NEWSWEEK contributor Michael Gerson helped craft some of President George W. Bush's
most memorable speeches. Michael Waldman, executive director of the
Brennan Center for Justice, did the same for President Bill Clinton.
Throughout this week, the two former presidential penmen will preview
the big speeches at the Republican Convention in St. Paul, Minn., and
analyze what worked-and what didn't-after the fact. First up: The
Bushes, Fred Thompson and Joe Lieberman:
MICHAEL GERSON
Arriving
earlier today at the Republican convention, I was reminded how cruel is
the passage of time in the political world. Four years ago, I stayed
at a suite at the Waldorf; this afternoon I taxied between hotels in
search of a misplaced reservation. At the Xcel Energy Center, I was
escorted to my nosebleed, "special press" seat with a close view of the
acoustical tiles on the ceiling, and a distant view of every speaker's
backside.
On the first real night of the Republican
convention, the speakers were varied, to say the least. Mrs. Bush,
with perfect appropriateness, talked about her husband, laying special
emphasis on his historic AIDS and malaria initiatives (topics close to
my heart). President Bush, with perfect appropriateness, talked about
the nominee. It was a memorable line to say that McCain has the "heart
of a protector." And with mock exasperation about McCain's
independence, the president generously gave McCain permission to
emphasize his disagreements with the administration. Apart from the
brief mention of the "sunny side of the mountain"--reprise from his own
first convention speech--Bush was unsentimental. I noticed he spared
few words for Sarah Palin, but those duties seemed to fall to Mrs.
Bush, who was warm about the vice presidential nominee.
The speech of the night was given by Fred Thompson, who will never be
president, but should play one on TV. He is an enormously effective
storyteller, weaving humor and moments of quiet intensity. And McCain
has a story worth telling--a story of broken bones and rope torture and
solitary confinement and defiance still shocking in its courage. Some
personal stories get smaller the closer you approach. McCain's story
gets larger. Thompson gave a narrative to McCain's life--a "mixture of
rebellion and honor"--that made sense of McCain's entire career. And it
was a strong relaunch for a Republican message drowned out, to this
point, by high winds and soap operas.
READ THE FULL STORY HERE.