You're Wrong About - Gary Hart
Episode Date: February 7, 2019Sarah tells Mike how a sex scandal ruined a rising star and established a new template for American elections. Digressions include "Good Will Hunting," People Magazine and Linda Ronstadt. Mi...chael Dukakis is described, for the first time ever, as "the soulmate who was there all along."Continue reading →Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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The Year of the Bimbo, the Year of My Conception.
I've like started to take that as my,
like I was born in the Year of the Dragon,
but I was conceived in the Year of the Bimbo
and I've become very proud of that.
["The Year of the Bimbo"]
Welcome to You're Wrong About,
the show where we recapture, oh fuck.
Um, sorry, sorry, sorry, let me start over.
The problem is that you start doubting yourself
midway through saying a slogan.
It's like, hot pockets, hot, oh no, that's no good.
Oh, start it over, shut it down, new jingle.
Welcome to You're Wrong About,
the show where we retell stories of the past
in ways you've never heard before.
That is true.
That's worse, I'm sorry.
Well, but this one is honestly,
like one of the ones where I got in,
there was just like one thread that I was pulling on
and then I just kept pulling.
I was like, I thought this was one of our boring elections.
No, we don't have those, okay.
I am Michael Hobbs, I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post.
I'm Sarah Marshall and I'm a writer
in residence at the Black Mountain Institute.
And today we're talking about Gary Hart and Donna Rice.
Yes, and by extension, Willie Horton and Michael Dukakis.
We're going on a journey that's taking us
through election 88 and we're gonna start
with a sex scandal and we're gonna end with law and order.
Ooh, that sounds like my college years.
Yes, so tell me what you know.
What do you know about Gary Hart and Donna Rice?
Okay, so here's my broad outline of Gary Hart
or what little I know about him.
He was the presidential candidate for the Democrats in 1988.
He was really popular and really charismatic
and somebody that was sort of this rising star.
And then he flamed out when a photo emerged
of him smiling in the sun with this woman named Donna Rice
on his lap, that was the end.
And my understanding is that it was sort of the beginning
of a lot of threads that culminated with Bill Clinton,
candidates' personal lives becoming part of the story
and the press becoming much more zealous
in finding these sort of personal pecadillos
rather than the political nature of political figures.
And so I think it was just the beginning
of a new form of politics for the country,
or at least that's always the narrative that I've heard,
that he was kind of a breaking point.
Yeah, and I feel like the story as I've absorbed it
in the past has been that, you know,
as a presidential candidate,
your sex life was your business,
your personal life was your business,
the press could be counted on to look the other way,
and that Gary Hart kind of through no fault of his own
had been caught in the moment
that American politics shifted from like,
you can do whatever you want,
it doesn't matter to show up and have good hair
and then you can go off and have sex with whoever you want
to know actually we are going to inspect your personal life
and that will be the litmus test
for your ability to serve the American people.
Right.
That's certainly true, but election 88 was fascinating.
And I think that the way that Gary Hart's campaign
was destroyed and how spoiler alert,
George H. W. Bush ended up winning it,
these things are all related to what politics
has become in the last 30 years.
So, Tally Ho, where does the story begin?
Okay, so let's start in the spring of 1987.
And 1987 is as we talked about in our Jessica Hahn
and Tammy Faye Baker episode, quote unquote,
the year of the bimbo.
Right.
So Donna Rice in 1987,
she's like a model slash actress slash
pharmaceutical rep at the time.
I think she's like in sort of pretty person industries.
She was on an episode of Miami Vice.
That to me means like, yes, she's a star.
She's living in Miami and in with a sort of wealthy
Glitterati crowd, she's in with the movies and shakers.
And so she goes to a New Year's party in Aspen
hosted by Don Henley.
No way.
Don Henley is, he's one of the guys in the Eagles.
I don't know what he did in the Eagles.
Like, didn't they all kind of do the same thing?
Like they all, there was like six guys
and they all played guitar.
They're basically a mariachi band.
Yes, it's all, it's all guitars.
Yes.
Anyway, he's very famous.
Don Henley is like a very big, exciting deal.
Yes.
In 1987 is the point.
And Donna Rice is this sexy, young, unattached lady
in her prime and who should she meet
at Don Henley's party on the swinging slopes of Aspen?
But Gary Hart, who she thinks of when she meets him
as just a super attractive, charismatic guy
with a lovely head of hair,
who she doesn't really know that much
about what he does for a living or what he's up to
and later will claim that she didn't even know
that he was running for president.
So she's a low information voter, like so many of us.
Yeah, she's a low information voter.
And an interview with one of her friends at the time,
that person says like, yeah, like Donna,
I guess kind of knew that he was running for president
but didn't really pay attention to it,
which I think actually is the attitude both of them had,
which is just very, very hard to imagine now
that Gary Hart also was like, yeah, I'm running for president.
No big deal.
Anyway, you seem nice.
You know, and I think they met at this party
and I'm sure that there was some energy of, wow,
like we are two very attractive charismatic people
in our sexual primes.
Like how interesting, how provocative, right?
Cause Gary Hart's 50.
He's running for president for the second time.
He ran in 1984 and he was considered
as a running mate for Walter Mondale.
And ultimately wasn't chosen for that
because there were some whispers at the time of like,
you know, if you bring Gary Hart on the ticket,
like he's kind of a swinger.
