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2 News Homepage News News Portal Lead

The Analysis of From and Fuller: COVID Leadership, Military Base Names, and Spy Poll on Monuments

June 18, 2020 by Al From and Craig Fuller

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Every Thursday, the Spy hosts a conversation with Al From and Craig Fuller on the most topical political news of the moment.

Today the Spy commentators to discuss President Donald Trump’s leadership during the COVID- 19 crisis, the possible renaming of military bases that had honored confederate leaders, and the Spy’s poll on the future of Confederate statues in 21st century America.

This video is approximately thirteen minutes in length.

Background

While the Spy’s public affairs mission has always been hyper-local, it has never limited us from covering national, or even international issues, that impact the communities we serve. With that in mind, we were delighted that Al From and Craig Fuller, both highly respected Washington insiders, have agreed to a new Spy video project called “The Analysis of From and Fuller” over the next year.

The Spy and our region are very lucky to have such an accomplished duo volunteer for this experiment. While one is a devoted Democrat and the other a lifetime Republican, both had long careers that sought out the middle ground of the American political spectrum.

Al From, the genius behind the Democratic Leadership Council’s moderate agenda which would eventually lead to the election of Bill Clinton, has never compromised from this middle-of-the-road philosophy. This did not go unnoticed in a party that was moving quickly to the left in the 1980s. Including progressive Howard Dean saying that From’s DLC was the Republican wing of the Democratic Party.

From’s boss, Bill Clinton, had a different perspective. He said it would be hard to think of a single American citizen who, as a private citizen, has had a more positive impact on the progress of American life in the last 25 years than Al From.”

Al now lives in Annapolis and spends his semi-retirement as a board member of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University (his alma mater) and authoring New Democrats and the Return to Power. He also is an adjunct faculty member at Johns Hopkins’ Krieger School and recently agreed to serve on the Annapolis Spy’s Board of Visitors.

For Craig Fuller, his moderation in the Republican party was a rare phenomenon. With deep roots in California’s GOP culture of centralism, Fuller, starting with a long history with Ronald Reagan, leading to his appointment as Reagan’s cabinet secretary at the White House, and later as George Bush’s chief-of-staff and presidential campaign manager was known for his instincts to find the middle ground. Even more noted was his reputation of being a nice guy in Washington, a rare characteristic for a successful tenure in the White House.

Craig has called Easton his permanent home for the last five years, where now serves on the boards of the Academy Art Museum, the Benedictine School, and Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.  He also serves on the Spy’s Board of Visitors.

With their rich experience and long history of friendship, now joined by their love of the Chesapeake Bay, they have agreed through the magic of Zoom, to talk inside politics and policy with the Spy every Thursday.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 2 News Homepage, News Portal Lead Tagged With: From and Fuller

Looking at the Masters: Faith Ringgold   Spy COVID-19 Daily Update June 18

Letters to Editor

  1. Marian Murphy says

    June 18, 2020 at 3:26 PM

    I believe the statues and monuments honoring the Confederate’s position in the Civil War should be removed from public spaces but should be displayed in a museum type of environment to be used as an example of the hypocrisy of the time. The Civil War was not fought for state’s rights but to keep slavery alive and that issue shouldn’t be glorified with statues and monuments in front of our public buildings.

    We don’t burn books when we disagree with what they say and we shouldn’t destroy memorials that glorify racism but we should keep them as a tool to educate those of us who lived with these statues and monuments for years and just accepted their presence without realizing the racism they represented.

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