PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
As
a popular adage says, “A dog is man’s best friend.” And this is
truer if you’re running for President of the United States because Americans
are fond of having pet dogs. Study shows that one in every three Americans
own dogs. Since dog owners tend to identify with one another, it is
not surprising that a lot of American Presidents owned dogs,
too. Twenty-five of the 42 Presidents including Barack Obama owned
dogs.
I
looked up www.dog-names.org.uk and gleaned
interesting information about some of the dog-loving American Presidents.
George
Washington owned 10 Hounds named Mopsey, Taster, Cloe, Tipler, Forester,
Captain, Lady Rover, Vulcan, Sweetlips and Searcher.
Abraham
Lincoln owned at least two dogs called Fido and Jip. Like his
master, Fido suffered a violent death. A drunk who became angry when
the dog jumped on him with muddy paws knifed Fido to death in the street.
Theodore
Roosevelt owned five dogs: a Pit Bull Terrier (Pete), a Chesapeake Retriever
(Sailor Boy), a Terrier (Jack), a mongrel (Skip), and a Spaniel
(Manchu). Pete almost caused an international scandal when he ripped
off the French ambassador’s pants during a White House function.
Franklin
D. Roosevelt owned at least seven dogs: a German Shepherd (Major), two Scotch
Terriers (Meggie and Fala), a Llewellyn Setter (Winks), an English Sheepdog
(Tiny), a Great Dane (President), and a Mastiff (Blaze). Fala was
the star of an MGM Hollywood movie about the typical day of a dog in the White
House. Fala also became an honorary army private. He received this
honor by contributing one dollar to the war effort setting a trend for the rest
of the US.
John
F. Kennedy owned a total of 12 dogs: two Welsh Terriers (Charlie and Pushinka),
a German Shepherd (Clipper), an Irish Cocker Spaniel (Shannon), an Irish
Wolfhound (Wolf), and three Terriers (White Tips, Blackie and
Streaker). Kennedy was the first president to request that his dogs
meet the presidential helicopter when the president arrived at the White
House. Soviet Premier Khrushchev gave him Pushinka who was the
offspring of the Russian space dog Strelka. Pushinka had four
puppies of her own that JFK called “pupniks”!
Ronald
Reagan owned two dogs, a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel (Rex) and a Bouvier des
Flandres (Lucky). Reagan was photographed being dragged across the
White House lawn by Lucky in the presence of Margaret Thatcher. Lucky was sent
to live in California leaving just Rex at the White House.
Bill
Clinton owned a chocolate Labrador called “Buddy.” The TV cameras caught him
relieving himself on the carpet! Buddy was barely in the White House a month
before Newsweek proclaimed, “At last, a friend who can’t testify against him.”
Barack
Obama, during the 2008 presidential campaign, promised to buy a dog for his
daughters, Malia and Sasha, whether he’d win the election or not. After he was
sworn into office, the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy gave Obama a gift, a
black-and-white Portuguese water dog, who his daughters named “Bo.”
Could
owning a dog contribute to the electability of a presidential
candidate? I’d say “yes” but it would depend on how the candidate
relates to his dog. Two stories come to mind.
***
The
story goes: Two months after presidential candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower picked
then Sen. Richard Nixon as his running mate at the Republican
National Convention in 1952, the New York Post headlined: “Secret Rich
Men’s Trust Fund Keeps Nixon in Style Far Beyond His Salary.” The
article claimed that campaign donors bought Nixon by keeping a secret trust
fund for his personal expenses. Many Republicans were outraged by
the scandal and demanded that Eisenhower drop Nixon from the ticket.
On
September 23, 1952, the beleaguered Nixon appeared on national television and
radio. He defended himself saying that the fund existed but it was
not a secret. He claimed that it was used strictly to cover campaign
expenses and emphasized that no contributor to the fund received special
treatment or favor. He then showed the results of an independent
audit of his finances and also disclosed his financial history.
In
the middle of his speech, he admitted receiving one campaign donation and
intended to keep it for himself. He narrated how he got the gift
from a traveling salesman named Lou Carrol who heard Nixon’s wife say during a
radio interview how much the Nixon children wanted a dog. Carrol
then sent a black-and-white American Cocker Spaniel to the Nixons, who their
daughter Tricia named “Checkers.” Nixon said that if Checkers was an
issue, he didn’t care. His daughters loved Checkers and regardless
of what anyone said, they were keeping Checkers.
Watched
by 60 million Americans, Nixon’s “Checkers Speech” led to an outpouring of
public support. The Republican National Committee was bombarded with millions
of telegrams and phone calls to retain Nixon as Eisenhower’s running
mate. Eisenhower retained him and their ticket won in the November
1952 elections.
***
Sixty
years later, 2012, another dog story is making its rounds in the media and
cyberspace about Mitt Romney and his dog, Seamus.
The
story goes: Almost 30 years ago, Mitt Romney took his wife and children and
their dog, Seamus, on a 12-hour road trip from Boston to
Canada. They put Seamus, an Irish Setter, in a crate -- that Romney
built himself -- strapped to the car’s rooftop luggage rack. After
several hours on the road, the Romneys made an unscheduled rest stop to take
care of a messy problem dripping down from the car’s rooftop, which they hosed
down.
Recently,
Mitt Romney’s wife Ann explained during an interview with ABC’s Diane Sawyer
that Seamus had “slimed himself and the station wagon not because he was
terrified of the trucks whizzing past him on the interstate but because he'd
snagged some turkey off the kitchen counter before being latched in the crate
for the 12-hour drive.”
The
Seamus incident, which first came out in 2007, became an issue during the 2008
presidential primary elections. A Boston Globe reporter described
the dog-on-the-roof story in a seven-part series on Romney’s presidential bid,
which hounded (no pun intended) Romney throughout the Republican primary
season. It depicted Romney’s knack for “emotion-free crisis
management.” It also said, “Picking a president is all about deciding
who'll have a finger on the button for the next four years, and the last thing
we need is a guy who loses his cool when the stink hits the windshield at 60
mph.”
Romney
lost the primary to Sen. John McCain who then lost the presidential elections
to Obama. Did it help Obama get the votes of dog lovers when he
promised to buy a dog for his daughters during the campaign? Hmm…
Now,
Romney is the presumptive Republican nominee for President in the upcoming
November 2012 elections. Makes one wonder if the dog-on-the-roof
story would come back – if it hasn’t come back yet -- to hound him.
During
the recent White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, DC, Obama joked,
“Even Sarah Palin is getting back into the game, guest hosting on the ‘Today
Show.’ Which reminds me of an old saying: ‘What's the difference between a
hockey mom and a pit bull?’ A pit bull is
delicious.” Doggone it! (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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