abu Ghraib prison indicates the widespread pattern of prisoner abuse, certainly not limited to the actions or decisions of just a few rogue enlisted persons.

Iraqi major general Abed Hamed Mowhoush reported voluntarily to American officials in Baghdad in an attempt to locate his sons, and was detained, tortured, and stuffed inside a green sleeping bag, where he died from trauma and suffocation on November 26, 2003.

The superficial investigations under the auspices of the Department of Defense have made it obvious that no high-level military officers or government officials will be held accountable, but there is no doubt that their public statements and private directives cast doubt and sometimes ridicule on the applicability of international standards of human rights and the treatment of prisoners. [my emphasis]
That was 2005. After two full Bush-Cheney Administrations, two full Obama-Biden Administration, and over three years of the Trump Administration, the disgrace that is the prison in Guantanamo is still in operation. And the legal cases against the prisoners that have been there since the Bush Administration are still not all resolved.

Monday, March 23, 2020

My Scrooge-ish take on the NeverTrumpers

One phenomenon of the Trump era that I may never be able to grasp is the appeal of the group of hardcore, rightwing, warmongering Republicans known as NeverTrumpers.

Jennifer Rubin has a high public profile among politically engaged Democrats due to her regular Washington Post column. In Don’t torture yourself with the clown show Washington Post 03/22/2020, she argues, "It is only in the disastrous Trump era that we have been bludgeoned by ignorance, cruelty, incompetence and narcissism on an unprecedented scale."

That is an argument that I wouldn't make in the way she does. And it's a reminder of how the political establishment of both parties and the corporate media in general failed to seriously process the implications of the Bush-Cheney Administration with its serious crimes and abuses.

I've been re-reading Al Gore's 2007 book The Assault on Reason. He was engaging in real time with that Administration's policies. It's surprisingly hard going. Not because the writing is difficult to follow, on the contrary. The problem is that I can't make it through a whole chapter in one sitting, because it's stunning to remember how cosmically bad that Administration was.

Think about what was involved: the Iraq War, the bungled Afghanistan War, Guantanamo, Abu Ghuraib and "special rendition" and John Yoo (aka, criminal torture), the total ignoring of the Al-Qaida threat in 2001, John Ashcroft, Halliburton, Katrina.

With the Iraq War in the mix, I wouldn't say that Trump has yet reached the Shrub Bush level of cruelty, incompetence, etc.

But be that as it may, that horror show of a government was creating clear precedents for the worst practices of Trump's scary clown show of a government. People like Gore and John Dean were saying clearly at the time what kind of horrendous precedents Bush and Cheney and their whole crew were creating.

Take this current very legitimate concern as an example. The current Attorney General, William Barr, served in the first Bush Administration, where he was already in favor of packing the jails full. (Sagiv Galai, William Barr Was an Ardent Champion of Mass Incarceration ACLU.org 01/10/2019) Now he's asking for more power to keep people in jail without charges, aka, preventive detention, using the COVID-19 crisis as justification, as Betsy Woodruff Swan reports (Politico DOJ seeks new emergency powers amid coronavirus pandemic 03/21/2020):

The Justice Department has quietly asked Congress for the ability to ask chief judges to detain people indefinitely without trial during emergencies — part of a push for new powers that comes as the novel coronavirus spreads throughout the United States. ...

The request raised eyebrows because of its potential implications for habeas corpus — the constitutional right to appear before a judge after arrest and seek release.

“Not only would it be a violation of that, but it says ‘affecting pre-arrest,’” said Norman L. Reimer, executive director of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. “So that means you could be arrested and never brought before a judge until they decide that the emergency or the civil disobedience is over. I find it absolutely terrifying. Especially in a time of emergency, we should be very careful about granting new powers to the government.” [my emphasis]
Here is what Gore wrote in his 2007 book:
... the diminished role of individuals in America's national conversation has been accompanied by a diminished respect for the rights of individuals- especially during the Bush-Cheney administration.

For example, President Bush has declared that he has a heretofore unrecognized inherent power to seize and imprison any American citizen whom he alone determines to be a threat to our nation- without an arrest warrant, without notifying them of what charges have been filed against them, and without even informing their families that they have been imprisoned. The president claims that he can simply snatch an American citizen off the street and keep him or her locked up indefinitely - even for the rest of his or her life- and refuse to allow that citizen the right to make a phone call or talk to a lawyer even to argue that the president or his appointees have made a mistake and imprisoned the wrong person. [my emphasis in bold]
Bush's Attorney General John Ashcroft, who like Barr was a Christian dominionist who disdained separation of church and state, infamously used the aftermath of the 2001 9/11 attack, followed by an unrelated shooting spree in the Washington area by two men and the never-fully-explained mailings of anthrax powder to politicians and media offices, to get a grab-bag of increased surveillance and police powers enacted which was basically a wish-list of measures of things the Justice Department wanted anyway.

This history forms my own view of the NeverTrumper schtick. Which starts from the fact that NeverTrumpers particularly visible in the press such as Rubin, Max Boot, Butcher's Bill Kristol, David "Bobo" Brooks, David Frum, Peggy Noonan, Michael Gerson, are rightwing Republicans. They are not people who had some kind of "Road to Damascus" conversion in which they became aghast at the loyal support for the Bush-Cheney Administration and its horrible precedents. The main impulse for the "NeverTrumper" crew was Trump's seeming departures from hawkish Republican war policies, as illustrated by this joint statement of various conservative foreign policy figures from March 2016, Open Letter on Donald Trump From GOP National Security Leaders War on the Rocks 03/02/2016.

So why do some Democrats who don't necessarily identify with their rightwing policy positions find NeverTrumper arguments attractive? It seems to me several factors are at work. One is the novelty factor, which weighs heavily with the favorable media reception of the NeverTrumpers. The NTers are making "counterintuitive" arguments, something the media loves, i.e., they are professed rightwing Republicans arguing against the rightwing Republican President.

