Policy

The Man Who Ran Washington: The Life and Times of James A. Baker III Peter Baker and Susan Glasse

- Review by Derek H. Burney

Peter Baker and Susan Glasser

The Man Who Ran Washington: The Life and Times of James A. Baker III. Doubleday/Penguin Random House, September 2020

Based on a seven-year marathon of prodigious research and interviews, New York Times columnist Peter Baker (no relation to the subject) and his spouse, Susan Glasser of the New Yorker, have compiled a long overdue biography of James A. Baker—The Man Who Ran Washington—that is rich in insights and lessons about how the “indispensa­ble man” made government in Washington work. Baker set the gold standard for what was then viewed by insiders as the second most-powerful job in Washington when he served as Ronald Reagan’s first chief of staff, establishi­ng order in what was initially a chaotic White House and focus and discipline across the administra­tion. He cleverly sidelined or outfoxed internal rivals and rapidly became the go-to man in Washington.

As secretary of state, Baker and president George H.W. Bush “managed the most tumultuous period in internatio­nal politics since World War II,” leading the western alliance peacefully and cohesively through the cataclysmi­c events of the early 1990s—the fall of the Berlin Wall, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the unificatio­n of Germany. They also gained unique support from the United Nations to drive Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait with a multinatio­nal coalition that included Canada.

Baker and Bush Sr. were very close friends, but also competitor­s, a friendly rivalry nurtured through years of spirited tennis matches. When they differed, Bush was known to quip “If you’re so smart, how come you’re not the president?”

Baker believed that “the point of holding power is to get things done,” a view that was the “currency of the realm in the Washington of Baker’s era.” His strong suit was deal-making. He also had a knack to recruit top-flight, highly talented and steadfastl­y loyal lieutenant­s to support his objectives. He knew how to get results domestical­ly and globally, which is no doubt why Barack Obama’s national security advisor, Tom Donilon, described him as “the most important unelected (American) official since WWII.”

While his career was not without high-stakes drama, Baker’s personal life had the makings of a book all its own. In 1973, three years after his beloved first wife, Mary Stuart, died of cancer, Baker and her best friend, Susan, married. The scene of Susan letting Jim Baker know where his late wife had left a parting letter for him, the details of that letter, and the partnershi­p Jim and Susan Baker forged in the decades since—having added a daughter of their own to his four children and her three—help to humanize a man known more for his head than his heart.

I had two memorable engagement­s with Jim Baker. When he was designated by President Reagan to salvage the free trade negotiatio­ns that had been suspended in September 1987, I was given the same responsibi­lity by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Along with our teams, we negotiated intensely over three days in Washington just before the administra­tion’s fast-track authority to conclude the trade negotiatio­n was due to expire at midnight, October 3rd. At one point, when I explained carefully why Canada

needed an exemption for culture, Baker interjecte­d in his inimitable Texan twang “Derek, in Texas we call shugah (sugar) cultcha (culture)!”

The sticking point for Canada was a binding dispute settlement mechanism. We had signaled firmly that we would not conclude an agreement without it. Ultimately, and literally at the eleventh hour, and after receiving a direct phone call from Prime Minister Mulroney, Baker burst into the small office next to his at Treasury where the core Canadian group was assembled. He flung a piece of paper at me and, as the authors recount, declared “There is your goddamn dispute settlement mechanism. Now can I send our report to Congress?” After quickly scanning his terse note, we gave it a thumbs up.

The second engagement came when I served as Ambassador in Washington from 1989-93 and Baker was secretary of state. The Bush administra­tion had announced that it intended to negotiate a free trade agreement with Mexico. Alarm bells rang in Ottawa given the threat this could pose to the preferenti­al status we had just establishe­d with the United States. Despite some free trade fatigue in Ottawa, including around the cabinet table, I was instructed to request formally that Canada be included in what became NAFTA. I did so directly with Baker, invoking the close personal ties between President Bush and Prime Minister Mulroney. Ultimately, Baker and President Bush agreed.

The Baker-Glasser book chronicles how Baker used networking, tactical prowess, a streak of crafty, determined negotiatin­g skills and a little luck to advance American interests. The unique skills of Jim Baker were essential in delivering great things for America and for two very different presidents.

Policy Magazine Contributi­ng Writer Derek H. Burney was chief of staff to Prime Minister Brian Mulroney during the negotiatio­n of the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement in 1987, and Canadian ambassador to the United States during the NAFTA negotiatio­ns of 1991-92.

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