Like he's callin' around extramaritally
that might be a problem for you, like who can say.
So this was known.
Yeah, this is a known thing about him.
And another problem that Gary Hart has
is that he has always been kind of prickly
when people wanna like know the real Gary Hart.
Like who is he really?
What is he like?
What is his childhood like?
And he's like, no, like, can I just be your president?
Why must we talk about my childhood?
Don't you wanna hear my thoughts on policy?
Which seems so naive now, but is actually kind of nice.
So yeah, Gary Hart, like rather than packaging himself
or getting into the sort of, you know,
how do I commodify my early life?
My childhood, my personal details, whatever,
is just like, no, it's none of your business.
I really prefer not to talk about it.
Like he's seen as aloof and kind of difficult to get to know.
And that's seen as his major flaw,
that and the kind of rumors of womanizing.
And aside from that, he's, you know,
he's a moderate reformer.
He's comfortably progressive.
He's charismatic.
He's attractive.
He's a very good candidate.
He's also not in the race for very long.
He pulled out of the race after three weeks.
Oh.
Like he was barely in the game.
What was he at this point?
Is he a governor, a senator?
He's a senator serving the state of Colorado.
Okay.
He's an affable aloof westerner.
Skiyer, an affable skier.
Actually, okay, this is one of my favorite features
on the show.
Look at a picture of Gary Hart
and tell me your thoughts.
Gary Hart.
Oh.
He's handsome.
He's smiling, good teeth.
Is he wearing a tie with a nautical theme?
Yes.
Yeah.
He looks clean and affluent and easy to go along with,
like a tennis coach or something.
Yeah.
I think Gary Hart has a quality where he seems
like Hollywood's idea of a politician.
Like he looks like the president in a movie.
Right.
Warren Beatty and Gary Hart were friends
with each other.
And if you're trying to avoid rumors of womanizing,
like being friends with Warren Beatty
kind of shows that you don't really care.
Yeah.
If you want to avoid accusations of alcoholism,
you probably shouldn't be friends with like Motley Crue.
Right.
So Gary Hart is running.
He hasn't been in the race for very long.
The other candidates who have entered the race
among them are Michael Dukakis and Jesse Jackson.
Okay.
You know, Michael Dukakis has that Jimmy Carter energy
of like, I will be your president if you will have me.
Right.
I don't want to lie to you.
I don't want to bamboozle you.
I don't want to manipulate you.
And I think Gary Hart has that energy of like,
I'm going to manipulate you a little.
Because we both know that's what you want.
Like I'm going to lie to you a little.
I'm your daddy.
Like I'm not going to tell you what's really going on
when I leave the house during the day
because you don't really want to know.
You just want me to come home and tell you
that everything's fine.
Right.
Yeah.
And that's kind of the model of politician,
the mold that he's poured into.
Okay.
He and Donna Rice have met at Don Henley's party in Aspen.
So they meet, they chat,
but like nothing interesting happens.
As far as we know, they just, they have a meet cute.
Okay.
Donna Rice also has a friend named Lynn Armont
who later sells her story to People magazine.
She's like one of the first key leakers.
She also tells people that actually Donna
wasn't super interested in Gary Hart when they first met.
She like more was vibing with Don Henley.
But I mean, the rock star versus the obscure senator.
Yeah.
So she's more interested in Don Henley,
but she apparently stays in touch with Gary Hart.
And so then a few weeks later in Miami,
William Broadhurst, who's a lawyer in Washington DC
and a good friend of Gary Hart's
and also a fundraiser for his campaign,
invites Donna Rice out on the boat with him and Gary.
And Donna Rice invites her friend Lynn
and Lynn comes on board and takes a photo of Donna
while she is sitting on Gary Hart's lap on a boat
called the Monkey Business.
The infamous photo on the extremely
unfortunately named boat.
Yeah.
And Gary Hart later will say that that was a post photo.
Donna Rice had like jumped into his lap for five seconds
while Lynn took the photo and then she jumped back out
and it was all a setup.
This is what he later claims.
Lynn, when she sells her story and also her photographs
says they go out, they spend the night in the Bahamas.
She and Broadhurst, the lawyer slept
in separate bedrooms that night,
but as far as she knows Donna and Gary didn't.
And then let me also tell you a theme is emerging here
because in the story that she sells to people,
Lynn talks about observing Gary and Donna
because her story is that she was Donna's friend
and she ended up getting roped into going along
and being kind of part of this weird vacation.
Like a weird wingman, wing lady.
Yeah, like she obviously, when she goes to people
isn't talking about being part of arranging any setup.
And Donna's like, she describes her as a lovely
but like slightly flighty person
who's like very into Gary and not really super thinking
about the implications of what they're doing together.
Which to be fair, neither is Gary Hart.
Lynn says of Gary, I thought he almost wanted to be caught.
He's a very smart man, but he was doing stupid things
like being blatant with Donna.
So do we find out about this photo immediately?
Like does this hit the papers?
No, Donna Rice and Gary Hart go on the monkey business
and take the famous lap sitting photo in March of 1987.
And so in early May of that year,
Broadhurst, the lawyer and Gary Hart campaign fundraiser
invites Donna Rice and her friend Lynn up to Washington.
Meanwhile, the Miami Herald has a tip
about a young lady who is not his wife
who is going to be visiting Gary Hart
at his house in Washington.