But why do Democrats find their arguments attractive? Here are my thoughts at this point.

As Republicans, the NT's have a kind of "insider" credibility.

They insist on what would be nice to believe, that Trump is a bizarre aberration who will soon give way to a restored normalcy. Rubin writes, "Though so much is uncertain and our lives have been put on pause, we will hold elections in November. We will be able to replace Trump and his exasperating band of buffoonish advisers."

They often stress broad (classical) liberal principles like the rule of law and respect for institutions.

The Democratic leadership really has since the Reagan years gotten comfortable with a "duck-and-cover" approach. Part of that, as George Lakoff has described at length, is that Democrats are sorely tempted to adopt Republican "framing" on major issues. Or simply conceding the framing to Republicans are try to argue against a Republican worldview by stressing facts but not distinguishing a progressive, Democratic worldview/framing. (Patt Morrison, Linguist George Lakoff on what Democrats don’t understand — and Republicans do — about how voters think Los Angeles Times 11/22/2018) The NeverTrumpers give centrist Democrats anti-Trump arguments prepackaged in Republican framing.

And, let's be blunt, a not-insignificant number of Democratic voters support the more hawkish worldview of the NeverTrumpers. It's worth noting that the "neoconservative" foreign policy mode of thinking was heavily influenced by Democratic Party "Cold War liberalism," notably that of Washington Sen. Henry "Scoop" Jackson. The post-1989 political world saw the emergence of a strong "humanitarian hawk" view within the Democratic Party associated with foreign policy figures like Madeleine Albright and Samantha Power. This provided some combination of conviction and political cover that led Democratic Senators Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, and John Kerry to vote in support of the Iraq War in 2002, a disastrous war whose results were far from being humanitarian.

The Democratic Party is the center-left party of the US and has traditionally was the pro-labor party. But - at least prior to the COVID-19 crisis and the beginning recession! - has not been doing politics in a country where Franklin Roosevelt once famously saw "one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished." (“One Third of a Nation”: FDR’s Second Inaugural Address History Matters) Poverty is obviously a very persistent problem! But a key part of the Democrats' current voting base are affluent city-dwellers and suburbanites, sometimes referred to with the (to me) awkward term "professional-management class (PMC)". These voters tend to be more liberal on formal freedoms like voting rights and women's rights. But many of them are also comfortable with conservative economics, including corporate-deregulation "free trade" treaties and to the rhetoric of "humanitarian hawks".

For some Democrats, the NeverTrumper way of thinking will be an "gateway drug" to becoming, uh, Republicans.

A couple of concluding comments on the NTers. The driving concern of the NeverTrumpers has been their concern that his foreign policy was insufficiently warlike and/or too incompetent at trying to start wars. (On the latter, see Susan Glasser, The Trials of a Never Trump Republican New Yorker 03/23/2020: "Trump has done plenty of things the old Republican foreign-policy establishment would cheer for, if someone else were doing them.") The NTers are Iraq War Republicans. And the Iraq War is what catastrophe looks like.

Which means they are Dick Cheney Republicans. Which is why the prefer to give the impression that they came out of some clean, respectably democratic and responsible Republican Party which went astray with a strange and unprecedented character named Donald Trump. But the Trumpist of 2016-2020 would not have been possible without the Cheney-Bush Republican Party of 2001-2009. That's what the Republican Party still is. The NeverTrumpers just want a slightly more respectable-sounding Dear Leader. And, yes, much of the Republican adoration of Shrub Bush was the same kind of cringe-worthy Dear Leader idolatry that today's Republicans give to the Malicious Orange Clown.

My bottom line: NeverTrumpers, bah, humbug!

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Andrew Bacevich’s "The Age of Illusions" (Review, Part 2 of 4)

Bacevich implicitly uses 1991 as the end of the Cold War, a more clearly defined dividing point than the Owl of Minerva can usually identify. He takes the war that year to push Iraq out of Kuwait as the historical demarcation line, a conflict called at the time the Gulf War. (The beginning of the Cold War is conventionally dated somewhere between 1945 to 1948.)

The Emerald City Presidencies

The press and public perception of that war would prove to be a crucial element of the often miserable US experiences with wars the next three decades:
The conclusion of the Cold War showed that the U.S. military could win without fighting. The Persian Gulf War showed not only that America's armed forces could still fight, but that they were seemingly invincible.

So the nation's military narrative added a chapter: After Vietnam there now came Desert Storm. The latter did not expunge the former. Yet the military failure in Southeast Asia now lost much of its relevance. By putting a ragtag Iraqi army to flight, the United States had emphatically "kicked the Vietnam syndrome," as President George H. W. Bush put it at the time. With that, reticence about using force evaporated, especially in elite circles. In a post-Cold War world that awaited shaping, America's manifest superiority in all things military positioned it to do whatever needed to be done.
This is key to understanding Bacevich’s understanding of what the book’s subtitle describes as the US squandering its Cold War victory and the destructive hubris that was integral to it. Freed from the balance-of-power considerations of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact and the policy limits imposed by the negative public view of the Vietnam War, the US could now indulge in war after war without the prospect of a major domestic political backlash.

Bacevich quotes a prime example of the American Exceptionalist rhetoric characteristic of the Emerald City era, this one from Colin Powell in 1992:
No other nation on earth has the power we possess. More important, no other nation on earth has the trusted power that we possess. We are obligated to lead. If the free world is to harvest the hope and fulfill the promise that our great victory in the Cold War has offered us, America must shoulder the responsibility of its power. The last best hope of earth has no other choice. We must lead.
In reality, the enormous popularity that President G.W. Bush enjoyed in 1991 after the successful conclusion of the war with Iraq did not prove sufficient to get him re-elected against Bill Clinton in 1992.

