Presidential Prankster

He orchestrated George Bush's daring behind-enemy-lines raid on Boston Harbor during the 1988 campaign. Later that year, he struck again, winning from several Massachusetts' police groups endorsements of Bush instead of the state's Governor, Michael Dukakis. At the time, he described himself as a practitioner of "psychological terror" and "disinformation."

The late Lee Atwater? Nope, Ron Kaufman, George Bush's new deputy assistant for political affairs. Named last month to the job held by Atwater during the Reagan years, Kaufman comes from the same school of hardball politics as the former Republican Party chairman. Kaufman once asked an associate why his reputation as a prankster was so enduring. Came the reply: "Because you are a prankster."

Last summer Kaufman allegedly conspired to disrupt the Massachusetts state Democratic convention. Party officials say he helped organize a picket line of local policemen outside the hall in Springfield. The demonstrators roughed up a few would-be conventioneers and delayed the start of the ceremonies for a few hours. Within days, the state party sued Kaufman and other local operatives for damages. Lawyers will take Kaufman's deposition in Boston this week.

Kaufman claims he had nothing to do with the fracas. He insists that he was holed up in a nearby hotel room -- and in constant cellular telephone contact with the picket line -- for a benign purpose: boning up for an appearance as a guest commentator on local television and radio news programs that night. One of the pickets allegedly boasted that "me and Kaufman really screwed up the convention." He later said the comment was just a joke.

| Justice Department officials have warned lawyers for the Massachusetts Democratic Party that requests for depositions by Kaufman's White House co- workers may be met with claims of "Executive privilege." The White House doesn't want to talk about the case because Kaufman represents an awkward side of Bush's personality. The polite, ever congenial President throughout his career has surrounded himself with political hardballers whom he counts on to say and do the nasty things that sometimes get politicians elected. For much of his career, Bush has begrudgingly gone along, even if the better angels of his nature have regrets about it later.

Those regrets were conspicuous by their absence last week. Bush, who as Vice President, made a profession out of going to funerals, passed up the rites for Atwater to go bonefishing in the Florida Keys; he sent Dan Quayle to the South Carolina ceremony and attended a Washington memorial service near the end of the week. It was a curious decision. Atwater, more than any other person, was responsible for Bush's 1988 election triumph and was, Barbara Bush once said, "like a son" to the First Family.

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
ABC NEWS SPOKESPERSON, on why American Idol runner-up Adam Lambert's scheduled appearance on Good Morning America on Wednesday was canceled; his performance at the American Music Awards on Nov. 22 was controversial for being "sexually charged"
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
ABC NEWS SPOKESPERSON, on why American Idol runner-up Adam Lambert's scheduled appearance on Good Morning America on Wednesday was canceled; his performance at the American Music Awards on Nov. 22 was controversial for being "sexually charged"

Stay Connected with TIME.com