IF DONALD TRUMP RUNS AGAIN, DO NOT COVER HIM THE SAME WAY:  A JOURNALIST’S MANIFESTO

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

I borrow the headline on this blog from a column published in the Washington Post this morning and written by Margaret Sullivan, a now retired columnist who, in her last years on the job, often commented on the craft of journalism.

She often criticized what she called “the traditional way of doing things as a reporter or editor.”

What follows below is the full text of her new column, which rests on this notion from Sullivan:  “I believed in traditional reporting, but Trump changed me — and it should change the rest of the media too.”

The length of Sullivan’s column is imposing.  But I believe it is worth reprinting all of it because:

  1. So much is at stake for America – the very future of democracy in the face of many – call them “election deniers” – who, led by Donald Trump, want to dismantle everything.
  2. Sullivan proposes excellent, though tough-to-implement suggestions for the industry where I got worked in my first years out of college.

So, here is the column.

*********

Error! Filename not specified.espite my nearly four decades in journalism, I was unprepared for the moment of no return that came on a July day in 2016, as a blazing sun beat down on the streets of Cleveland. Walking around the grounds of the Republican National Convention, I was looking for a column idea.

I was new at this, having started at The Washington Post only a few weeks earlier. Wandering and observing, I came upon a table of souvenirs, meant to appeal to the convention attendees who had arrived from all corners of the nation to cheer on the Republican Party’s nomination of Donald Trump.

I already had seen some gleefully misogynistic anti-Clinton paraphernalia — “Hillary sucks but not like Monica” — but nothing measured up to the horror I felt as I registered the meaning of a T-shirt featuring the image of a noose and these words: “Rope. Tree. Journalist. Some assembly required.”

Over the weeks and months ahead, as I started to write what I hoped were well-reasoned Post columns about Trump’s relationship with the media, I felt an irrational anger coming at me like an unending blast from an industrial-strength hose. Trump hadn’t invented this anger, of course, but he certainly emboldened it — and used it for his own purposes.

On social media, in phone messages, in emails I received, the sheer hatred from Trump supporters shocked and even frightened me. One, unsigned but from a “lifetime member of the NRA,” asserted that people like me wouldn’t be around much longer. Another, signed “A Real, True Patriot,” read:

“Though I would never read a manure-laden pile of toilet paper like Washington Compost, I heard about your Nazi column about ‘reaching the masses’ with your fake news to convince people that your leftist Nazi lies are truth. You are a well-trained serpent of the left, following communist orders as you were taught. ‘If you say and repeat a lie often enough, it will eventually be seen as truth’ — Lenin … Here’s what you (slithering, fake-news/propaganda- generating slimy slug) should do: Go fornicate yourself with a large, sharp knife, and then eat rat poison until your belly is stuffed.”

I was called the c-word repeatedly. One reader suggested I have my breasts cut off. I tried to let all this nastiness roll off my back and even found it amusing when a Post reader sent me an email calling me a “venomous serpent.” John Schwartz, then a reporter for the New York Times who had become a friend, suggested I treat it as a badge of honor and write a book titled “Memories of a Venomous Serpent.”

Now, six years later, we journalists know a lot more about covering Trump and his supporters. We’ve come a long way, but certainly made plenty of mistakes. Too many times, we acted as his stenographers or megaphones. Too often, we failed to refer to his many falsehoods as lies.

It took too long to stop believing that, whenever he calmed down for a moment, he was becoming “presidential.” And it took too long to moderate our instinct to give equal weight to both sides, even when one side was using misinformation for political gain.

It’s been an education for all of us — a gradual realization that the instincts and conventions of traditional journalism weren’t good enough for this moment in our country’s history. As Trump prepares to run again in 2024, it’s worth reminding ourselves of the lessons we’ve learned — and committing to the principle that, when covering politicians who are essentially running against democracy, old-style journalism will no longer suffice.

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Back in 2016, I was still looking for common ground with the Trump crowd. It fit with my background as a traditional newspaper journalist. During nearly 13 years as chief editor of the Buffalo News, ending in 2012, I had believed that I could listen to or communicate with our readers, whatever their politics — and I was registered to vote as a “blank.”

Our editorial board, which I sat on, endorsed candidates from various parties, and I had courteous relationships with officeholders of all stripes. I frequently would go out to speak to civic organizations, such as rotary clubs, in the Buffalo-Niagara region with no regard for whether their members leaned right or left.

At the Cleveland airport after the convention, I interviewed one delegate, a concierge for a car dealership named Mary Sue McCarty, who wore a cowboy hat and pearls as she waited for her flight home to Dallas. She had her mind made up about the news media: “Journalists aren’t doing their jobs. They are protecting a certain class.”