Gary Hart has even in the past invited the press
to follow him around because he's been frustrated
at sort of their focus on his personal life.
And so the Miami Herald's reporters do
and they do a stakeout outside of his house.
And what do they see?
But Donna Rice is going in the front door
and then not coming back out.
And apparently staying overnight.
And so-
Not great, not a great look.
Not a great look.
They break the story.
And what Gary Hart and Donna Rice immediately claim
is that actually there is a back door.
She walked out of that one.
They did not spend the night together.
They had not slept together in the past.
They had not had an affair.
And as far as I know,
they both consistently maintain that to this very day.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, not only was this blown out of proportion
but that there wasn't even an affair between them.
So it looks bad, but in actual fact,
it's a perfectly explainable scenario.
Yeah, I mean, and it is.
It's not an unreasonable explanation
that someone could go in the front door
and come out the back and not be noticed
by the vehicle staking at the front entrance.
It's also super possible that two attractive people
can go on a boat to the Bahamas to get,
like it's obviously possible for attractive people
to not have sex with each other
because you walk outside and like the world is not an orgy.
So like we as human beings are capable of restraint.
Yes.
Although, what is their explanation
for why he's having a woman over at his house at all?
Well, I mean, at the time,
I don't think he's ever able to say anything convincing.
And the way that the news plays this
is that story breaks in the Herald
and then People Magazine are like,
oh my God, we need to get a picture of this Donna Rice person.
Nobody knows what she looks like.
There are no pictures of her.
We can be the first people to get a Donna Rice picture.
And then they go out, they scour all their contacts.
They find out that Donna Rice
was a catalog model at one time.
And so they find a contact of theirs
who happens to have taken a photo
of her seven years earlier
when she was on a beach in France.
And because he had like come across her
and her girlfriend when they were like 21 years old
and were sunbathing and took a bunch of photos of them.
And he was smoking and like gave her a cigarette to hold
and was like, hold this cigarette
and give me a come hither look
and took a photo of her like that
and then actually had her sign a release and everything.
And was like, maybe someday, you know,
these will be in print.
She was like, hey, yeah, sure.
Right.
Okay.
And that photo becomes the cover of People Magazine.
Nice.
The headline is Heart Stopper.
Oh, God, I mean, that's actually pretty good.
It's actually pretty good.
And it's like, and it's unfortunately
a great picture of Donna Rice.
Like she looks like Bo Derek.
She looks amazing.
And this is like the worst time
for a woman to look amazing, right?
Yeah, you're the bimbo, yeah.
She's the bimbo.
She's the third bimbo.
After the story is in the Herald,
Donna calls Lynn Armand and says,
remember those pictures that you took
on the monkey business of me and Gary?
Please destroy them.
Okay.
This is what Donna says later.
And Lynn says, oh, yes.
Okay.
And Donna assumes that she's destroyed them.
What she instead does is sell them to people.
And so Lynn sells the monkey business photo
to People Magazine and that's how that breaks.
I mean, it feels like all of these quote unquote
bimbo stories have just like shitty friends
at the center of them.
This also is a trend that we're gonna see
amplified and repeated in the 90s
where like suddenly anyone who has ever met you
is valuable to hard copy.
It's really, it's bad.
And so this comes out
and the press go into a feeding frenzy
and Gary Hart pulls out of the race.
That's it.
That's the Gary Hart story.
Yeah, he was the front runner.
He was gonna be president.
He was this great, you know, charismatic candidate
who could have taken on the Reagan dynasty
and beaten Bush and instead he got too friendly
with Donna Rice and had sex.
And because of that, we ended up in the Iraq war.
However, recently there was a new complication
to this story.
This gets back to a gentleman by the name of Lee Atwater.
Do you know about Lee Atwater?
No.
I have become fascinated by Lee Atwater
while researching this.
So Lee Atwater helped get Ronald Reagan elected in 1980.
He worked on the Reagan campaign.
He was an early proponent of pretty much
everything we can see today in terms of like
what we take for granted is how elections work.
A lot of that was new at the time
and specifically innovated by Lee Atwater.
So for example, he was an early adopter of push polling.
Do you know what that is?
Oh, that's the fake thing where they call you
and they're like, now that you know
that 80% of America is Muslims,
how do you feel about that good or bad?
So they're giving you this false information
and pretending that it's just some neutral poll?
Yeah.
So he's like, that's a Lee Atwater classic.
Nice.
And you know, and he didn't invent it,
but like he helped popularize it.
And he also is an early and enthusiastic adopter
of what we now think of as going negative,
which is basically, you know, it doesn't matter
who your candidate is and what he has to offer.
The only question is how do you dig up personal information
or like specific damning information about the opponent
and make it impossible for the people
to vote for the opponent
so that they have to vote for your candidate,
which is very useful if you're the campaign manager
for George H.W. Bush,
which is what Lee Atwater became in 1987.
So he's like the Carl Rove for Reagan and H.W. Bush.
Yeah.
And he actually, Carl Rove is his protege.
And I think in the same way that like we can trace
the moments that lost an election to like,
Don Henley throws a New Year's party in Aspen.
One of the other moments that I think brought us
to where we are today is that in 1956 in South Carolina,
Lee Atwater is five years old
and he has a little brother named Joe
and Joe and Toddy Atwater, their mother,
are making donuts in a deep fat fryer.
And there's an accident and it falls
and Joe is covered in horrible burns.
