About the
Author
Dean Hartwell: Political Scientist
Dean Hartwell has followed presidential elections
closely since 1980. At the age of 12, he knew his
candidate was John Anderson over incumbent President
Jimmy Carter and former California Governor Ronald
Reagan. His decision to support Anderson made him
unpopular among his seventh-grade classmates. It would
not be the last time his political leanings got him in
trouble with others.
Hartwell suffered through
the Reagan Administration, both for its policies and for
its leader. Watching Reagan push through tax cuts that
favored the wealthy and that increased the nation’s debt
was bad enough. But watching the demeanor of the
president, who always seemed to be joking around instead
of taking his job seriously, was too much.

But
the Democrats, whom Hartwell officially joined as a
registered voter in 1986 upon his eighteenth birthday,
could never stop Ronald Reagan. Twice he had won for
Governor of California and twice he won for President.
He tried his hand as a volunteer for Michael Dukakis’
bid for President in 1988, first in the California
primary and later in the general election. Hartwell
enjoyed talking to voters and made calls fast (as many
as 40 calls per hour).
Dukakis took on Reagan’s
Vice-President, George Bush. At first the campaign
looked promising; some polls suggested in July 1988 that
Dukakis had a lead as big as seventeen points. Then Bush
struck with commercials that all but called Dukakis
unpatriotic and unconcerned about crime. Hartwell
thought for sure the voters would see past the scare
tactics and elect the candidate more capable of leading
in an ethical manner.
But he was wrong. Bush won
the election handily, making Hartwell wonder if scaring
the voters with half-truths and falsehoods was the new
definition of leadership. Even more disturbing was the
transformation that candidate Bush went through in
becoming president. The issues he campaigned on most
frequently, the pledge of allegiance and the criminal
furlough program, were nowhere to be found after
Election Night. If that weren’t enough, the
intellectually-challenged Dan Quayle, who once said he
didn’t “live in this century”, would now be the
Vice-President.
Not long after the election,
Hartwell received his Bachelor of Arts in Political
Science from the University of California at Irvine. He
took some time off from school, then attended California
State University of Long Beach where he received his
master’s degree in May 1993.
In 1992, after an
unsuccessful attempt to become a Jerry Brown delegate to
the Democratic National Convention, Hartwell joined the
Bill Clinton campaign. Though he did not agree with
Clinton’s support for the death penalty and other ideas,
he wanted to knock Bush out of the White House badly
enough to come on board.
Clinton’s primary
campaign against Brown and others spoke little of
sacrifice (ex: middle class tax cuts) and too much of
attacking opponents, issues Hartwell had come to realize
were important in assessing a presidential candidate. He
watched the fall election closely and saw a Clinton
concerned about health care coverage and into
criticizing ideas rather than people (he told President
Bush he was “wrong to attack his patriotism”, for
example).
In retrospect, our nation received two
Bill Clintons: the one who adamantly denied involvement
with “that woman, Ms. Lewinsky” and the one who
campaigned with passion for gun control, against the
tobacco lobby and for universal health care. What if we
knew ahead of time what we were getting into? Given the
importance of the presidency in our society, how to
obtain this knowledge sounded like a topic worthy of a
book to Hartwell.
Hartwell lives in Glendale with
his wife, Lori, and their five pets: an African Gray
parrot, two cats and two dogs.
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