When I pointed out that it was the New York Times that broke the consequential story about Hillary Clinton’s email practices and that mainstream media organizations had aggressively investigated the finances of the Clinton Foundation, she shrugged: “If it’s a Republican, it’s investigated to death. If it’s a Democrat, it’s breezed over.”

This assertion could hardly have been more wrong. After all, the media’s endless emphasis on Clinton’s emails would prove to be a big factor in dooming her campaign. It simply wasn’t the case that the press was giving Democrats a pass.

Clearly, the empirical common ground I depended upon — and believed in — was eroding. Dealing with that growing reality over the next few years would change me as a journalist and even as a person. Some principles and beliefs, I found, were more important than appearing to get along with everyone or responding to criticism by offering to compromise or change course.

Journalists have to stand, unwaveringly, for the truth — and if that meant being attacked by zealots who wanted to call such a position evidence of bias, I could live with that. For me, it would soon become a matter of simple integrity to acknowledge that some of the old-school rules and practices didn’t work anymore.

From this new vantage point, it seemed self-evident that the mainstream press was too often going easy on Trump. Well into his presidency, journalists didn’t want to use the word “lie” for Trump’s constant barrage of falsehoods.

To lie, editors reasoned, means to intend to be untruthful. Since journalists couldn’t be inside politicians’ heads, how were we supposed to know if — by this definition — they were really lying? The logic eventually became strained, given that Trump blithely repeated the same rank mistruths over and over.

Too many reporters and their editors didn’t seem to want to figure out how to cover Trump properly. From the moment he descended the golden escalator at Manhattan’s Trump Tower in June 2015 to announce his candidacy, the news media was in his thrall.

Journalists couldn’t stop writing about him, showing him on TV and even broadcasting images of the empty stage waiting for him to arrive at a rally. Trump had described himself as “the ratings machine,” and for once he wasn’t exaggerating.

As I continued to tackle the 2016 campaign, I criticized the press’s obsession with the former reality-TV star, yet I was caught up in it, too. I have no regrets about what I wrote, but I certainly was aware that if I wrote a column with Trump’s name in the headline, it probably would find a passionate audience: thousands of comments and retweets, hundreds of emails, requests to talk on TV.

And because I wrote about the news media, and Trump never stopped using the news media as a foil, there was so much to say.

In every way, Trump was a deeply abnormal candidate, but the news media couldn’t seem to communicate that effectively or even grasp the problem. Instead, his every unhinged, middle-of-the-night tweet was covered like legitimate news.

To be fair, the media was applying a standard that had made sense up until that moment:  When a major presidential candidate says something provocative or worse, it’s newsworthy. The problem is that we were applying this old standard to a candidate who was exploiting it for his own purposes — while seeking to undermine democracy itself.

In the late afternoon of November 8, 2016, Election Day, I walked into The Post’s newsroom with a column already started about Hillary Clinton’s supposedly inevitable victory. A few hours later, I was scrambling, just like every reporter, editor, and commentator. My colleagues and I watched the television screens placed all around the newsroom as one battleground state after another fell to Trump.

Tossing away my useless column, I wrote that the media coverage of the 2016 race had been, as I put it, “an epic fail.” They — and I would include myself in this criticism — employed a kind of magical thinking: A Trump presidency shouldn’t happen, therefore it won’t happen.

Soon, word filtered down from the boss, Marty Baron, that I should produce a second column before I left the newsroom that night. He wanted me to write my recommendations for how the traditional press should cover the new president. So, I wrote a call to arms for American journalists: “Journalists are going to have to be better — stronger, more courageous, stiffer-spined — than they’ve ever been.”

I filed it, not at all convinced that I’d written anything worthwhile on this momentous night, said good night to my editor and headed out of the newsroom around 3 a.m.

Stunned and spent, I walked slowly through the deserted streets of downtown Washington. As I neared my apartment, I could see the U.S. Capitol, that seemingly inviolable symbol of American democracy, off to the east. Lit from within, it glowed an ethereal white in the darkness.

In every way, Trump was a deeply abnormal candidate, but the news media couldn’t seem to communicate that effectively or even grasp the problem.

As we would learn over the coming years, the Capitol was not inviolable, and neither is the democracy it represents. American democracy is now on the edge of a precipice. What can members of the press do to help keep it from tipping over as the 2024 campaign looms? What should we have learned since that summer in 2016?

For one thing, I’m convinced that journalists — specifically those who cover politics — must keep a sharp focus on truth-seeking, not old-style performative neutrality. Does that mean we throw objectivity out the window?

