Farewell to the Chief: Andy Card's Last Trip
Up front, President Bush, the traveling staff, some Secret Service agents and a few crew members had gathered in the conference room for cake and slides to mark Card's final flight as "The Chief." Joshua B. Bolten, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, officially takes over Saturday.
Card had an emotional message for the crowd in the conference room: It is hard to get a job at the White House, but it is even harder to leave. Some people dabbed their eyes. "Secretary Card," as he is known around the Administration, often said in speeches, "It is unbelievable to be able to say, 'Good morning, Mr. President' every day that he comes into The Oval Office." On Thursday, Card will do it for the last time, before the Bush family heads to Camp David for Easter.
The Card party cut into a huge coconut cake and watched a slide show that White House photographer Eric Draper had assembled to commemorate Card's five-plus years in the West Wing, the second longest any Chief of Staff has served. The meal for the two-hour flight from Des Moines was chicken Marsala and tomato cucumber salad. The Air Force One crew presented Card with a jacket and a window from the plane inscribed with his name as an expression of gratitude. Card, a frequent guest at Camp David and a member of the "Hundred Degree Club" of hot-weather runners at Bush's ranch, talked about what a privilege it was to work in the White House. He walked around the conference room and thanked everyone, then strolled through the plane to thank the crew and other staff and agents.
White House press secretary Scott McClellan said after getting off the plane, "It was an emotional day. This was his swan-song trip."
Everyone in the White House capitalizes the "P" when they write "the President," but Card is one of the few who also capitalized "The." The Chief made humility his calling card, telling audiences that he came to work every day hoping not to be pinched in case it was just a dream. He is conscious, however, of the role he has played in history. Three years ago, he told the annual banquet of the Federalist Society about traveling with the President in Florida on Sept. 11, 2001, when initial reports suggested a small twin-engine plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. "What a horrible accident; the pilot must have had a heart attack or something," the President had said to Card. Later, while Bush was inside a school classroom, Card learned that it looked like a jet liner, and that there was a second plane. "I stood at the door and wondered, If I were President, would I want to know that?" Card recalled. "The answer is obvious. The challenge of how to tell the President became the burden of the moment. He was with students in front of a press corps. So I chose to state two facts and then make one editorial comment. I walked into the classroom, went up to the President's right ear, and bent down and said, 'A second plane hit the second tower. America is under attack.' I stepped back from the President. I did not want to invite a question or a debate."
The Chief showed his sense of humor on an "Ask the White House" Web chat in 2004 when he was asked if he had picked the tie the President had worn on TV a few nights before. His reply: "No !! (All I can say is that Mrs. Bush was not here that day.)" Asked about the role of prayer in his management style, Card typed: "I feel very blessed to work for our President. I do pray and know that others pray for me too."
Card, 58, sat in the jump seat of the cockpit of the Boeing 747-200B for the landing. At 8:50 p.m., just after Air Force One touched down, Card hustled briskly down the front steps carrying a massive black briefcase, caught up to the President on the Tarmac, and walked him to the waiting Marine One chopper. Three minutes later, they flew off into the night.
Most Popular »
- Ice Age vs. Transformers: It's a Draw!
- Is There Hope for the American Marriage?
- How Bad Are Auto Sales? Ten Questions and Answers
- Why Obama's Afghan War Is Different
- Why Sarah Palin Quit as Governor
- The Challenge That Awaits Obama in Moscow
- How Medicated Was Michael Jackson?
- When Benedict Meets Barack
- Searching for Palin's 'Hot Photos'
- Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
- Is There Hope for the American Marriage?
- Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
- How Bad Are Auto Sales? Ten Questions and Answers
- Why Obama's Afghan War Is Different
- Germany's Bright Idea: Street Lighting on Demand
- How Twitter Will Change the Way We Live
- China: At Least 140 Dead in Xinjiang Province Clashes
- Why We Have Affairs And Why Not to Tell
- Why VW and Porsche are On a Collision Course
- When Benedict Meets Barack







RSS