As the Owl of Minerva can now clearly see, the “successful” conclusion of the First Gulf War actually meant continuing low-level air war of the US against Iraq, punctuated by the big escalation of the very unfortunately named Operation Desert Fox in 1998. (See: Andrew Corseman, The Military Effectiveness Of Desert Fox: A Warning About the Limits of the Revolution in Military Affairs and Joint Vision 2010 Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) 02/16/1999)

It led further – by the conscious decision of the Cheney-Bush Administration with the explicit support of leading Democratic Senators including Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, and John Kerry – to the disastrous 2003 invasion of Iraq, whose very deadly consequences are still playing out in 2020. The Iraq War also dramatically increased the regional power of Iran by removing the balancing power of Saddam Hussein’s Sunni-led Iraq. And, of course, at the time Bacevich’s book appeared in January 2020, the US was on the verge of war with Iran.

Bacevich traces the broad path of US wars and assertions of military dominance through the Clinton Administration and its interventions in the Balkan Wars:
In the ceaselessly updated chronicle of the American military experience, the Bosnia and Kosovo campaigns - Operation Deliberate Force, lasting just three weeks in the late summer of 1995, and Operation Allied Force, spread across seventy-eight days in the spring of 1999-have long since been crowded out. Both featured what military theorists were then calling "precision bombing." In both cases, American air forces operated at high altitudes and faced negligible resistance, with U.S. losses all but nonexistent.

... during Clinton's eight-year tenure as commander in chief, these were the only victories the U.S. military was able to claim. As such, at least for a time, they shaped American expectations regarding the use of force. Here, it seemed, was evidence that the United States had solved the riddle of making armed might politically purposeful. [The military idea of] Full-Spectrum Dominance was no longer a theory. Bosnia and Kosovo made it fact.
While stressing this feature of the Clinton Administration that continued the hubristic direction of Emerald City, he makes it clear that the Bush-Cheney Administration took a qualitative (and bad) next step:
The central theme of Bill Clinton's tenure in office had been globalization. The central theme of George W. Bush's tenure became war, which some in his administration conceived as a sort of complement to globalization - another approach to bringing the world into conformity with American preferences. While Clinton had dabbled in war, the events of September 11 prompted Bush to embrace it wholeheartedly. Wars that still today follow their meandering course ultimately consumed his presidency.

The name devised to justify those conflicts-the Global War on Terrorism - amounted to an exercise in misdirection. … As an explanation for U.S. policy after 9/11, terrorism comes nowhere near to being adequate. Indeed, much like the shelling of Fort Sumter in 1861 or the sinking of the USS Maine in 1898, the attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon served less as a proximate cause for war than as a catalyst. [my emphasis]
And he describes the various arrogant assumptions that flourished in the Bush-Cheney foreign policy that “went altogether off the rails”, a task which Bacevich was diligently performing in real time during that Presidency in his published work and public appearances:
The Bush Eschatology struck me even then as vainglorious, if not altogether blasphemous. Yet by no means did it signify a fundamental change in the trajectory of post-Cold War American statecraft. On the contrary, it reaffirmed in the strongest possible terms the premises underlying those policies. [my emphasis]
Noting that he himself voted twice for Obama as President, he carefully points out what he sees as Obama’s positive accomplishment. But Obama did not break from the four elements that Bacevich identifies as characterizing the Emerald City era, despite the symbolically transformative nature of the election of the first African-American President.

Obama “saved globalized neoliberalism”, he writes, but did not substantively transform it. “Sadly, the mendacity and malfeasance that had paved the way for the Great Recession went essentially unpunished.” Through policies like his escalation in the Afghanistan War, the failure to fully extricate American troops from Iraq, his extensive use of drone attacks, and the 2011 intervention in Libya, Obama modified but did not fundamentally alter the kind of militarized global dominance approach of the post-1989 era.

He has a particular criticism of this moment in the Libya intervention when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was asked about the torture-murder of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi by rebels:
On March 19, Western air attacks on the Gaddafi regime commenced. By October, the regime had collapsed and Gaddafi himself was dead. On national TV, a laughing Clinton bragged, "We came, we saw, he died."

Yet liquidating Gaddafi no more settled the matter than the fall of Baghdad ended the Iraq War. His ouster merely paved the way for a years-long civil war. As Libya descended into anarchy, the United States largely washed its hands of further responsibility. Years later, Clinton was still insisting that the intervention she had done so much to promote exemplified "smart power at its best," the apparent measure of merit being not the results achieved but the dearth of U.S. combat casualties.

... I also found her premature and unseemly victory dance regarding Libya indicative of someone possessed of a dangerously deficient understanding of war. [my emphasis]
Part 1: From Boone City to the Emerald City

Part 2: The Emerald City Presidencies

Part 3: Bacevich’s political perspective

Part 4: The way forward – and what to do about the “deplorables”

Sunday, October 13, 2019

Auftakt zum Trumpismus: Bush gegen Gore und die Präsidentschaftswahlen 2000

Die Krise der Trump-Administration wird scheinbar von Tag zu Tag offensichtlicher. Während die Republikaner anfangen, aus dem sinkenden Trump-Schiff zu retten, werden wir immer mehr darüber hören, wie Trump in der Republikanischen Partei eine Fehlentwicklung war, dass er nicht ein "wahrer Konservativer" ist, usw.

(Alle Übertrangungen aus dem Englischen in diesem Beitrag sind meine.)

Daher ist es wichtig, sich daran zu erinnern, dass Trump zwar unter den amerikanischen Präsidenten einzigartig empörend sein mag, dass es aber starke Strömungen von Interesse, Gewohnheit und Ideologie gab, die eine Trump-Administration möglich machten. Die Präsidentschaftswahl 2000 zwischen George W. Bush und Al Gore ist ein wichtiger Wegweiser davon.

Die Wahl im Jahr 2000 ist das berüchtigtste Beispiel für unverhohlene Wahl-Trickserei rund um die Präsidentschaftswahlen, wobei die berüchtigte Entscheidung des Obersten Gerichtshofs Bush v. Gore (2000) prominent mitspielt.