Of course not. We should be resolutely objective in the sense of seeking evidence and approaching subjects with an open mind. We should not, however, resort to taking everything down the middle, no matter what. Rather than, for example, having equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats (or conservatives and progressives) on every talk show, or devoting equal numbers of words to each side of a political argument, we should be thinking about what coverage serves the public best.

Those who deny the outcome of the 2020 election certainly don’t deserve a media megaphone for that enduring lie, one that is likely to reemerge in the presidential campaign ahead. But the media should go one step further: When covering such a politician in other contexts — for example, about abortion rights or gun control — journalists should remind audiences that this public figure is an election denier.

That’s exactly the model pursued by WITF, a public radio station in Harrisburg, Pa., which decided to remind its audience on a regular basis that some Republican state legislators and members of the Pennsylvania congressional delegation had opposed the transfer of power to Joe Biden, despite the lack of evidence to support their claims of election fraud.

A story on the station’s website about a state legislator’s efforts to get Pennsylvanians vaccinated was accompanied by a sidebar of text about his behavior after the election. On-air stories have used a tagline to accomplish the same purpose. The decision wasn’t easy, one editor told me, “because this is not the normal thing.”

Unfortunately, many media organizations — increasingly owned these days by huge corporations or hedge funds — seem more interested in ratings and profits than in serving the public interest. So, they are extremely hesitant to offend groups of viewers or voters, including the many Republicans who have signed on to the lie about the 2020 election being stolen.

The new boss of CNN, Chris Licht, raised eyebrows when he made the rounds on Capitol Hill a few months ago to assure Republican leaders that members of their party would be treated fairly on the network that had been one of the former president’s favorite punching bags. One conservative publication, the Washington Free Beacon, called Licht’s unusual outreach an “apology tour.”

Given all this, it’s difficult to picture CNN consistently alerting viewers that a politician is an election denier, even when discussing a different subject. Yet that’s exactly the type of bold measure that is needed.

Media people — not just reporters but their editors and top leaders of newsrooms — also need to take a hard, critical look at the types of stories that constitute traditional campaign coverage. That coverage has historically leaned on such things as live footage of speeches, rallies and debates; on “horse race” articles based on polls or conventional wisdom; and on blowing up small conflicts (campaign staff in disarray!) into major stories.

These modes of coverage can have the effect of normalizing a candidate who should not be normalized. They also often constitute a distraction at a time when huge swaths of one party are essentially running against democratic practices.

By no means am I counseling that journalists act as if they are “on the team” of Trump’s rivals. That’s not our job. At the same time, we have to be aware that covering someone who doesn’t care about democratic norms — even something as basic as the peaceful transfer of power — requires different judgments about what stories really matter, and how we should or should not cover them.

In making these judgments, we have to relentlessly explain ourselves to our readers, viewers and listeners. Although it didn’t involve Trump, a good example of this came over the summer when the Plain Dealer newspaper in Cleveland decided against covering a rally for U.S. Senate candidate J.D. Vance featuring Florida Governor Ron DeSantis because of the absurdly restrictive rules the campaign had tried to impose, including a prohibition against interviewing attendees who weren’t approved by rally organizers.

Instead, the Plain Dealer published white space, with a note to readers written by editor Chris Quinn headlined, “We reject the free speech-trampling rules set by J.D. Vance and Ron DeSantis for covering their rally.” Quinn was blunt: “Think about what they were doing here. They were staging an event to rally people to vote for Vance while instituting the kinds of policies you’d see in a fascist regime.”

Of course, the press must be just as tough on Democrats, should they adopt similar tactics or start lying all the time or trashing governmental norms. The standards should be the same for all. But journalists shouldn’t shy away from the unavoidable truth: Most of this is coming from Trump-style Republicans.

Perhaps the most important thing journalists can do as they cover the campaign ahead is to provide thoughtful framing and context. They shouldn’t just repeat what’s being said, but help explain what it means. This is especially important in headlines and news alerts, which are about as far as many news consumers get.

When Trump rants about the supposed horrors of rigged elections and voting fraud, journalists have to constantly provide the counterweight of truth. We have gotten better at this since 2016. Now we have to stick to it.

All of these suggestions go against the grain of traditional politics coverage. Undoubtedly, this approach will draw accusations of bias from the right; undoubtedly, journalists and news leaders will be put on the defensive.

They’ll need to get over that. The stakes are enormously high. Doing things the same old way isn’t remotely appropriate. By now, that’s something we all should have learned.

THE DEPARTMENT OF GOOD QUOTES WORTH REMEMBERING IS OPEN AGAIN

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

Yesterday, I opened one of three departments I run with a free hand to manage as I see fit – the Department of Pet Peeves.

