''�Andy has always been one of the guys the Bushes can turn to in
difficult circumstances,' said Bob Marsh, a government relations specialist
at General Motors, where Card is now on leave from his job as director of
government affairs...�

Boston Globe
-------
Versatile adviser regarded as ace in the Bush camp
By Anne E. Kornblut, Globe Staff, 11/16/2000

USTIN, Texas - When a hurricane hit Florida in 1992, President Bush
dispatched his friend Andrew Card to handle the public relations disaster,
amid accusations that the administration acted too late. Three months later,
the president summoned Card to handle a more personal crisis: making the
transition from the White House after losing to Bill Clinton.
Exactly eight years later, Card is back at the center of a maelstrom
involving both Florida and the Bush family, one of several friends of the
former president now advising George W. Bush on how to handle an election he
has not yet won. And in photographs and whispers, the campaign has made it
clear: Should Bush prevail, Card, 53, a former Massachusetts legislator and
corporate lobbyist, would probably be named White House chief of staff.
Card's sudden visibility is part of a careful strategy to make Bush appear
ready to take office; with the presidency hanging in the balance, the Texas
governor has invited TV crews to his home almost daily to capture him
surrounded by an image of his possible future Cabinet, including national
security specialist Condoleezza Rice and economics adviser Lawrence Lindsay.
But in the case of Card, aides said his presence in Texas last week was more
than ceremonial.
''Andy has always been one of the guys the Bushes can turn to in difficult
circumstances,'' said Bob Marsh, a government relations specialist at
General Motors, where Card is now on leave from his job as director of
government affairs. ''He doesn't go for self-promotion. He really avoids it
like the plague. He used to call himself the `worst leak in the White House'
and that's one of the reasons the Bushes respect him so much.''
In addition to complete loyalty, Card is seen as bringing to the Bush camp a
range of chief-of-staff-like qualities: deep political roots, a talent for
navigating Capitol Hill corridors, an easygoing personality, and a cool head
under pressure.
He is also a moderate - or, at least, ''by no means any kind of
right-winger,'' in the words of one former Beacon Hill colleague - a trait
that could prove helpful in building alliances with Democrats. Whichever
candidate ultimately wins, the narrow margins in the House and Senate will
make it necessary for the incoming president to sway members of the opposite
party, which colleagues say Card has a history of doing.
Philip Johnston, a Democrat who worked alongside Card in the Massachusetts
State House, said he ''would be very encouraged'' by the direction of a Bush
White House with Card in a position of power. ''I think it would be a very
encouraging sign for all of us in the country if Andy Card were the chief of
staff in the White House,'' Johnston said. ''It would give me some
confidence that they would avoid ideological conflict with the Democrats,
and I think he would argue for moderation and restraint, and, frankly, for
many issues I care about, issues affecting poor people, issues affecting
women.'' 
Born in Holbrook, Card comes from a family immersed in politics: His father,
the late Andrew Card Sr., was on the local school committee and ran for the
Legislature in 1966. His brother, Brad, works as chief of staff to a New
York Republican in the US House, Representative John Sweeney. His sister
Alison, who works for Governor John Rowland of Connecticut, is married to
Ron Kaufman, the Massachusetts committee member of the Republican National
Committee and former political director for President Bush.
Card's own political resume starts with the presidency of the class of 1965
at Holbrook High School, followed by four terms on Beacon Hill, where he
made his reputation pursuing corruption in the 1970s and '80s. Perhaps his
most famous accomplishment was helping to form the Ward Commission, the
panel that investigated corruption in the state's building of the University
of Massachusetts at Boston campus. After an unsuccessful bid to become
Massachusetts governor in 1982, Card become the liaison between state
officials and the White House in the Reagan era, then on to the Bush
administration, where he served three years as deputy chief of staff before
becoming US Secretary of Transportation.
But for all that experience, Bush aides say Card has ingratiated himself
with the Texas crowd by deferring to their judgment on important matters. In
dealing with younger members of the campaign, he has managed to avoid
sounding condescending, aides said, and has never challenged the authority
of senior advisers such as Karl Rove or Joe Allbaugh.
''It's a hard balance to strike, between the Washington stuff and the Austin
stuff,'' one Bush aide said. ''He's somebody who has been in Washington, but
any time he has worked with us, he's a loyal helper. He offers his help
without any air about him.''
As the head of Bush's team at the Republican National Convention in July (an
event that was widely heralded as a success, and that sent Bush's poll
numbers soaring) Card recognized the value of letting the Texas operatives
have their say, several GOP aides said.
''I think the reason we wanted Andy to do it is because he respects the
people who are running the show,'' another Bush strategist said. ''He knows
he has a role to play, but he wasn't the kind of guy who was going to go in
there and say, `Hey, I'm in charge, I'm going to be a new power center.'''
This story ran on page A29 of the Boston Globe on 11/16/2000.
� Copyright 2000 Globe Newspaper Company.  



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