Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Friends in high places

- Washington Maureen Dowd is a New York Times columnist.

When you are the president’s best friend, you may be called on for many services — some dicey, some soothing, some world-shaking and some profoundly personal.

In his new book, “First Friends,” Gary Ginsberg chronicles the unelected yet undeniably powerful people who shape presidenci­es.

We know too well how the advisers of presidents with all-access passes to the Oval can make or break legacies.

Look at how George W. Bush’s presidency was ruined when Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld got him to invade Iraq.

And consider how Rudy Giuliani ginned up Donald Trump’s craziest impulses, leading to two impeachmen­ts, one insurrecti­on and endless legal bills.

But there has been less focus on the often “unseen hands,” as Ginsberg calls them — the BFFS busy on the sidelines.

He became interested in the topic as a lawyer vetting vice presidenti­al candidates for Bill Clinton. He was joined in the last round by Harry Mcpherson, who was the White House lawyer for Lyndon Johnson.

Mcpherson believed that if LBJ had had an intimate, he might have navigated Vietnam more adroitly. So Mcpherson wanted to know, “Does Al Gore have any friends?”

When Gore stumbled over the answer, Mcpherson wondered, “If he can’t develop or even claim one real friendship, how’s he going to lead a nation?”

But Clinton didn’t seem to care. He had enough friends for both of them.

Ginsberg examines First Friends in nine presidenci­es and the impact of the backroom counsel. His tales include:

Bill Clinton dispatchin­g Vernon Jordan to talk Hillary Clinton out of leaving him after he publicly confessed to his relationsh­ip with Monica Lewinsky.

David Ormsby-gore, the British ambassador and an old friend of Jack Kennedy, helping to guide Kennedy through the Cuban missile crisis and signing a nuclear test ban treaty.

Bebe Rebozo relaxing the paranoid Richard Nixon by mixing martinis, making steak and Cuban black bean dinners, and paying to put a bowling alley in the White House basement.

Eddie Jacobson, an Army buddy and partner of Harry Truman in a Kansas City haberdashe­ry, helping persuade Truman to recognize the state of Israel.

Edward House serving as a de facto chief diplomat for Woodrow Wilson, negotiatin­g the World War I armistice and the doomed Treaty of Versailles, until Edith Wilson dismissed him as “a perfect jellyfish.”

Presidents can put their friends in awkward circumstan­ces. Nixon asked Rebozo to help him with a shadowy fundraisin­g scheme, and Clinton got Jordan involved in trying to get Lewinsky a cushy job at Revlon in New York, before that scandal exploded.

And sometimes the friends put the presidents in a bad light.

“By the late 1960s,” Ginsberg writes, “FBI agents investigat­ing criminal syndicates had identified Rebozo as a ‘nonmember associate of organized crime figures’ … The FBI now had reason to believe the Key Biscayne lots Nixon had purchased were owned by a business associate of Rebozo’s connected to organized crime.”

First Friends trade interestin­g gifts. When Thomas Jefferson was in Paris, he kept in touch with James Madison with presents marking current obsessions.

“Jefferson mostly sent books about political philosophy, European government­s, and failed democracie­s, as well as contraptio­ns like a telescope that retracted into a cane, phosphoret­ic matches, a pedometer, and a box of chemicals to further indulge Madison’s growing interest in chemistry,” Ginsberg writes.

Abraham Lincoln and his friend Joshua Speed — a Springfiel­d, Ill., shopkeeper — had a rare intimacy. The two shared Speed’s bed for years in Springfiel­d after Lincoln told Speed he couldn’t afford a mattress.

But when Speed moved back to the family farm in Kentucky and said he did not want to surrender his right to own human property, Lincoln wrote him bluntly about his disappoint­ment.

Other friends specialize­d in sycophancy. As Pat Nixon said of Rebozo, “Bebe is like a sponge; he soaks up whatever Dick says and never makes any comments. Dick loves that.”

Citing the example of Trump, “the friendless president,” Ginsberg told me that leaders need that emotional engagement of knowing that there is another soul who has their interest at heart.

I asked Ted Kaufman, the longtime pal of Joe Biden, who nursed him through Beau Biden’s passing, what it means to be a First Friend.

“I’d walk across cut glass for him,” he replied, “and I think he’d do the same for me.”

 ??  ?? MAUREEN DOWD
MAUREEN DOWD

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