Oh, God.
And dies pretty soon after,
but you know, that lives for a while with those.
And Lee is in the next room.
Oh, that's awful.
And this kind of becomes this weird little light motif
and profiles and interviews with him
as he becomes a Washington power broker in the 80s.
It's always so hard finding out these terrible people
had sad humanizing incidents in their pasts.
Because then you have to deal with them as people
and not as like these cartoon master shredder type characters
that I want them to remain in my head.
But it's like, oh, he's like a bad person
who had a really negative effect on US politics,
but he's also a human being with a history and hurts
and a family and all of this very inconvenient complexity.
Yes.
And yet I personally, like this is my favorite way
of gaining counterintelligence.
I know, it's my whole career.
It's my whole career.
Yeah, and it's tactical because like, you know,
yeah, there's the whole,
I feel like I encounter this sort of question a lot of like,
you know, what's the point of empathizing
with terrible people?
And it's like, well, okay, first of all,
like makes you feel more connected
to the great human assemblage
that we're all communally a part of, et cetera.
But also like, if you find out that someone could go out
and like destroy American politics
because they had a trauma in their childhood,
then that allows you to be like, okay, so like,
let's help people to like deal with their emotions
and then they won't see the world as an endless game
of like rape, pillage and push-pull, right?
If it comes down to like this grain of sand
that got sort of, you know, built around and around,
but like ultimately in the end,
there's just this scary sad thing that happened.
Then like, we don't need to have all of these dangerous
and unstable people running our country
if we can actually, you know,
if they didn't have to be this way.
And so what Lee Atwater says is that like,
he heard his brother screams the rest of his life.
He was haunted by it.
And he also formed this idea that like,
there is no mercy in this world.
Like this is a killer be killed kind of a place.
Essentially, it was traumatizing for him.
It sort of achieved certainly everything
that he brought to Washington.
And so he wasn't, you know, particularly interested
in politics when he was growing up.
He was actually much more interested in playing
in a blues band, which he was pretty good at,
which like one of the weird parts of his life
is that he was friends with BB King,
who was like very sad when he died.
So many celebrity cameos in the story.
Yeah. And so I think when he's 20 years old,
he does an internship for Strom Thurmond.
And that's the moment when he falls in love with politics.
Oh my God.
Just to put another execrable human being into this story.
Yeah. For those of us not lucky enough
to like be acquainted with the Strom Thurmond legacy,
tell us about Strom Thurmond, Michael, you know things.
He was like his old as like the tree people
in the Lord of the Rings movies.
He was just like the oldest man on planet Earth.
And of course his age has nothing to do
with like how terrible he is,
but it was more that like he was an old school racist.
He was like a reconstruction era racist.
I think that's the thing about him being so old.
You had this feeling that like he had been in the house
with Melanie and Scarlett and like grown up
and now he had been elected to office
and he was finally getting his revenge.
A Strom Thurmond quote, he says,
the blood will run before we integrate.
Fuck. Right?
That's a classic Strom Thurmondism.
So this is Lee Atwater's political education.
Yes. Every Vader has a Palpatine.
Good God.
Yeah. And so Lee Atwater is a practitioner
of the Southern strategy.
Oh yes.
Which is like racism two or 3.0 I guess.
Right.
Let's just read this in Lee Atwater's own words.
In 1981, Lee Atwater gives an interview
to a political scientist
and starts off by saying, y'all don't quote me on this.
Nice.
Lee Atwater at the time says, quote,
you started out in 1954 by saying n-word, n-word, n-word.
He is of course not saying n-word.
Right.
By 1968, you can't say n-word.
That hurts you, backfires.
So you say stuff like force busing, states rights
and all that stuff and you're getting so abstract.
Now you're talking about cutting taxes
and all these things you're talking about
are totally economic things and a byproduct of them
is blacks get hurt worse than whites.
We want to cut this as much more abstract
than even the busing thing
and a hell of a lot more abstract than n-word, n-word.
This is where welfare queens comes from.
Exactly. Yeah.
And he's saying like you can actually import
all of the kind of old fashioned racism
and just you don't have to name it.
You don't have to tell people
that you're appealing to their racism
in order to appeal to their racism.
You appeal to the worst instincts of the voters
that you're trying to court,
but you do it in a way that both of you can maintain
some kind of plausible deniability
about why you're doing what you're doing.
So he brings the same principle to the fact
that if you go negative about a candidate,
you can do it in a way that doesn't make you look bad.
Right.
You need to put that into the bloodstream,
but you don't necessarily want to be the one
who gets fingered is doing it, right?
You want this information to be out there,
but you don't want to be the one who raises your hand
and says, I'm the one making this accusation.
Exactly.
So Lee Atwater in 1990 has successfully gotten
one of our least charismatic presidents ever elected
by running the Bush campaign in 1988.
And then one day he's jogging with a friend of his
and suddenly stops running and his symptoms got worse.
And it turns out that he has a brain tumor.
Oh well.
And the doctors give him a year to live,
which is pretty much as long as he survives.
Wow.
And this is another thing that makes him
just so fascinating to me.
He comes to terms to some degree with what he's done.
Okay.
What he always said in the 80s
and what people always said about him was that
he loved to win and he made no bones about that.
He didn't care who he was trying to secure victory for.
He liked winning.
