Letters from an American - December 15, 2025
Episode Date: December 16, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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December 15, 2025, for the last couple of months, Senator Rumson has suggested that being president of this country was, to a certain extent, about character.
And although I have not been willing to engage in his attacks on me, I've been here three years and three days.
And I can tell you, without hesitation, being president of this country is entirely about character.
In 1995, the late Rob Reiner, who, along with his wife, Michelle Singer-Riner, lost his life yesterday,
directed the American president, written by Aaron Sorkin.
In the film, President Andrew Shepard, a widower, is facing a challenge from Republican presidential
hopeful Senator Bob Rumson, who attacks Shepard by focusing on the activist past of the woman
he is dating, lawyer and lobbyist Sidney Ellen Wade. The final scene of the film is a speech by the
president rejecting the pretended patriotism of his partisan attacker, who is cynically manipulating
voters to gain power. It is a meditation on what it means to be the president of the United States.
For the record, yes, I am a card-carrying member of the ACLU,
Shepard says to reporters at a press conference.
But the more important question is, why aren't you, Bob?
Now, this is an organization whose sole purpose is to defend the Bill of Rights,
so it naturally begs the question,
why would a senator, his party's most powerful spokesman and a candidate for president,
choose to reject upholding the Constitution?
America isn't easy.
America is advanced citizenship.
You've got to want it bad because it's going to put up a fight.
It's going to say, you want free speech?
Let's see you acknowledge a man whose words make your blood boil,
who's standing center stage and advocating at the top of his lungs,
that which you would spend a lifetime opposing at the top of yours.
You want to claim this land as a land of the free?
then the symbol of your country cannot just be a flag.
The symbol also has to be one of its citizens
exercising his right to burn that flag in protest.
Now show me that, defend that, celebrate that in your classrooms.
Then you can stand up and sing about the land of the free.
I've known Bob Rumson for years,
and I've been operating under the assumption
that the reason Bob devotes so much time and energy
shouting at the rain was that he simply didn't get it.
Well, I was wrong.
Bob's problem isn't that he doesn't get it.
Bob's problem is that he can't sell it.
We have serious problems to solve,
and we need serious people to solve them.
And whatever your particular problem is,
I promise you, Bob Rumson is not the least bit
interested in solving it.
He's interested in two things and two things only.
things only, making you afraid of it and telling you who's to blame for it. That, ladies and
gentlemen, is how you win elections. We've got serious problems and we need serious
people. And if you want to talk about character, Bob, you better come at me with more than a
burning flag and a membership card. This is a time for serious people, Bob, and you
Your 15 minutes are up.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
