Matt Towery's Inside The Numbers:
Hamilton Jordan Taught Them A Lesson
... Many Lessons
By Matt Towery
(5/21/08) In the early evening of Tuesday May 20, 2008, a massive
thunderstorm swept across the northern sections of Metro Atlanta.
It struck almost without warning and within an hour it was gone.
As I sat at home with no power, enjoying the rare quiet that comes
when there are no electronic distractions, my cell phone rang, reminding
me that there was truly no escape in these modern times (I try to
keep the thing turned off!)
It was a friend telling me that Hamilton Jordan, former chief-of-staff
to Jimmy Carter, had finally lost a valiant, graceful, powerful
battle against cancer. The phone just kept ringing after that. With
no television, no phones, no Internet, I did what came natural to
me. I drove to my office where there was power and wrote this column.
I understand that in the past few decades we have become such a
polarized nation that it is impossible to extol the virtues of someone
associated with a former Democratic president, particularly an active
and often colorful former president such as Jimmy Carter, without
immediately upsetting the most partisan of readers. Well, get over
it. Hamilton Jordan taught a lot of lessons.
We all need to be reminded of the human side not only of politics
and public service, but of the common bonds we all share.
Jordan - along with former Carter Press Secretary Jody Powell and
a handful of others, including media executive Gerald Rafshoon -
cobbled together and implemented a plan that in the mid-1970s seemed
impossible. They turned the one term governor of a then-small Southern
state into the alternative for which a demoralized post-Watergate
America was searching.
Make no mistake about it. Had there been no Hamilton Jordan, there
might never have been a President Jimmy Carter. OK, I hear my conservative
readers saying, “well?” Well, the answer is that Jerry
Ford was no big time conservative and although he was a nice man,
Ford’s defeat paved the way for a political cycle that later
delivered Ronald Reagan.
Had Ford won another term I doubt the Republican Party would have
recovered for another 20 years.
As for Carter, as I’ve said before, many of the problems
attributed to his presidency—massive inflation, an impossible
situation in Iran, a growing energy crisis—were all inherited
from the administrations of Nixon and Ford.
But enough about Carter. This is about Hamilton Jordan.
Hamilton Jordan had the courage of his convictions. He believed
in the plan he created for Carter’s upset takeover of the
Democratic Party and the White House in 1976. He took the potshots
and slights that came his way from a D.C. Establishment that resented
not only Jordan and Powell, but also close friends of Carters like
former Office of Management and Budget Director Bert Lance.
Lance was unfairly and shabbily treated by a “company town”
media for issues that, compared to this current administration,
would never have caught anyone’s eye. He went on to be one
of the Democratic Party’s most influential behind-the-scenes
movers and shakers.
All of these men took the shots and aggressively tried to serve
their nation.
Jordan risked his own life in dangerous undercover meetings in
attempts to free the hostages held in our embassy in Iran. And,
because they were southerners surrounded by an old guard elite in
D.C., they learned to circle their wagons and rely on their best
attribute - loyalty to one another.
But even if you didn’t like anything about the political
Hamilton Jordan - the tenacity in fending off a Ted Kennedy challenge
in 1980, or the strategic brilliance in making Ross Perot a player
in the 1992 elections - consider the following. It is ironic and
saddening that Kennedy, also a man of great accomplishment, should
learn of his cancer on the very day Jordan lost his battle to it.
Hamilton Jordan on more than one occasion faced cancer and stared
it down. And not only did he have the guts to fight, he put his
money and time where his resolve was, in creating a place for young
kids suffering from cancer known as Camp Sunshine.
Others knew him better. But, given my past history in assisting
certain other folks from Georgia to rise to the highest levels of
power, I always felt a kind of kinship and an affection for Jordan.
Like Hamilton Jordan’s life, the storm that raged on the
night he died Tuesday was powerful and electric. But it passed quickly.
Hamilton Jordan’s memory will last much longer.
Matt Towery served as the chairman of former Speaker Newt Gingrich's
political organization from 1992 until Gingrich left Congress. He
is a former Georgia state representative, the author of several books
and currently heads the polling and political information firm InsiderAdvantage.
To find out more about Matthew Towery and read features by other Creators
Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website
at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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