And as he's on his deathbed, he apparently has thoughts,
you know, along the lines of like,
maybe that wasn't the only thing to orient my life around.
Am I bad?
So he does an interview with Life Magazine
very shortly before he dies.
It's widely quoted and distributed
and it becomes this weirdly bipartisan thing
in Washington at the time of like,
yes, we should all follow the dying words of Lee Atwater.
Wow.
This is what he has to say as a kinder, gentler,
Lee Atwater.
Long before I was struck with cancer,
I felt something stirring in American society.
It was a sense among the people of the country,
Republicans and Democrats alike,
that something was missing from their lives,
something crucial.
I was trying to position the Republican party
to take advantage of it,
but I wasn't exactly sure what it was.
My illness helped me to see what was missing in society
is what was missing in me.
A little heart, a lot of brotherhood.
For fuck's sake.
I mean.
We would be a good, good cop, bad cop team
because I would just naturally be like,
can I get you anything from the vending machine?
That must have been hard.
And like, I need you as backup for these things.
It's just so easy to say that once you're out of power.
It's so easy to say that once you,
once you're on your death bed
and you're thinking about the stuff of,
you know, what really matters in my life?
It's family, it's health, blah, blah, blah.
It's like, well, other people have been shouting that at you
for decades and you have been ignoring them
and writing them off as kooks.
You were the barrier to a country
that puts those things at the center of political life.
And now that you're incapable of putting them
at the center of political life to be like,
oh, I was wrong all the time.
Fine, whatever.
Like, I don't want to take anything away from anybody.
But it's just, it's so frustrating
that so many people have these revelations
when they are too late.
Like we need these epiphanies
before people get brain cancer.
Yeah.
And like, did Lee Atwater have the potential
to even notice that before he had brain cancer?
Right.
Something else that Lee Atwater perhaps apologizes for
is setting up Gary Hart.
Oh.
Many years later, a guy named Raymond Strother
who had worked for Gary Hart's campaign
and known Lee Atwater at the time as everyone in politics did
comes forward and says that on his deathbed,
as he's very weak and dying of brain cancer,
Lee Atwater had called Ray Strother
and apologized for setting up Gary Hart.
Holy shit.
And getting Donna Rice in his lap
for the monkey business photo.
Setting up how though?
Like, how did it work?
Well, good question.
Because the story is that Lee Atwater
basically had gotten Broadhurst,
who is Hart's fundraiser lawyer friend.
It's his boat.
It's his kind of trip to the Bahamas
that he brings Donna Rice and Gary Hart on the boat for.
And he's the one who also is bringing Donna and Lynn
up to Washington DC, which is when the stakeout happens
that catches Donna Rice going into Gary Hart's house.
According to this version of events,
Lee Atwater gets to Broadhurst
and gets him to kind of arrange a sting.
And Gary Hart, who's also interviewed for this article,
said, yes, that is what happened.
And I was going to be president.
And then I was the victim
of a classic Lee Atwater dirty trick.
Is the idea that he encouraged Donna Rice
to sit on his lap and sort of aggressively
like create photo evidence of this,
or he encouraged Donna Rice to go over to his house?
I mean, it's a little bit vague.
Okay.
What Lee Atwater apparently tells Strother,
according to Strother is, I did it.
I fixed Hart.
And Broadhurst is dead.
So he can't be reached by the media
for comment about this.
So we don't know what his story is.
And of course, Donna Rice wouldn't have been in
on the setup.
So it's basically putting them together in a room.
It's not necessarily we're gonna pay Donna Rice
to create the illusion of an affair with this guy.
It's like, she's pretty.
We know Gary Hart has a weakness for pretty ladies.
Let's create the circumstances
under which he would have an affair.
Or just like we create smoke
and people assume there's fire
because if he is known for his extramarital dalliances
or at least rumors thereof,
no one has to have an affair
for him to seem guilty of having had one.
It does feel like classically Atwater
because it's about keeping your hands clean
and allowing someone to kind of do a lot of the work
for you because then Gary Hart pulls out of the race.
And so what Gary Hart says about the monkey business photo
in this Atlantic article, he says,
Ms. Armand made a gesture to Ms. Rice
and she immediately came over and sat on my lap.
Ms. Armand took the picture.
The whole thing took less than five seconds
with lots of other people around.
It was clearly staged, but it was used after the fact
to prove that some intimacy existed.
I don't know if I buy this explanation.
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, say more about that.
This kind of sounds like Gary Hart
justifying this after the fact
because the real scandal wasn't the photo.
It sounds like the real scandal
was her maybe spending the night at his house.
All right, well, I will tell you my thoughts on this,
which are that I think that Gary Hart has come to believe
what America has come to believe about Gary Hart,
which is that he was going to be president.
It was going to happen
and the Donna Rice thing derailed him,
which is like a nice idea,
but he was in that race for three weeks.
And what I have come to believe now,
having looked at how the rest of that race unfolded,
is that A, if Lee Atwater got him through Donna Rice,
then avoiding that would have just meant
that Lee Atwater would have got him some other way
because that's how negative campaigning works.
And you don't have to have an affair
or seem like you were having an affair
because Michael Dukakis has been happily married
to Kitty Dukakis for 500 years
and Lee Atwater still ruined his campaign too.
Also, Gary Hart, a lot of the writing about him
as he's beginning to campaign
and even his own descriptions of his own state of mind
are that he kind of wants to be president.