Today, demonstrating my supreme management ability, I open another of “my” departments – the Department of Good Quotes Worth Remembering.  [The third department, by the way, is the Department of “Just Saying.”]

So, the Good Quotes Department is open again.

FROM PAUL WALDMAN IN THE WASHINGTON POST:

“I wouldn’t be surprised if U.S. Senator Ben Sasse thought he was perfectly positioned for a future in his party after 2020:  Trump lost badly, then discredited himself with the January 6, 2021, insurrection, and surely the GOP would want to rid itself of Trump and all he represented.

“Sasse was one of seven Republican senators who voted to convict Trump in his second impeachment trial.

“Instead, Sasse’s party is as firmly committed to Trump as ever.  And apart from the occasional story of someone being asked to leave a restaurant or young Trump staffers being unable to find dates, there hasn’t been much accountability for those who served him, promoted him, and made clear their own moral depravity by defending him.

“Because so much of the GOP was invested in Trump, it was in its interest to make sure no one would suffer from the moral stain of their connection to him.  And had Sasse wanted a think tank sinecure or some corporate board seats, no one would have protested.  But he tried to step back into academia, where liberals have plenty of power.

“All of which shows that while Trump contaminates everything he touches, the irony is that the more you were willing to drink his Kool-Aid, the less damage that contamination did to you.  The Republicans facing the biggest consequences are the people like Sasse who didn’t really want to be a part of it.”

COMMENT:  Sasse tried to do what was right in the Senate and got black marks from Trump and his minions for doing so.  Now, as the main contender for the presidency of the University of Florida – he is fully qualified for such a position – he is being black-balled by students who contend he has not been “woke” enough on such issues as gay rights and same-sex marriages.

He can’t win, though the Board at the University of Florida may still go through with his appointment.

FROM BENJAMIN DREYER IN THE POST:  [Random House executive managing editor and copy chief.]

“Now, it’s a common misapprehension that ‘editing’ is a synonym for ‘deleting.’  Yes, by all means trim away what I call the Throat-Clearers and Wan Intensifiers — ‘to be sure,’ ‘that said, ‘of course,’ ‘in sum,’ ‘rather,’ ‘actually,’ and, ‘very.’

“But I have learned that prose often benefits from the cushioning of a few extra words — for rhythm, for sense, sometimes simply to counter the airlessness of sentences that are so straitened they can’t breathe.”

COMMENT:  I think Dreyer is right.  Words matter, as in his phrase, “for rhythm, for sense, sometimes simply to counter the airlessness of sentences that are so straitened they can’t breathe.”

I often remember when a former business partner of mine counseled that fewer words were better than more.  Possibly.  But the word “rhythm,” a key part of writing, often depends on the use of more words not less.

The most basic key:  Work to make sure your words deliver the message you want them to deliver, with rhythm, style, and personal tone.

DICK HUGHES IN HIS “CAPITAL CHATTER” COLUMN:

“Doug Moore, of the Oregon League of Conservation Voters, says Oregon often is mischaracterized as a very blue state when it’s actually purplish.

“Ah, be wary of the political stereotypes placed on any region.  Oregon’s status on the political spectrum varies according to the political contest, Republicans’ ability to field high-quality candidates, and the strength of their campaign structure and funding.

“Democrats have won 31 of the 33 statewide partisan elections since 2002. Secretary of State Dennis Richardson and U.S. Senator Gordon Smith were the lone Republican victors during those 20 years.

“With three strong candidates, it remains probable that a minority of voters will elect Oregon’s next governor.  Any of the three could yet win.”

COMMENT:  Hughes, former editorial page editor of the Salem Statesman Journal, has it right when he discounts labels in politics and says results often rest on the quality of candidates, not party label.

Whatever your set of beliefs this time around in the Oregon governor’s race, there is a real race here.  Any of three candidates could win.

The same is true, by the way, in another “purple” state, Washington.  There, long-time Democrat Patty Murray is in the race of her political career against a candidate from Eastern Washington, thus illustrating what is true both in Oregon and Washington – there are “two-Oregons” and there are “two Washingtons,” urban and rural…and rarely do the two ever meet or agree.

THE DEPARTMENT OF PET PEEVES IS OPEN AGAIN

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

This, remember, is one of several departments I run with a free hand to manage as I see fit.

The others are the Department of Good Quotes Worth Remembering, and the Department of “Just Saying.”

The peeves below would have fit in the Department of “Just Saying,” but I choose to open the Department of Pet Peeves instead.

PEEVE #1:  PAYING PREMIUMS AND FILING CLAIMS

Insurance companies love when you pay premiums and hate when you make claims.

