If I was going to write a political thriller, chapter two would go something like this:
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âGentlemenâ¦â
All present look up at the man standing at the head of the large boardroom table, their conversations trailing off. One looks to his neighbour and rolls his eyes, silently mouthing âOh God. A speech.â Another coughs pointedly.
âMaybe. Perhaps the American Empire has had its day, but its spirit will live on. For what is more the essence of the American Way than American Capitalism, wherever in the world it might take seed?
âThe last decade has been very good for us.â He glances around the table, picking out the eyes of his audience. âYou got the deregulation you wanted. You got to write the energy policy for the worldâs biggest consumer of oil. You got immunity from prosecution. You got your no-bid contracts, and the few billion we lost behind the couch cushions in Iraq. We all got tax breaks. And we came so close on Social Security. You could almost tasteâ¦â
A collective sigh of muttered regret ripples around the table.
ââ¦all that money could have been in our handsâ¦â
ââ¦we could have taken any risk we liked with it becauseâ¦â
ââ¦because no politician would let poor old Mom and Pop lose their retirement.â
Again, the speaker waits for the conversation to die down.
âTo that end I would like to propose a toast. To a man who sadly couldnât be here today, but through whom we were able to advance ourselves in ways even we never would have dreamed we could get away with a mere decade ago. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the forty-third President of the United States.â
âHear hear.â Glasses clink.
âAnd there lies our dilemma, my friends. In an ideal world we could choose a successor cut from the same cloth. In an ideal world we would be able to choose a new President who understands the value of appointing friends to high places. Who understands that executive power is there to be exercised without restriction. Who believes in a pragmatic approach to civil rights and the constitution. Who believes that giving us the keys to the economy isnât the best option, itâs the only option. Who isnât afraid to use our countryâs military to our advantage. Who can do the folksy thing with the people. Someone who is happy with distractions like abortion and gay marriage, while leaving the important decisions to us.â
âMaybe someone who could make better speeches, though?â
âWell yes, that would help. Still, we realised over a year ago that with the popularity of the current President there was no way we could push a worthy successor through the nomination process. So what are we left with now? A Mormon, an egomaniac andâ, his mouth curls with disgust. âa reformer. Up to now weâve been pushing Mister Ego as the best of a bad bunch, but who here feels confident that we can even get the guy elected, let alone be sure heâll do what heâs told afterwards?â
The table responds with murmurs and shaking heads.
âWell, my friends, I think we have found a solution. Brian?â
A young man steps forward. Smartly dressed. Hungry. Probably on the books as a âcampaign consultantâ. He drops a thick stack of manila folders onto the table, the thud resonating through the thick wood.
âThese are Senator McCainâs medical records. Before you ask, you donât want to know how I got them or how I am going to make the important parts disappear before the end of the week. All you need to know is on the one-sheet that my assistant is handing out.â
No sound at the table but the rustling of paper, a silence broken by a loud southern accent.
âJesus Christ. Why is this boy even running?â
âWhat does any man, any ambitious man really want when faced with that kind of news? Immortality. A justification for decades of public service. The Forty-Fourth Presidency of the United States of America.â They can hear the string of capital letters in the young manâs voice. âHeâs been stewing ever since we screwed him out of the nomination in 2000. At this point, heâd do anything for that one last moment of glory.â
âDo you think heâll play ball?â
âHe already is. We give him the nomination, we deliver him the election. Heâll do what we say during the campaign, andâ¦â
The southern drawl completes his sentence ââ¦and we get to pick the Vice President.â