He feels like it's his job to be president.
Everyone agrees that he's just like the one,
like it's hard to see who else it would be.
There's this kind of chosen quality to him.
There's quotes where he's talking about
running for president in his chances
and he's like,
50% of me wants to be president
and 50% of me wants to go live in Ireland and write a novel.
Do you believe him that they didn't have an affair?
I don't know.
I mean, I don't care.
Yeah.
Right?
I just don't care.
Did he have sex with Donna Rice
or some kind of physical thing with her
once or twice or a few times?
It doesn't matter.
If he did, then that's only the instance of that,
that they were able to get some physical proof of
and then use to torpedo his campaign.
But, you know, they were manufacturing evidence
of something that was kind of a bigger story
that was out there about him.
The opposition clearly didn't need
an actual affair to have happened
in order to do what they needed to do.
So it's like irrelevant to the campaign itself in a way.
I also looking at Gary Hart,
like there are times in my life,
obviously not on the scale,
but where like someone has asked me to apply
for a job or something.
And I will be like, it's interesting
that I haven't sent my resume in yet.
I want to send in my resume.
I want to want to send in my resume.
And yet I'm dragging my feet about attempting
to take advantage of this opportunity
that I should be interested in
and yet clearly don't actually care about.
Like I feel like Gary Hart,
regardless of what he did or didn't actually do,
I feel like he was kind of engaging
in self-sabotaging behavior
and that he really didn't want to be president.
In 1987, all Gary Hart knew
was that everyone wanted him to run for president
and he was the Democratic Party's best hope.
And so apparently this was what he had to do,
but maybe he didn't super want to do it
and helped torpedo his own career,
whether without the help of Lee Atwater.
And torpedoing your career is like a personal choice
that becomes much easier to regret
once you sit back and watch 30 years
of an American nightmare that you feel plausibly
and that other people are arguing
you personally could have prevented.
I mean, so is the real you're wrong about here
that Gary Hart would have lost anyway,
that this whole narrative that like he was the golden child
of Democratic Party politics isn't really true
and he probably would have lost
and we would have ended up in exactly the same situation?
Well, I mean, we can't know, but yes.
Like I do think that that's very, yeah.
I mean, I think that it's very possible
that Gary Hart would have lost.
And I think that the narrative that we've taken from this
is that Gary Hart didn't become president
because of this little dalliance that he had,
which also allows us to blame everything on Donna Rice,
which of course we love to do.
And that it is Donna Rice's fault
that George Bush became president
and then everything that came after that.
But I guess what you're saying is
that the Gary Hart story is actually
much more the Lee Atwater story.
Yes, and that it's all the Lee Atwater story.
Do you have a favorite fact about Michael Dukakis
because I have like a lot of them?
I have very little, this is the first election
that I actually remember.
Really?
I was six and so I remember my parents talking about it
and I remember being like aware vaguely
that we were a Dukakis family.
Everything I know about you and your family tells me
that you are like an archetypal Dukakis family.
Yes, totally.
I wasn't aware of this at the time,
but all I really know about that campaign now
is the infamous tank photo.
Where Michael Dukakis' little head
was popping out of a little tank
with a little hat on it that made him look like a turtle
and it was seen as like this dumb thing
and like all political moments that we fixate on.
I'm sure that it was a much larger story,
but that's essentially the only lingering image
or lingering conclusion of that election
is that one photo op went wrong.
You know who did that ad?
Oh fuck, is it gonna be Lee Atwater?
Yes.
Really?
Yeah, oh yeah, he saw that footage of Dukakis in the tank
because for a photo op to make him look military-like,
the Dukakis campaign had gotten him writing in a tank
with a helmet on and that yeah,
that became the image that the Bush campaign seized on.
At least so when you think about the fact
that they were trying to get George H.W. Bush elected,
who despite having been a pilot in World War II,
just like does not come across as a guy's guy.
They were always talking about trying
to get past the weenie factor.
So is the Dukakis campaign a glimpse
of what the Gary Hart campaign would have been?
Yes, I think so.
And then the other Lee Atwater joint
that he apologizes for on his deathbed,
in which he says rather telling Lee
that he wishes he hadn't done it
because it makes him seem racist,
which he is not.
I'll talk safe.
Is the Willie Horton ad.
Yeah.
Do you know this story?
I mean, wasn't it Dukakis had passed a law
that allowed convicts to go out of prison on furlough
and there was a convict named Willie Horton
who went out on furlough
and I think raped and murdered somebody.
And they laid that at the feet of Mike Dukakis.
Yeah.
And that's definitely what we taken from it
and remember is like, yes,
Michael Dukakis was letting murderers out of prison
on their own recognizance
and they were going out and raping and killing.
And so obviously we can elect him.
We need a law and order president at the end.
Yes.
So the Willie Horton thing, first of all,
his name is not Willie Horton.
No one in his adult life has ever called him Willie Horton.
He has a grown man.
His name is William Horton.
Oh, so they changed it to make it sound more typically
African-American.
Yes.
And so what happens, by the way,
William Horton takes part in a robbery
where he claims that he sat and waited in the car
while one of the other guys went in,
committed the robbery and stabbed the clerk to death.
The clerk was a 17 year old boy.
Okay.
You know, he's in prison for I think a decade
and has good enough behavior that he's able
to get out on a furlough.