Das ist der Schwerpunkt dieses Beitrags. Aber es ist auch wichtig, sich an zwei weitere prominente Fälle zu erinnern, in denen illegale Aktivitäten ein wichtiges Ergebnis bei einem Sieg der republikanischen Präsidentschaftskandidaten bei den Präsidentschaftswahlen spielten. Der Watergate-Einbruch und die größere Anzahl illegaler Aktivitäten, zu denen er gehörte, waren wahlbezogen. Aber es wäre schwer zu argumentieren, dass sie für das Wahlergebnis entscheidend waren.

Dasselbe gilt nicht für zwei weitere Fälle, die illegale Intervention der Nixon-Kampagne 1968 mit der südvietnamesischen Regierung zur Sabotage der Friedensgespräche im Vietnamkrieg und die "Oktoberüberraschung" der Reagan-Kampagne von 1980 mit der iranischen Regierung über die amerikanischen Geiseln. (Andrew Schupak, Republican Presidential Heists Huffpost 03/14/2017)

Der Fall von 1968 ist sachlich unbestritten. Die Johnson-Administration hatte Beweise dafür abgehört. Die Beweise für den Fall von 1980 sind weitgehend indizienhaft, aber sehr überzeugend. Gary Sick, ein Iran-Spezialist in der Carter-Administration, legte den Fall in seinem October Surprise: America's Hostages in Iran and the Election of Ronald Reagan (1991). Siehe auch ein C-SPAN-Interview (Video und Transkript) mit Sick, October Surprise 11.12.1991. Der investigative Journalist Robert Perry schrieb darüber auch in Trick or Treason: The October Surprise Mystery (1993).

Beide Fälle waren Fälle einer Kampagne, die illegal mit ausländischen Regierungen zu tun hatte, um Ereignisse zu manipulieren so, dass sie den Ausgang der US-Präsidentschaftswahlen beeinflussten. Der Fall aus dem Jahr 2000 hatte mit direkten Versuchen zu tun, die Auszählung der Wahlen selbst zu manipulieren. Alle drei trugen natürlich dazu bei, dass sie unter republikanischen Insidern das Gefühl hatten, dass sie bei der Manipulation von Präsidentschaftswahlen mit ernsthaften Gemeinheiten unbeschädigt davonkommen könnten.

Ein zentraler Teil der Geschichte von 2000 war die Dysfunktion der corporate media, sowohl während als auch nach den unmittelbaren Ereignissen rund um die Neuauszählung in Florida. (Miranda Spencer, Who Won the Election? Who Cares? FAIR 01/01/2002) Es gibt drei kritische Elemente in dieser Reihe von Ereignissen, die auch sehr wichtige Teile davon sind, wie die Republikanische Partei endete, eine Trump-Kulte zu sein, der als politische Partei funktioniert.

Eine davon ist die Rücksichtslosigkeit bzw. der Mangel an Skrupeln durch die Republikaner und insbesondere die Bush-Familie. Eine andere ist die mangelnde Bereitschaft der Demokratischen Partei, den Ernst des Problems in Verbindung mit ihrer leider starken Neigung, sich in Schlüsselmomenten der Republikanischen Partei zu ergeben, anzuerkennen. Die Mediendysfunktion ist die dritte, die vor, während und nach der Wahl auffiel.

Britannica Online hat eine kurze Zusammenfassung der Ereignisse in seinem Eintrag Bush v. Gore Eintrag (12.05.2018). Nachdem die Umfragen am 7. November geschlossen hatten, wurde schnell klar, dass die Wahl durch das Ergebnis in Florida entschieden werden würde. FOX News war die erste große Nachrichtenorganisation, die das Florida-Ergebnis und die Auszählung des nationalen Electoral College für George W. Bush anrief, wie Melinda Wittstock berichtete Cousin John's calls tipped election tally Guardian 11/19/2000):
John Ellis ist nicht anders als jeder andere amerikanische Journalist, der mit großen Nachrichten an erster Stelle stehen will. An der Spitze des Wahlnacht-Entscheidungsteams von Rupert Murdochs Fox News Network er erreichte die nun zweifelhafte Auszeichnung, als erster Florida - und die Präsidentschaftswahlen - für George W. Bush anzurufen. Die Zahlen, von denen er arbeitete, waren nicht offiziell, aber die Zuschauer wussten das nicht. Sie wussten auch nicht, dass Ellis sehr freundlich mit Bush war - er ist sein erster Cousin.

Niemand hätte Ellis viel mitbekommen, wenn die Wahl nicht fast zwei Wochen später noch an einem Tschad hing - oder wenn er nicht dem New Yorker Magazin gezerrt hätte, dass er während des gesamten Als "Indecision 2000" bekannten Essständig mit seinem Cousinen telefonierte, George und Floridas Gouverneur 'Jebbie' [G.W. Bushs Bruder], sie mit den neuesten internen Projektionen auf die Abstimmung abkippt.

Die Enthüllung hat in den eher aufgekreizten Medienkreisen für Unruhe gesorgt, nicht zuletzt, weil seine Entscheidung, sie um 2:16 Uhr auf Fox "Dubya" [Bush] zu deklarieren, die Hand konkurrierender Netzwerke erzwungen hat. CNN, NBC, ABC und CBS folgten der Ellis-Führung innerhalb von vier Minuten, um weniger als zwei Stunden später zu peinlichen Rückschritten gezwungen zu werden. [meine Hervorhebungen]
So waren Bushs Rücksichtslosigkeit und mangelnder Respekt vor demokratischen Normen sowie die Probleme nicht nur von FOX News (damals wie heute ein republikanischer Propagandakanal), sondern auch der "Qualitätspresse" innerhalb weniger Stunden nach der Wahl sehr öffentlich zu sehen.