We are learning this again as we wait for coverage of water damage in our laundry workroom.  The insurer should have responded by now, but wait – this is a claim, so we sit on our hands.

Let me add this important point:  I have friends who have been or are in the insurance business.  They are good guys.  The issue is not the insurance agents or managers; It is the system that sucks.

PEEVE #2:  MISPLACED MEDIA FOCUS

I am peeved at the media for focusing incessantly on such idiots as Donald Trump, Kanye West, and Elon Musk. 

Why not spend as much time and effort focusing on citizens in this country who are striving to provide for their families and friends?  Such as immigrants to this country from Afghanistan, Ukraine, and to the south.

There are many great stories there, which would help all of us arrive at a more accurate perception of immigrants than what is often portrayed by the media.

So, enough of West, Musk, and Trump!

PEEVE #3:  DIVERTING FROM REAL, COMPETITIVE PROFESSIONAL GOLF

On this subject, I have made my views clear in the past.  As it is said, “crystal.” 

I dislike LIV golf and what it is doing to professional golf in this country and around the world.

It is making a mockery of the goal of competing to win and for prize money.  All LIV does is create exhibitions and pay those who play in such events millions of dollars just for showing up regardless of how they play.

Exhibitions are not necessarily bad in and of themselves.  They are just not my thing.

Especially if the money to fund them comes from the tainted Saudi Arabia Defense Fund.  If other industries do business with that country and with that fund, then they are wrong, too.  Two wrongs don’t make a right.

Does this mean that I believe the PGA Tour in the U.S.A. and the DP Tour in Europe are perfect?  No.

Both need to up their games, not only for the players and caddies, but for golf fans like me.  And both appear to be doing so.  An acknowledged top golfer, Jack Nicklaus, now retired, made this point yesterday.  He said the PGA Tour needs to continuing to improve its management to assure that all the recent changes work well.

If the improvement actions that have been taken by the PGA and DP are a response to LIV, so be it.

Further, what gets lost in the shuffle of all the controversy is a key, salient fact:  Both the PGA and DP Tours have designed events that produce millions of dollars for worthy charities.

Does LIV?  Absolutely not.

WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO AMERICA IF TRUMP WINS AGAIN?

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

If you want to avoid losing sleep or throwing up, then don’t read a major analysis in the Washington Post.

But, if you want to know the truth about what may be ahead for America, then be informed.  Read it.

The scenarios are grim says writer David Montomery whose by-line appears over a story under this headline:  What Will Happen to America if Trump Wins Again?  Experts Helped Us Game It Out.

Here is how Montgomery started his analysis:

“Imagine it’s January 20, 2025.  Inauguration Day.  The president-elect raises his right hand and begins to recite the oath:  I, Donald John Trump, do solemnly swear …

“It’s an anti-Trumper’s nightmare, but it could happen:  47 per cent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents want Trump to be the nominee in 2024, according to a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll. And if Trump and Joe Biden are the contenders, Trump narrowly edges Biden, 48 to 46 per cent, among registered voters (albeit within the poll’s margin of error).”

To help grasp the consequences of another Trump administration, Mongomery, reports the Post, turned to 21 experts in the presidency, political science, public administration, the military, intelligence, foreign affairs, economics, and civil rights.  They sketched, he says, chillingly plausible chains of potential actions and reactions thatcould unravel the nation.

“’I think it would be the end of the republic,’ says Princeton University professorSean Wilentz, one of the historians President Biden consulted in August about America’s teetering democracy.  ‘It would be a kind of overthrow from within. … It would be a coup of the way we’ve always understood America.”

Based on what these experts described, here’s a summary of the country’s crack-up in three phases as reported by the Post:

  • Phase 1:  Trump seizes control of the government and installs super loyalists.  He governs without Senate advice and consent.  He creates a MAGA civil service.
  • Phase 2:  Trump deploys the military aggressively at home, while retreating abroad.  As he did in his earlier term, he uses the military to promote his own political power, including the specter of a military parade down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., all to honor Trump.  American global leadership is finished — much to Putin’s delight.  Intelligence work is harmed.
  • Phase 3:  Political violence and democratic collapse?  It’s possible.  Ideological, racial, and ethnic tensions ramp up.  The bonds that bind the Union loosen.  The chances of civil war increase.

Montgomery concludes by quoting one his contacts:  “After four more years of nihilistic energy like that, the experience of being an American could well have been transformed into something unrecognizable.”

So, prepare yourself.  Read the entire article.  And worry about the future of America if Trump and his minions prevail.  Just as I do.

