Primary Colors - An Anonymous novel on politics
This is the story of a governor of "a state no one has heard of," Jack Stanton, in his pursuit for the presidency of the United States. The story is narrated from the first person point of view by Henry Burton, a bright, youngish black man who rises quickly to a key position on the Governor's presidential primary campaign staff.
Stanton is a brilliant but flawed man, who truly loves people. He really cared about "folks," as he needs them to survive both politically and just plain physically. He feeds off the energy of the people with a charisma that is infectious to all those around him. He's married to Susan Stanton, a smart lawyer who despises his louche sexual adventuring but is driven by her own demons. Stanton main flaw: he can't keep his pants on. As the campaign struggles in New Hampshire, it has to be in damage control because of a Cashmere McLeod, Susan's hairdresser, who sells the story to a tabloid alleging she had an affair with Stanton. She has recorded her conversations with Stanton but through Henry's ingenuity, they are proven to be hacked conversations from the governor's cell phone superimposed with her own. However, he did have the affair.
The next hurdle in the campaign is New York. The governor forms an alliance with NYC's mayor, Richmond Rucker, but Rucker can't deliver so they fight. The governor of the state, Orlando Ozio, has been thinking of running himself for the presidency so he boycotts the campaign efforts. Lawrence Harris, Stanton's main opponent, wins NY State and seems unstoppable.
At this point, the campaign turns negative: it seems that Sen. Harris campaign platform has statements about balancing the budget by reducing Social Security benefits. The Stanton campaign seizes on this at the Florida primary. In the ensuing debate, Harris is so enraged that he suffers a heart attack and ends up in a coma. Martha Harris, the Senator's wife, recruits a prior governor of Florida to take over the campaign: Fred Picker.
Mr. Picker is a really nice man and decides to campaign honestly. He fires all of his advisers and just "talks" to people. He immediately destroys the Stanton campaign - not to mention that at this time there's a rumor that Stanton got a black young girl pregnant: Loretta McCollister, daughter of Stanton's friend Fat Willie.
However, Picker has skeletons on the closet. Olivia (Libbie) Holden, Stanton's chief of staff who's in charge of digging the dirt, finds out that Picker was involved in some shady developments in Florida, was a cocaine addict, and perhaps a homosexual.
Henry and Libbie decide they will not allow Stanton to use this against Picker and, as Stanton goes to deliver the dirt to Picker and to tell him that he's no longer running, Picker tells Stanton he's the one who's not running and endorses Stanton for the Presidency.
Whether or not it is an account of Bill Clinton's road to the White House, the circumstances behind this crackling, highly perceptive study of a presidential campaign are bizarre. Publisher's Weekly said: "not even its publisher, Harold Evans, who signed the book, or its editor knows the identity of the author." Assumptions run wildly that it might had been someone close to Clinton's campaign, but it still remains speculation.
The novel isn't perfect. The main romance - between Henry Burton and Daisy Green - isn't really well-defined. In as much as it makes for a fun easy read, the story is not believable, even for the mid nineties. One thing is for certain: in view of President Obama's failures in spite of his clean credentials, this book is "about the ability to lead. It's not about perfection." People smile, listen, do pathetic favors and fudge when they can't. They tell them what people want to hear, unless they think they want to hear something else. People live an eternity of false smiles: "because it's the price you pay to lead."
Somehow I wish our current President had more of Jack Stanton. I think our country would be a lot better!