By PAUL KRUGMAN
George W. Bush, I once wrote, “values loyalty above expertise” and may have “a preference for advisers whose personal fortunes are almost entirely bound up with his own.” And he likes to surround himself with “obsequious courtiers.”
Lots of people are saying things like that these days. But those quotes are from a column published on Nov. 19, 2000.
I don’t believe that I’m any better than the average person at judging other people’s character. I got it right because I said those things in the context of a discussion of Mr. Bush’s choice of economic advisers, a subject in which I do have some expertise.
But many people in the news media do claim, at least implicitly, to be experts at discerning character - and their judgments play a large, sometimes decisive role in our political life. The 2000 election would have ended in a chad-proof victory for Al Gore if many reporters hadn’t taken a dislike to Mr. Gore, while portraying Mr. Bush as an honest, likable guy. The 2004 election was largely decided by the image of Mr. Bush as a strong, effective leader.
So it’s important to ask why those judgments are often so wrong.
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Paul Krugman Al Gore Bush Media Politics George W. Bush Gore