ANOTHER ELUSIVE RULES QUESTION FROM MY DEDICATION TO GOLF

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

To come up with the following question, you would have to be a dedicated golfer who does not have much to do with his or her time other than think about golf rules. 

Or, in this case, an even more obscure topic – what golf scores to post to produce a golf handicap?

Here’s the question (which has troubled me over the years):

Should you have to post golf scores produced in a “match-play game”?  Which is much different from the more-played form – “stroke play.”

I say the best answer is “no.”

Unfortunately, the United States Golf Association disagrees.

Here is what it says:

“Question:  Should match play scores be posted even if you do not hole out on every hole?

“Answer:  Yes.  When a hole is started but a player does not hole out, the player must record their most likely score for handicap purposes. (Rule 3.3, Rules of Handicapping)

“If the match ends with holes left to play and the players continue to play, the actual scores must be posted on every hole played.

“If a match ends with holes left to play and the players do not play the remaining holes, net par should be recorded as the hole scores for the remaining holes (keeping in mind at least 7 or 14 holes must be played for a 9- or 18-hole score to posted).”

Now, for all of us amateur golfers, how’s that for confusion and controversy.

In other words, if you don’t finish a golf hole, make up a score and post that score.  And, note, that golf used to be called “a game of honor.”

Here are a couple ways the situation plays out:

Situation 1:  You are playing in a two-person “best ball” format and your partner makes a putt before you have a chance to do so.  So, you don’t putt and just pick up your ball.  You are supposed to post the score you think would have gotten.

Stupid.

Situation 2:  You are playing in an 18-hole match, but the opposing individual or team beats you before the 18th hole.  So, you don’t play, say, the last four holes.  You are supposed to post the scores you think you would have gotten.

Again, stupid.

If I was THE final golf rules arbiter – many of my friends would say they are glad I am not – I would rule, DON’T POST SCORES IN MATCH PLAY!

The reasons are that, (a) it is, by design, very different from stroke play, and (b) it specifically involves a very different way of thinking about how to play.  The number of strokes only matters if it affects the match, not your own score.

So, I say, don’t post scores in match play.  Do what the form of competition requires – play to win golf holes, not post a score!

JOBS I WISH I COULD HAVE HAD

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

While I had what I thought was a good run as a journalist, a state government manager, and a lobbyist, my thoughts on occasion in retirement sometimes go to jobs I could have had – or wish I had.

Two examples:

  • I would like to have been one of the persons who decides on names of cars – the names, including the basic brand, and the letters, and names, and numbers under that basic brand.
  • I would like to have been a golf commentator on TV.  Then, I could have said stuff like, “He has a lot of work left to do” or, “If he hit it harder, it would have gone farther.”

Back to car names.  Ever wonder how folks think up the names?  I have.

To do so, you have to figure out a combination of words, letters and numbers, all related to the bottom-line credentials of the vehicles, as well as to the basic question – will the names sell cars?

Note these current letters in car names that stand for something:

  • SS – SuperSport
  • GL – Base model symbol in most cases
  • RL – Road Luxury
  • TL – Touring Luxury
  • MDX – Medium crossover vehicle
  • RDX – Compact crossover vehicle
  • R/T – Road and Track
  • SL – Sport Light
  • ST – Sport Touring
  • LE or LTD – Limited Edition
  • LS – Limited Series, Luxury Sport, or Luxury Sedan
  • GT – Gran Turismo (Italian for grand touring)
  • CE – Compact Edition
  • CL – Comfort Luxe
  • C – Convertible, Coupe, or Compact

Didn’t know much of that.

But, beyond that, what’s in a name?  Here is a summary of what I found using “Mr. Google:”

“Everyone forms a picture of luxury in their mind when they hear the word ‘Lexus.’  But does everyone instantly know the manufacturer behind a Fusion, Veloster, or Challenger?  Maybe not.  That’s why makers of luxury vehicles, such as Audi, Lexus, Infiniti, BMW, Acura, Mercedes, and Jaguar, use alpha-numeric names.  They want to keep the focus on the brand, not the model.

“The alpha-numeric designations help buyers and sellers identify luxury vehicle classifications.  For example, Mercedes-Benz uses the ‘G’ classification for its family of sport utility vehicles and crossovers. The  ‘G’  stands for Gelaendewagen, a German word that translates loosely to “all-terrain vehicle,” and doesn’t really trip off the tongue.”

So, it’s more than just thinking up cute numbers with numbers that roll off the tongue.  It’s marketing.

Now, on to the golf commentating business.

When it comes to those who call golf on TV, I know what I like and what I don’t like.

