On his HBO show, Bill Maher usually arranges for one of his three guests to be a conservative. In one sense, he wants to be fair to the conservative point of view; in another he wants to provide a foil for the two liberal guests (as well as himself) who also sit on the panel.<\/p>\n
One of the conservative guests who has been a regular on the program is David Frum, a one-time aide and speech writer in the George W. Bush White House. He did not always take the company line in the White House. While he supported John Roberts as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, he was a force in opposition to Harriet Miers as an associate justice. He was a strong advocate for many conservative ideas in the White House, but also a gadfly who would oppose the \u201cRovian\u201d conventional wisdom when he felt that empathy was being overlooked. He eventually left the Bush White House to work for presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City.<\/p>\n
The Canadian-born Frum is the author of seven books. Most advocate conservative ideas, suggesting that the liberal philosophy leads to financial waste and unaccountable social policy. However, through it all, he has maintained a certain skepticism of the wisdom of his fellow conservatives.<\/p>\n
Over time, David Frum did what very few political advocates do. He basically changed his political philosophy. He came to accept the Democratic principles of primary concern for the poor and disenfranchised. He saw hypocrisy within both parties, but particularly with the Republicans. He became comfortable with uninhibited criticism of the Republican Party, particularly its leaders.<\/p>\n
In the July 30, 2012 issue of The Nation<\/em>, David Oppenheimer wrote a definitive article,\u00a0 <\/a>describing Frum\u2019s metamorphosis. The same day that the article in The Nation<\/em> came out, Frum, as a CNN contributor, wrote an article entitled \u201cMitt Romney\u2019s painfully bad week.\u201d <\/a>Frum spared no punches on the Republican presidential candidate-to-be. He talked about Romney\u2019s blatant criticism of the Affordable Health Care Act\u00a0 at a meeting of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People). Romney was predictably booed, but Frum raises the question of whether Romney was\u00a0 na\u00efve and had no idea what the reaction would be, or if he intentionally stirred the embers and sought sympathy from America\u2019s whites, who seem to hate President Obama.<\/p>\n