Schnell folgten verschiedene dubiose Aktionen, darunter die der secretary of state (Wahl-Verwalterin) von Florida, Katherine Harris, deiner Republikanerin, die die Bush-Cheney-Kampagne in Florida mit leitete. Einer der dramatischeren Momente war das, was als "Brooks Brothers Riot" bekannt wurde, in dem ein republikanischer Mob, der republikanische Kongressmitarbeiter umfasste, die Schließung einer Neuauszählung der Stimmen im Miami-Dade County erzwang. (John Latigua, Miami's rent-a-riot Salon 11/28/2000)

Das Oberste Gericht des Bundesstaates Florida ordnete eine neue Wahl-Rechnung in einigen Bereichen. Die Bush-Kampagne ging an den amerikanischen Obersten Gerichtshof, der die Neuauszählung am 12. Dezember stoppte, und mit einer 5-4 Entscheidung, die das Rechtsmittel des Florida-Gerichts gegen eine Neuauszählung ablehnte. Al Gore kündigte am nächsten Tag an: "Obwohl ich mit der Entscheidung des Gerichts entschieden nicht einverstanden bin, akzeptiere ich sie." Und räumte damit die Wahl Bushs.

Die Pro-Bush-Richter, die die fünf Stimmen zur Einstellung der Neuauszählung zur Verfügung stellten, wussten, dass ihre rechtliche Argumentation im Extremfall zweifelhaft war. So beinhaltete die Entscheidung den Qualifikanten: "Unsere Überlegung beschränkt sich auf die gegenwärtigen Umstände..." Mit anderen Worten, es sollte nicht als Präzedenzfall in zukünftigen Fällen verwendet werden. (Bush v. Gore, Library of Congress Texte)

Die politische Haltung der Demokraten während der Kontroverse nach der Wahl in Florida entsprach nicht aus der Ferne dem schrillen parteipolitischen Ansatz der Republikaner. Aber wenn Gores Aussage "Obwohl ich mit der Entscheidung des Gerichts absolut entschieden nicht einverstanden bin, akzeptiere ich sie" im Nachhinein sanftmütig klingt, klang sie damals wie eine brüllende Verurteilung der Parteilichkeit des Obersten Gerichtshofs im Vergleich zum Ton anderer führender Sprecher der Demokraten, die in der Regel versuchten, einen Ton der sorgenden Staatsleuten zu schlagen.

Al Gore war damals sowohl formell als auch de facto Chef der Demokratischen Partei. Und er war der Präsidentschaftskandidat. Er trägt also eine gewisse Verantwortung für das unzureichende Maß an Reaktion. Seine Wahl von Joe Lieberman als Vizepräsidentschafts-Kandidat sieht im Nachhinein sehr unglücklich aus, nicht zuletzt, weil Lieberman eindeutig gegen eine aggressive politische Reaktion auf die Neuauszählung war, während sich die Republikaner im Brooks Brothers Riot-Modus befanden.

David Margolick berichtet diesem Vorfall (The Path to Florida Vanity Fair Oct 2004; online date: 03/19/2014):
Mark Herron, ein Anwalt des Gore-Teams in Tallahassee, hat die Sache für seine eigene Seite versehentlich noch verschlimmert. Am 15. November verschickte er ein langes Memo über die Regeln für abwesende Stimmzettel an die demokratischen Anwälte, die in jedem der 67 Countyvorstände positioniert waren. Eine Kopie des Memos fand irgendwie seinen Weg zu einer republikanischen Anwaltskanzlei auf der anderen Straßenseite von Herrons Büro. Als nächstes, was er wusste, zitierten die Republikaner seine sorgfältige Rezitation des Wahlgesetzes in Florida, um ihre Behauptung zu untermauern, dass die Demokraten mutige Amerikaner in Uniform entrechten wollten.

In Panik stellte das Gore-Team Joe Lieberman in die Sonntags-Fernseh-Talkshows, um zu erklären, dass die Demokraten dies niemals tun würden und dass er zum einen der Meinung war, dass der liberalste Standard auf alle eingehenden Stimmzettel angewendet werden sollte. Herron war entsetzt, als er das hörte: Er wusste, dass die westlichen Panhandle-Counties dicht mit US-Militärstützpunkten waren. Wenn alle abwesenden Stimmen nach der Wahl zählen, auch solche mit verspäteten – oder nein – Poststempeln, könnte die Präsidentschaft verloren gehen.
Es ist keineswegs sicher, dass eine andere Reaktion zu einem anderen Wahlergebnis geführt hätte. Aber es hätte der Demokratischen Partei sehr wahrscheinlich geholfen, der neuen Cheney-Bush-Administration viel skeptischer und kritischer gegenüber zu stehen und sich ihrer destruktiven Politik zu widersetzen. (Es ist erwähnenswert, dass viele Demokraten bis heute Ralph Naders dritte-parteiliche Kandidatur für den Verlust in Florida verantwortlich machen, obwohl die Umfragedaten wenig Beweise dafür liefern.)

Ich gebe zu, dass ich nicht sehr bereit bin, Gore für den Ausgang der Entscheidung nach der Wahl verantwortlich zu machen, nicht zuletzt, weil ich seine Leistungen bei der Aufklärung der Menschen über die Klimakrise bewundere und auch, weil Gore - im Gegensatz zu Hillary Clinton und Joe Biden und John Kerry - Gore stellt sich dem Irak-Krieg direkt entgegen. Sein „Current TV“-Projekt bot auch eine begrenzte, aber wichtige Fernsehplattform für liberale und progressive Berichterstattung. Zuvor war Gore ein Star des neoliberalen Democratic Leadership Council (DLC). Aber auch hat sich in sehr bedeutender Weise von dieser Position entfernt. Sein 2007 erschienenes Buch The Assault on Reason war eine wichtige kritische Analyse der Desinformationstechniken, die von der Cheney-Bush-Administration in der Öffentlichkeit praktiziert wurden, unter anderem rund um den Irak-Krieg:
... das derzeitige Weiße Haus [Bush-Administration] hat eine beispiellose und anhaltende Kampagne der Massentäuschung geführt - vor allem, wenn es um seine Politik im Irak geht. Aktive Täuschung durch die Machthaber macht eine echte Beratung durch die Menschen selbst praktisch unmöglich. Wenn irgendeine Regierung das Volk belügt, schwächt sie Amerikas Fähigkeit, kluge kollektive Entscheidungen über unsere Republik zu treffen.