For example, lead NBC commentator Paul Azinger does what I consider to be a great job of analyzing golf, including swings and results.  Not just saying something like “good shot” or “bad shot.”

In his day, Johnny Miller was good, too, in part because players didn’t like when he criticized their swings or performance, though he always maintained he said what he said to relate to those watching.

As for Nick Faldo, who just retired from the commentating business to herd cattle on a ranch in Montana, not so much.  To me, he often got caught up in his own awkward sentences, though he also loved the job, which he illustrated when he cried as he completed his last segment a few weeks ago.

Think, too, of sentences uttered by commentators that have become part of golf history.

One of the most famous came from analyst Gary Koch.  When golf pro Tiger Woods made an incredible putt on the iconic 17th island green at TPC Sawgrass, Koch said this:

“Better than most!”

I often have wondered Koch didn’t say, “Better than anyone else.”  Would have been more accurate.

REFLECTING ON A PAST PRIVILEGE

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

My bio which starts off this blog notes one of my jobs in the past – serving as press secretary for an Oregon congressman in his Washington, D.C. office.

It was a privilege to do so.

His name was Les AuCoin, a Democrat, who cut his political teeth in the Oregon Legislature, then moved on to Congress from Oregon’s 1st Congressional District.

Today, he is retired and lives most of the time in Montana.

All of this came back to mind this week as I read remarks AuCoin made at an event at Pacific University where he graduated.  The occasion was the ceremony to create the AuCoin Archive at the school, as well as the start of the AuCoin Lecture Series.

Here are a few excerpts of what AuCoin said:         

“Sixty-two years ago, I arrived on this campus to do something no one in my family had ever done — I signed in for a college education!  I was the skinny 18-year-old son of a single mom — a waitress in Redmond, Oregon, who had only an 8th-grade education, but big dreams for me.  I was the first male in my extended family to have even finished high school!

“If anyone had told me then I’d be standing here now, doing this, they might have been accused of smoking something a lot stronger than tobacco! 

“So, maybe you can understand why for a guy like me, a day like this could go to my head! Except … that isn’t going to happen! Because I know that the history Pacific University has archived is not mine alone! It’s a 25-year record of idealism and action created by an entire community—especially my staff, family, and friends.

In a reference to his staff:  “These remarkable people embody a virtue as old as the American idea … the belief that governments are instituted to protect the rights of the otherwise unprotected and to be faithful at all times to the first principle of democracy— ‘Consent of the Governed,’ an ideal that has lately come under assault.

“We’re living in fraught times.  Hannah Arendt, the political philosopher, wrote something years ago that describes part of our present difficulty. ‘The ideal pawn for a dictator,’ she said, ‘is not those who are committed to an ideology, but rather people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction…and between true and false…no longer exists.’

“Let’s each of us respond to our times by pushing forward our hopes and ideals, and never giving up, regardless of the difficulty. With so much on the line, let us not become ‘summer soldiers’ or ‘sunshine patriots.’  Let us be what Ulysses spoke of in the epic poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. 

               
“Here’s my favorite stanza.  Someday, I hope it is said of me: 

“Tho’ much is taken, much abides; and tho’

We are not now that strength which in old days

Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;

One equal temper of heroic hearts,

Made weak by time and fate, but still strong in will

To strive, to seek, to find … and not to yield.”

My own memories of my time working for AuCoin remain strong today.  For one thing, on the staff, I joined a college classmate, Gary Conkling, who was AuCoin’s chief of staff in D.C. and who later joined me as a partner in our lobbying and public relations firm, Conkling Fiskum & McCormick.

And, the McCormick?  He was – and is – Pat McCormick, who ran AuCoin’s Oregon office and became, for me, a life-long friend, a relationship we cemented when we both worked for our company.

Good times?  Yes.

But, also as AuCoin said very well above, it was a time when government stood for something positive.  Not perfect.  But positive.

Nor was AuCoin perfect.  He was just…positive.  The word service meant something to him – and I hope it did for me, as well.  It was my pleasure to deal with the media on behalf of AuCoin, both editors and reporters  in Washington, D.C., as well as those back home in Oregon.

AuCoin properly cites differences between his days in Congress (and mine, by extension) and what goes on in politics today.  The positive character of government back then is a far cry from the depths to which political activity has sunk today.

A PUZZLE ABOUT PUBLIC RECORDS

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

Oregon is famous for its “public records” law.  Properly so in the name of good government.

I am very familiar with the law based on my days as a State of Oregon employee, as a state lobbyist, and, now, as a member of an Oregon commission.

The notion of the law is simple:  Every record is public unless you can fit it into one of the exemptions built into the law.

As much as I am a believer in public records, including the law, it creates a puzzle for me. 