And the way he tells it later, he's out on furlough.
He's driving a car without a license.
The cops pull him over and he panics and runs away.
Okay.
And then he's on the lamb for about a year.
Oh, wow.
And then in April of 1987, he breaks into a house
in a Maryland suburb, which is the home
of a couple named Clifford Barnes and Angela Miller.
And he takes Clifford Barnes to the basement
and stabs him or cuts him with a knife and Barnes survives.
And then when Angela Miller, who's his fiance, arrives home,
William Horton rapes her at gunpoint multiple times.
And it's a terrible crime.
And this becomes the ad.
Right.
So William Horton is let out of prison
because of a furlough program.
Furlough programs used to be the norm in American prisons.
A couple of years before Michael Dukakis
is running for president,
every state in America had a furlough program.
Oh, really?
They were that common?
I had no idea.
Yes, I know.
Neither did I because we grew up in the law and order years.
The Dick Wolf law and order years,
which were almost as bad as the Nixon ones.
Like when Ronald Reagan was governor of California,
California had a pretty liberal furlough
and work release program.
Which Ronald Reagan vocally defended.
And in the 1970s, two people who were serving prison terms
in California for nonviolent offenses,
committed murders while they were on work release.
And Ronald Reagan, you know, before the press,
what he says is, you know, because what is true is,
listen, no system is perfect.
Like, yes, there were two murders,
but you have to look at it in the scheme
of hundreds of thousands of people.
Like ultimately this is worth doing.
Yeah.
And so with the furlough program in Massachusetts,
this was a program that was preexisting
when Michael Dukakis became governor of Massachusetts.
All that he did was refuse to veto it.
Nice.
Like all he did was keep it going.
So it wasn't even like a Mike Dukakis joint?
No, it absolutely wasn't.
It just happened while he was there.
Yeah.
Josie Jackson after the ad, the infamous,
because I don't want to call it the Willie Horton ad,
but that's what it is.
The quote unquote Willie Horton ad comes out.
It's like, this is racist.
You guys.
I know that no one has said this,
but like this is racist.
Woof, woof, woof, woof, woof, yeah.
Yeah. And the Bush campaign is like, no, it isn't.
And it's not even our ad.
And then actually they're able to,
after the ad has been airing for almost an entire month,
that it has like 28 days to be on the air.
And on day 25, the Bush campaign is like,
actually please stop airing it.
It's racist.
We're disavowing it.
Oh really?
I didn't know that.
Okay.
Lee Atwater is the master of having your smear cake
and eating it too.
Right.
So like they don't have to take any responsibility
for spreading racist rhetoric,
but there's still the beneficiaries of it.
Right.
And so one of the myths about this ad
is that Dukakis has a big lead.
He's doing well on the race.
And then the ad comes out and torpedoes his campaign.
Okay.
I think what's true now is that the ad is like,
it's our fossil of that tactic of the Bush campaigns,
but actually Dukakis had started suffering
well before the ad came out.
Right.
Because they had been hammering the Willie Horton point
for weeks and weeks.
Like this was something that Bush was consistently mentioning.
It was a, you know, just a tenet of the campaign
to talk about how Dukakis,
he wants to scale back defense budgets.
He wants to render America vulnerable to foreign attack.
He looks silly in a helmet.
Right.
He also makes the big mistake,
which I guess I identify with so much,
where he's in a debate against Bush in mid-October.
So like his numbers are already like dropping at this point.
And the question they ask him is, Michael Dukakis,
if a criminal were to rape and murder your wife Kitty,
wouldn't you want him to be executed?
And Michael Dukakis, God bless him,
is like, well, I don't believe in the death penalty.
I don't support it.
We know that it doesn't act as a deterrent.
There are better, more, you know, blah, blah, blah.
He answers as a politician, not as a husband.
Yeah.
I read about the response people had to this
and how it was just this terrible,
how could he possibly have just responded
so coldly and unemotionally?
And it's like, it's a policy question.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Politicians aren't supposed to be making their decisions
based on their worst fears
about what could happen to their wives, actually.
But this is also a period in America
where the needle is moving toward that being the norm.
Everyone knows that they're at a risk
of getting Willie Horton.
Everyone knows that they're at a risk
of the Willie Horton effect,
where you're trying to, you know, run for office
and accrue some power and have some values.
And if someone, because of a policy
that you did not actively, emphatically oppose,
murder someone, then like it is on your hands
and you have to do everything that you can
to prevent that possibility or else
you will render yourself unelectable.
Like I think this is the moment when soft on crime
became one of the things that even liberals
were most afraid of seeing
because they all saw what happened to Dukakis.
And Dukakis himself, you know, during this race,
he doesn't counter the accusations.
Oh, really?
Yes, initially, later on he does.
But for the first, I think couple of months,
he's like, whatever, like this,
obviously what they're saying doesn't make any sense.
My policies are logical.
Right.
And this is the same thing that Gary Hart says
when the accusations about Donna Rice surface initially.
He's like, that's none of your business.
I don't need to talk about that.
And Dukakis is like, what?
No, like I am supporting reasonable policies.
I don't need to engage in this conversation with you.
And what that means is that people take
what the Bush campaign is saying to be true.
It sounds like both politicians didn't realize
the nature of the political fight they were in.
Yeah.
But they thought they were at this higher level of like,
we're in a debate about policies
and we're in a debate about how my ideas
will affect American lives.