Jetzt, da das ganze Ausmaß dieses historischen Fiaskos deutlich wird, ist es wichtig zu verstehen, wie eine solche schreckliche Reihe von Fehlern in einer großen Demokratie hätte gemacht werden können. Und es ist bereits offensichtlich, dass der anormale und unamerikanische Ansatz der Regierung in Bezug auf Geheimhaltung, Zensur und massive systematische Täuschung die Haupterklärung dafür ist, wie Amerika diese Katastrophe angenommen hat. [meine Hervorhebungen]
Gore konnte im Gegensatz zu den meisten anderen Führern der Demokratischen Partei den radikalen, antidemokratischen Kurs, auf dem die Republikanische Partei unterwegs war, klar erkennen und artikulieren.

Die corporate press Behandlung der Clintons auf dem Whitewater und verschiedene andere Pseudoskandale in den 1990er Jahren beinhalteten einige epische journalistische Missbräuche. Gene Lyons und Joe Conason sind zwei der Journalisten, die hervorragende Arbeit geleistet haben, um diese Erfahrung zu dokumentieren und zu kritisieren. Dies setzte sich während der Kampagne im Jahr 2000 fort, die voller alberner Tropen wie "Al Gore behauptete, er habe das Internet erfunden" war. Maureen Dowds New York Times Kolumnen darüber, wie Al Gore ein Sissy war, lieferten einige Beispiele dafür, wie bizarr diese Pressepraxis im Washington Beltway Village geworden war.

Und es ging nach Bushs Amtseinführung weiter, auch wenn verantwortungsbewusstere Journalisten die Auszählung der Stimmen in Florida im Jahr 2000 intensiv überprüften. Wir können nicht sagen, dass eine gründlichere Stimmenauszählung des gesamten Staates definitiv zu einem Gore-Sieg geführt hätte, weil die detaillierten Studien Annahmen darüber treffen mussten, wie die Neuauszählung stattgefunden hätte. Es gibt gute Gründe zu der Annahme, dass es einen Gore-Sieg gebracht hätte. Aber diese zentrale Erkenntnis wurde wiederum durch die Berichterstattung der Unternehmenspresse über diese Studien stark verwischt. Es half in dieser Hinsicht nicht, dass die Studien nach dem Anschlag von 911 abgeschlossen wurden und ein Großteil der Presse zu beschäftigt war, den Hurra-Patriotismus zu fördern, um viel Zeit damit zu verbringen, über etwas so Triviales (für die Beltway VillageBewohner) zu streiten oder sogar verantwortungsvoll zu berichten, wie die Integrität der Präsidentschaftswahlen 2000.

Doch so viel oder wenig Schuld man auch für Gores persönliches Konto, Edward Foleys Bericht in George W. Bush vs. Al Gore, 15 years later: We really did inaugurate the wrong guy Salon 12/19/2015 ist auch eine genaue Beschreibung der Ereignisse:
Bush v. Gore, der Gerichtsprozess, wird oft synonym als Abkürzung für Bush-versus-Gore verwendet, den gesamten Streit über den Ausgang der Wahl.

Aber dieser Streit umfasste weit mehr als nur die Entscheidung des Obersten Gerichtshofs der USA, die in Wahrheit nicht einmal den Kampf beendete. Das Ende kam vielmehr am nächsten Tag, dem 13. Dezember, als Gore ankündigte, er werde nicht versuchen, die Neuauszählung durch zusätzliche Verfahren vor den Gerichten Floridas zu erneuern. Hätte er dies getan, hätten er und Bush ihren Kampf bis zum Kongress verfolgen können, wie Hayes und Tilden es bei den Wahlen 1876 getan hatten. Wäre Bush-gegen-Gore den Kongress erreicht, wäre dies der erste wirkliche Test des undurchdringlich zweideutigen Electoral Count Act von 1887 gewesen, mit unvorhersehbaren Folgen. So war es Gores Zugeständnis vom 13. Dezember und nicht das Urteil des Gerichtshofs vom Vortag, das den Kampf um die Präsidentschaft in der Praxis wirklich beendete. [meine Hervorhebungen]
Er erläutert weiter, wie die Situation nach der Entscheidung vom 13. Dezember einen alternativen Versuch einer Neuauszählung unternommen hat, was praktisch problematisch war:
Gores Anwälte kamen verständlicherweise zu dem Schluss, dass das Gesetz von Florida keinen gerichtlichen Rechtsbehelf für ein falsches Wahlergebnis durch die Schmetterlingswahl vorsah. In einer Klage, die im Namen der betroffenen Wähler eingereicht wurde, kam der Oberste Gerichtshof von Florida einstimmig zu dem Schluss, dass der Entwurf des Urnengangs, so problematisch und konsequent er auch sein mochte, nicht gegen staatliches Recht verstieß. Selbst wenn dies der Nachhinein der Falle wäre, ist unklar, welche Abhilfe das Staatsgericht hätte schaffen sollen. Es war nicht genügend Zeit, um eine völlige Neuwahl in Florida abzuhalten, da die Präsidentschaftswähler des Staates verfassungsmäßig verpflichtet waren, ihre offiziellen Wahlmännerstimmen am selben Tag wie die Wähler in allen anderen Bundesstaaten abzugeben, die der Kongress als Montag, 18. Dezember angegeben. Die Beschränkung einer Rückstimme auf nur Palm Beach County hätte ernste verfassungsrechtliche Fragen aufgeworfen, vor allem, wenn Palm Beach-Wähler, die nicht an der ersten Wahl teilgenommen hatten, an der Abstimmung teilnehmen durften, aber die Wähler in Florida anderswo nicht in ähnlicher Weise eine zweite Chance gegeben, eine Stimme abzugeben.
Zusätzliche Berichterstattung über die Wahltravestie 2000:

Prelude to Trumpism: Bush v. Gore and the 2000 Presidential election

The crisis of the Trump Administration is becoming more obvious seemingly every day. As Republicans start to bail out of the sinking Trump ship, we'll hear more and more about how Trump was an aberration in the Republican Party, not a "true conservative," etc.