This:

What I often do to create a document on my own laptop — not state government property – as one way to help me think through issues more completely than would be the case without words on paper.

As a one-time newspaper reporter and as a person who enjoys writing, I often think that writing results, at least for me, in better thinking about a particular issue or situation.

Then, is what I create a “public record?”

Some friends, attorneys, have told me that the answer might be “yes.”  If it is, I disagree.  Strongly.

That’s because the document I have created is only for me.  No one else.

But, of course, if I send it on to a someone in government, yes, I have created a public record.

Public records law is well covered in the Oregon Revised Statutes.  The emphasis, as stated above, is that every record created by government is public unless the information can fit one of several exemptions in law.  Such as trade secret information submitted to government by businesses, information about the exact status of collective bargaining negotiations, the estimated value of property the state may be intent on selling or acquiring, information on the status of criminal investigations, and others.

So, with this emphasis – everything is public unless specifically exempt – leave my laptop scribbles to me unless I do something formal with them.  Please.

TWISTS AND TURNS IN THE OREGON GOVERNOR’S RACE

This is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

Recent media reports, as well as background intelligence I have gathered, leads me to believe this:

There is a chance for a Republican governor in Oregon this time around.  A chance.  Not assured.  Am I betting on it?  No.

If the Republican, Christine Drazan, were to win, she would be the first Republican governor in more in nearly 40 years.

In the spirt of full disclosure, I worked for the last one, the late Victor Atiyeh.

Overall, the governor’s race in Oregon has claimed national headlines as “one to watch.”  It has experienced a variety of twists and turns in the last few days, such as the following:

FINALLY, A NEW INDEPENDENT POLL:  Under this headline – “Christine Drazan, Tina Kotek neck-and-neck in race for Oregon governor” — the Oregonian newspaper wrote a story on a new poll done by a reputable pollster, one not linked to any side in the upcoming election.

The story started this way:

“About 32 per cent of likely Oregon voters said they would vote for Drazan if the election were today, while 31 per cent said they would vote for Kotek, according to the poll conducted by Portland firm DHM Research. “Betsy Johnson, a longtime Democrat lawmaker who is running unaffiliated, received 18 per cent support.

“That puts Drazan, the former House Republican leader, and Kotek, the former House Speaker, in a statistical tie for first place given the poll’s margin of error, plus or minus 4 per cent.  About 15 per cent of voters remain undecided in the poll of 600 likely Oregon voters that was conducted on Friday and Saturday last week.”

The Oregonian had it right when it wrote that “the results are a boon for Drazan,” who, if she won, would become the first Republican to hold the office since 1987.

Further, earlier this month, The Cook Political Report changed its outlook of the race in Oregon from “lean Democrat” to a “tossup.”

One more interesting fact in the poll is that Johnson is not doing better.  Some early observers thought she could have a chance to win.  If the new poll is to be believed, she doesn’t.  But, still, 18 per cent is a high mark for a third-party candidate.

INTELLIGENCE FROM THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL:  Through a couple confidential sources, I have gleaned this:

  • Drazan could have difficulty going above about 32 per cent.
  • Kotek could begin solidifying her Democrat base, especially in the three counties around Portland, which means she may succeed like many Democrats have in the past – winning metropolitan Portland as an offset to rural Oregon.
  • Republicans around the state are succeeding so that Democrats will not be able to maintain super-majorities in either the House or the Senate.  If the tallies come true, that would increase prospects for bi-partisan action in a legislature not known for it. 

THE OREGONIAN’S PROFILES OF JOHNSON AND KOTEK:  The Oregonian is running profiles of the three gubernatorial candidates, the first focusing on Johnson and the second on Kotek.  Drazan’s is coming.

In the articles, Johnson comes across as a skeptic of government, which, to me, is good.  Skeptical.  Not cynical.

That’s what government needs to force agencies to justify the rationale for investments of state tax dollars.

Johnson also comes across as a legislator with a record for caring for her home ground, either the Scappoose area in Columbia County or the area where she grew up, the Metolius River area in Central Oregon.

There could be two views of such actions.  First, the positive notion is that she tended to the affairs of area where she lives or has lived.  Second, some could say she took care of her own interests, not the interests of all Oregonians.

The profile on Kotek highlights her long-standing linkage of public employee unions, as well as her efforts to deal with Oregon’s housing issues.  Still, she avers that she will be independent if she is elected governor where she will be in charge of implementing laws she helped pass in the Legislature.

I suggest that the profiles of Johnson and Kotek are worth reading, as will be the the one on Drazan soon.

So, as gubernatorial and legislative campaigns come down to the end, it’s worth paying attention.