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Eine Klein Critique
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Kausfiles.com went away for a few
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days, and missed a Joe Klein swoon. This time over Bill Bradley. Actually, it
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was more of a swoonlet; as Klein makes clear in a contribution to
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Slate
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's Fray,
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he's just really happy with several of the candidates this year, including Bush
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and McCain. (Is he allowed to swoon for more than one at a time? Isn't that
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some sort of antitrust violation?)
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Klein's piece is perfectly OK. But one expects a lot of him, since he was once
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(and may again be) the best in the business. So:
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1) Why discover Bradley so late? Most of the press told us weeks ago about the
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ex-senator's "artful languor," his "aloof anti-charismatic messianism," his
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emphasis on "substance, not style." You can see Klein's failure to obey the
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media's quasi-menstraul cycle (which dictates that this is a Gore Comeback
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moment) as stubborn, heroic individualism. Or you can say The New
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Yorker seems to think its high-income readers aren't very well
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informed--doctors, maybe, with no time to read the papers--and they can use a
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sort of remedial course on what's been happening in politics over the past
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months. They need a classy analyst to tell them that Bradley has "run an
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extremely effective campaign" but that "The race is about to intensify." Did
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Klein write sentences like that when he was at Newsweek ? I don't remember them. (A third
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theory: Maybe it's New Yorker
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editors who are isolated and not very well-informed.)
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2) In the course of mildly hyping Bradley's substance, Klein says Bradley
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proposed an "extremely controversial" solution to each of the problems he has
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tackled, including child poverty. But Bradley's child poverty speech was a
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bunch of sensible incremental proposals that practically everyone
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to the left of the Heritage Foundation's Robert Rector might endorse (and
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Rector might go for some of them). To show Bradley's extreme controversiality
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on poverty, Klein notes that Bradley "has remained opposed to Clinton's 1996
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welfare initiative." But it is hardly controversial if Bradley doesn't renounce
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his own recorded vote against the bill. What's significant is that Bradley
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doesn't call for repealing any significant part of the law--which would be controversial. What seems to have
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happened is that after Bradley got burned by the press' sniping at the cost of
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his health plan, he got a bit cautious, and hasn't proposed anything dramatic
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since. But that's not the sort of complication you can get into if you're
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giving a remedial lecture to time-pressed MDs.
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3) Klein's other generalities are sometimes a little off. He says Bradley's
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antipoverty plan had a "big price tag--$9.8 billion." If that's a big price
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tag, we really have gone a long way down the incrementalist road. Klein also
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praises Bradley for giving "speeches on issues that are less prominent on most
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pollsters' radar screens," citing, as his first example, Bradley's speech on
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"gun control." But if ever there was a "hot button" issue that is big on
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Democratic pollsters' radar screens but relatively unimportant in reality, it's
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gun control. As others have said: The
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New Yorker has fact-checkers; it needs some thought-checkers.
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4) Maybe Klein is just spending his time doing something else, like writing his
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next novel. ... Alas, Kausfiles
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doesn't have that excuse!
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So he had a Caucasian guilt thing going, is that it?
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"Ickes, a White deputy chief of staff and architect of Clinton's 1996
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re-election, steadfastly has denied breaking any fund-raising laws."
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--Associated Press story of Wednesday, Oct. 27, describing the efforts of
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Clinton aide Harold Ickes on behalf of Jesse Jackson Jr.'s campaign for
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Congress.
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