So it's important to remember that while Trump may be uniquely outrageous among Presidents, there were strong currents of interest, habit, and ideology that made a Trump Administration possible. The Presidential election of 2000 between George W. Bush and Al Gore is a major signpost on that road.

The 2000 election is the most infamous example of blatant election shenanigans around Presidential elections, with the notorious Supreme Court decision Bush v. Gore (2000) prominently featuring in it.

That is the focus of this post. But it's also important to remember two other prominent cases in which illegal activity played an important result in a Presidential election victory for Republican Presidential candidates. The Watergate burglary and the larger set of illegal activities of which it was part were election-related. But it would be difficult to argue that they were decisive in the election results.

The same cannot be said for two other cases, the 1968 Nixon campaign's illegal intervention with the South Vietnamese government to sabotage peace talks in the Vietnam War and the 1980 Reagan campaign's "October Surprise" dealings with the Iranian government over the America hostages. (Andrew Schupak, Republican Presidential Heists Huffpost 03/14/2017)

The 1968 case is factually not in dispute. The Johnson Administration had taped evidence of it. The evidence for the 1980 case is largely circumstantial, but very persuasive. Gary Sick, a specialist on Iran during the Carter Administration, laid out the case in his October Surprise: America's Hostages in Iran and the Election of Ronald Reagan (1991). See also a C-SPAN interview (video and transcript) with Sick, October Surprise 11/12/1991. Investigative journalist Robert Perry also wrote about it in Trick or Treason: The October Surprise Mystery (1993).

Both of those cases were instances of a campaign illegally dealing with foreign governments to manipulate events in such as a way as to affect the outcome of the US Presidential election. The 2000 case had to do with direct efforts to manipulate the election count itself. All three, of course, contributed to the sense among Republican insiders that they could get away with some serious skullduggery in manipulating Presidential elections.

A central part of the 2000 story was the dysfunction of the corporate media, both during and after the immediate events around the Florida recount. (Miranda Spencer, Who Won the Election? Who Cares? FAIR 01/01/2002) There are three critical elements involved in that series of events that are also very important parts of how the Republican Party wound up being a Trump cult functioning as a political party.

One is the ruthlessness and lack of scruples by the Republicans, and the Bush family in particular. Another is the unwillingness of the Democratic Party to recognize the seriousness of the problem combined with its unfortunately strong inclination to surrender to the Republican Party at key moments. The media dysfunction is the third one, which was striking before, during, and after the election was resolved in the manner it was.

Britannica Online has a concise summary of the events in its Bush v. Gore (12/05/2018). After the polls closed on Election Day November 7, it quickly became clear that the election would be decided by the outcome in Florida. FOX News was the first major news organization to call the Florida result and the national Electoral College count for George W. Bush, as Melinda Wittstock reported (Cousin John's calls tipped election tally Guardian 11/19/2000):
John Ellis is not unlike any other American journalist in wanting to be first with big news. At the helm of Rupert Murdoch's Fox News Network's election night decision team, he achieved the now dubious distinction of being the first to call Florida - and the presidential election - for George W. Bush. The numbers he was working from were not official, but the viewers did not know that. Nor did they know that Ellis was very chummy with Bush - he's his first cousin.

No one might have given Ellis much notice if the election was not still hanging by a chad almost two weeks later - or if he had not bragged to the New Yorker magazine that throughout what's come to be known as 'Indecision 2000' he was constantly on the phone with his cousins George and Florida's Governor 'Jebbie' [G.W. Bush's brother], tipping them off with the latest internal projections on the voting.

The revelation has caused disquiet within the more high-minded of media circles, not least because his decision to call it for 'Dubya' on Fox at 2:16am forced the hand of competing networks. CNN, NBC, ABC and CBS followed the Ellis lead within four minutes, only to be forced into embarrassing retractions less than two hours later. [my emphasis]
So, Bush family ruthlessness and lack of respect for democratic norms as well as the problems of not only FOX News (then as now a Republican propaganda channel) but of the "quality" press also were on very public display within hours after the election.

This was quickly followed by various dubious actions, including those of Florida's chief election official Secretary of State Secretary of State Katherine Harris, a Republican who co-chaired the Bush-Cheney campaign in Florida. One of the more dramatic moments was what came to be known as the "Brooks Brothers Riot," in which a Republican mob that included Republican Congressional staffers forced a shutdown of a recount of Miami-Dade County votes. (John Latigua, Miami's rent-a-riot Salon 11/28/2000)

The Florida state supreme court ordered recounts in some areas to proceed. The Bush campaign went to the Supreme Court, which stopped the recount on December 12, and on a 5-4 decision rejected the Florida court's remedy of a recount. Al Gore announced the next day, "While I strongly disagree with the court’s decision, I accept it." And thereby conceded the election to Bush.

The pro-Bush Justices who provided the five votes stopping the recount knew their legal reasoning was dubious in the extreme. Thus, the decision included the qualifier, "Our consideration is limited to the present circumstances..." In other words, it wasn't supposed to be used as a precedent in future cases. (Bush v. Gore, Library of Congress text)

The Democrats' political stance during the post-election Florida standoff wasn't remotely commensurate with the Republicans' shrilly partisan approach. But if Gore's statement, "While I strongly disagree with the court’s decision, I accept it," sounds meek in retrospect, it sounded at the time like a roaring condemnation of the Supreme Court's partisanship in comparison to the tone of other leading Democratic spokespeople, who generally tried to strike a tone of hand-ringing statesmanly concern.

