The sands may be running out on the Bush administration, but there is still time for a June wedding in the White House.
Jenna Bush, the more rambunctious of President Bush’s 25-year-old twin daughters, got engaged last week. The family has been short on further details. But it stands to reason that the wedding could take place at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, where Jenna’s fiancé, Henry Hager, 29, once worked as an aide to Karl Rove, Bush’s soon-to-be-ex top political strategist. It would be the first White House wedding in 36 years, since Tricia Nixon tossed her bouquet from the grand staircase.
The country is at war, of course, and Bush’s popularity is low. So surely the White House itself is asking the logical question: How would a White House wedding go over?
Tricia Nixon and Luci Baines Johnson (who actually got married in a church but held her reception at the White House) were married during wartime, and were boons to their father’s political fortunes, at least temporarily. It always helps a President — especially beleaguered Presidents — to be seen as a family man, and few moments are as poignant as when a father is giving his daughter away.
“If weddings ceased when we had difficult foreign relations or outright war,” said Judith Martin, also known as Miss Manners, “very few people would be married. It is not considered frivolous to get married.”
Robert Dallek, the presidential historian, said he thought the country would be ambivalent. “There might be some sense of relief and celebration because of the pall that has settled over this society and is reflected in the fact that 70 per cent of the country thinks we’re on the wrong track,” he said. “But they have to be careful that there is not a huge amount of hoopla and excess and self-indulgence, because we are mired in a war.”
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