And then what the Atwater got was that
you're in a mud fight, you're in a wrestling match,
and you just have to use everything you can.
Yes, and I think also there's this idea of,
that people are taken down by discrete scandals, right?
That like, if only Gary Hart hadn't gone
on the monkey business with Donna Rice,
he would have been president.
If only Dukakis could have avoided the Willie Horton
ad or the crime that precipitated it,
it would have been fine.
And it's really, I look at that and I'm like,
this is not like the pacted one ad
and Gary Hart made one mistake.
They were taken out because the Republican party
had gotten so good at campaigning based
on the perceived flaws and all of the fears
and all of the anxieties that it could whip up
about the opposition that this became their sole
strategy at the time and it worked
because there really wasn't much you could say about Bush,
about who he was as a candidate that made him attractive.
Like you really were forced to go after
the perceived flaws and weaknesses of his opponents.
And so what I really think is that
it's not about Donna Rice, it's not about William Horton,
it's about Lee Atwater and to a larger degree,
it's about what campaigning for president
turned into in America by the late 80s.
It's a way of campaigning, it's a methodological shift.
Yeah, and then that became our reality
and you can see how by trying to counter that,
candidates that we had in the future got in the mud,
especially the tough on crime mud.
So I will close by telling you my favorite,
Michael Dukakis fact, which is that he's,
I think 85 years old and works at Northeastern,
which is two miles away from his home.
He walks to work and when he walks the two miles to work,
he takes a reused plastic bag with him
and he fills it with all of the trash that he finds.
Oh my God.
He's kind of like this actually,
this Massachusetts Bill Murray because people also
like run into him while he's picking up garbage
and then be like, oh, I just met Michael Dukakis.
There are all these interviews where people
are just out walking with him talking about policy
and you know, Boston and the future and the past
while Michael Dukakis is walking around
picking up garbage with his bare hands.
Oh, and he also wears Kitty's hand-me-down
Prada sunglasses because he's thrifty and he likes them.
And he also is like known apparently among his friends
for making soup out of turkey carcasses
after Thanksgiving, which he then gives to homeless shelters.
So a few years ago, people, everyone gave him
their turkey carcasses.
So we ended up with like 27 turkey carcasses one year.
I know, like my takeaway for this also is that like,
there was this narrative that like Gary Hart
could have been president, but then he had sex.
And so we were stranded with Michael Dukakis
who was like a terrible wimp.
And I'm like, no, Michael Dukakis was great.
Like he has thoughts and feelings
and he believes in responsible criminal justice policy
and he picks up garbage, like what was wrong with us?
Maybe Michael Dukakis is like the soulmate
who was there all along.
And so I think that inside all of us,
there's the eternal Janus face of at water and Dukakis.
There is a side of us that just wants to win to win
or you can accept that everyone thinks you're a cuck
and the joke's on them that you know that the best way
to live and serve your community
is to quietly do unsexy infrastructural stuff,
like make the tea better.
And to give to your community,
not through bombast and hateful rhetoric,
but by picking up garbage.
God, it's so just like these perfect contrasts
of like the road we didn't take and the road we did, right?
It's like this quiet, decent man
like seems to actually care about the community around him
and is smart and just nice.
And it's like, fuck that dude.
And is thanked for it by being relentlessly mocked.
Like our electorate has become,
we're like Matt Damon in Good Will Hunting.
Like Michael Dukakis came along, you know,
with his nice little bag of trash and his sweater
and was like, I'd like to help you have public transportation
and to reduce recidivism.
And we were like, don't fuck with me, Sean.
I think that like on the whole,
like both the Gary Hart story and the Dukakis story,
like both of those campaign stories,
we have absorbed them as stories of like,
you know, you make one mistake
and then you just, you torpedo your chances
and then the other guy wins.
And it's like, no, the other guy was running his campaign
using a computer and you guys were using slide rules.
Right.
You know, like I think it's like the future came
and it was called Lee Outwater.
And it wasn't that Gary Hart was slutty
and it wasn't that Michael Dukakis
made a mistake with policy.
It was just that they were unable
or unwilling to comprehend what they were up against.
And I think that it's like, the problem was not them.
It wasn't Donna Rice's fault.
It wasn't Michael Dukakis fault.
It wasn't even really Lee Outwater's fault
because like he was an individual person
and he, you know, in that the same way
that like Linda Ronstadt has written a bunch of songs
that have become hits and everyone knows them
and sings them and you like cry in the car
and, you know, they like touch a part of your soul.
Like that's because Linda Ronstadt is a gifted musician
but it's also because she happened to know
what America needed to hear
at the moment they needed to hear it.
I've just been driving a lot in the Southwest.
I always sing a lot of Linda Ronstadt when I'm doing that.
I can always tell when you've been on road trips.
Yeah.
So I guess like Lee Outwater understood
what America wanted and gave it to us.
You can blame Lee Outwater and the GOP
for preying on those fears,
but like they also assessed vulnerabilities
that were really there and they pandered to racism
that existed and like, I just, you know,
like America didn't deserve Michael Dukakis, I guess.
I just think that if you're an elected official
running for president and you need to meet
with an attractive female model for any reason,
do it at Panera Bread.
That's a much better idea than having her at your house.
And then after having the meeting,
you like go out to the parking lot
and see if there are any loose napkins
you can pick up together.
haha