Al Gore at the time was both the formal and de facto head of the Democratic Party. And he was the Presidential candidate. So he bears some responsibility for the inadequate level of the response. His selection of Joe Lieberman as his Vice Presidential candidate looks very unfortunate in retrospect, not least because Lieberman was clearly opposed to an aggressive political response on the recount while the Republicans were in a Brooks Brothers Riot mode. David Margolick, The Path to Florida Vanity Fair Oct 2004 (online date: 03/19/2014) recounts this incident:
Mark Herron, a Gore-team lawyer in Tallahassee, inadvertently made matters worse for his own side. On November 15, he sent out a long memo on rules governing absentee ballots to the Democratic lawyers positioned at each of the 67 county canvassing boards. A copy of the memo somehow found its way to a Republican law firm across the street from Herron’s office. Next thing he knew, the Republicans were quoting his careful recitation of Florida election law to support their claim that Democrats wanted to disenfranchise brave Americans in uniform.

Panicked, the Gore team put Joe Lieberman on the Sunday television talk shows to declare that the Democrats would never do that, and that he, for one, thought the most liberal standard should be applied to all incoming absentee ballots. Herron was appalled when he heard that: he knew that the western Panhandle counties were thick with U.S. military bases. By letting any post-election absentee votes count, including those with late—or no—postmarks, the presidency might well be lost.
It's by no means certain that a different response would have produced a different election outcome. But it would have very likely have helped the Democratic Party to be far more skeptical and critical of the new Cheney-Bush Administration and more agfressive in opposing its destructive policies. (It's worth noting that a lot of Democrats to this day blame Ralph Nader's third-party candidacy that year for the Florida loss, though the polling data provides little evidence for that.)

I'll admit that I'm reluctant to blame Gore for the outcome of the post-election decision, in no small part because I admire his accomplishments in educating people on the climate crisis and also because, unlike Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden and John Kerry, Gore straightforwardly opposed the Iraq War. His Current TV project also provided a limited but important television platform for liberal and progressive news coverage. Earlier in his political career, Gore was a stalwart of the neoliberal Democratic Leadership Council (DLC). And has moved away from that position in very significant ways. His 2007 book The Assault on Reason was an important critical analysis of the disinformation techniques practiced on the public by the Cheney-Bush Administration, including around the Iraq War:
... the current White House has engaged in an unprecedented and sustained campaign of mass deception - especially where its policies in Iraq are concerned. Active deception by those in power makes true deliberation and meaingful debate by the people themselves virtually impossible. When any administration lies to the people, it weakens America's ability to make wise collective decisions about our Republic.

Now that the full extent of this historic fiasco is becoming clear, it is important to understand how such a horrible set of mistakes could have been made in a great democracy. And it is already obvious that the administration's abnormal and un-American approach to secrecy, censorship, and massive systematic deception is the principal explanation for how America embraced this catastrophe. [my emphasis]
Gore, unlike most other Democratic leaders, could see and articulate clearly the radical, anti-democratic course on which the Republican Party was traveling.

The corporate press treatment of the Clintons on the Whitewater and assorted other pseudoscandals during the 1990s involved some epic journalistic malpractice. Gene Lyons and Joe Conason are two of the journalists who did excellent work documenting and critiquing that experience. This continued during the 2000 campaign, which was full of silly tropes like "Al Gore claimed he invented the internet." Maureen Dowd's New York Times columns on how Al Gore was a sissy provided several examples of how bizarre this Beltway Village press practice had become.

And it continued after Bush's inauguration, even when more responsible journalists undertook intensive review of the 2000 Florida vote count. We can't say that a more thorough vote count of the entire state would definitely have produced a Gore victory, because the detailed studies had to make assumptions about how the recount would have taken place. There is good reason to think it would have produced a Gore win. But that central finding was in turn badly blurred by the corporate press coverage of those studies. It didn't help in that regard that the studies were completed after the 911 attack and much of the press was too busy promoting hurrah-patriotism to spend a lot of time fretting over, or even reporting responsibly, on anything so trivial (to the Villagers) as the integrity of the 2000 Presidential election.

But, however much or little blame one may choose to Gore's personal account, Edward Foley's account in George W. Bush vs. Al Gore, 15 years later: We really did inaugurate the wrong guy Salon 12/19/2015 is also an accurate description of events:
Bush v. Gore, the court case, is often used interchangeably as shorthand for Bush-versus-Gore, the entirety of the dispute over the outcome of the election.

But that dispute encompassed much more than just the US Supreme Court’s decision, which in truth did not even end the fight. Rather, the end came the next day, December 13, when Gore announced he would not attempt to renew the recount through additional proceedings in Florida’s courts. Had he done so, he and Bush conceivably might have pursued their fight all the way to Congress, as Hayes and Tilden had over the 1876 election. If Bush-versus-Gore had reached Congress it would have been the first real test of the impenetrably ambiguous Electoral Count Act of 1887, with unpredictable consequences. Thus it was Gore’s concession of December 13, and not the Court’s ruling of the previous day, that truly ended the fight for the presidency as a practical matter. [my emphasis]
He goes on to explain how the situation made any alternative attempt at a recount after the December 13 decision was problematic as a practical matter:
Gore’s lawyers understandably concluded that Florida law provided no judicial remedy for a mistaken electoral outcome caused by the butterfly ballot. In a suit filed on behalf of affected voters, the Florida Supreme Court unanimously concluded the ballot’s design, however problematic and consequential it was, did not violate state law. Even if it had, it is unclear what remedy the state court should have provided. There was insufficient time to hold a whole new election in Florida, since the state’s presidential electors were constitutionally required to cast their official Electoral College votes on the same day as the electors in all other states, which Congress had specified as Monday, December 18. Limiting a revote to just Palm Beach County would have raised grave constitutional questions, especially if Palm Beach voters who had not participated in the initial election were permitted to participate in the revote, but Florida voters elsewhere were not similarly given a second chance to cast a ballot.
Additional reporting on the 2000 election travesty: