It's usually a President's second term that kills him. Sometimes literally. By Lincoln's second term he was dead. By Nixon's second term he was impeached. The worst of the investigations targeting Reagan and Clinton hit in their second term. The phenomenon of a second term destroying a President didn't just begin now, go back to the first President and you'll find a wounded and hurt George Washington battled by the volume of slander and attacks on his character launched by his political opponents, many of whom he had once considered friends.
A President's first time is his chance to implement his agendas and platforms. His second term is when the failures and consequences set in, the investigations and the endless hounding. It's when the physical and emotional toll of the presidency begins to take a serious toll. Hair turns white, posture droops and gaze becomes confused. And for the short term few Presidents manage to leave office after a second term without their reputation turning to mud, to perhaps be redeemed by history's posthumous judgment.
Lucky one term Presidents depart after a first term shrouded in mediocrity to be swiftly forgotten. Who has heard from Gerald Ford or George H.W. Bush Sr lately. Jimmy Carter's frenzied attempts at remaining relevant only make him more of a public joke. Unlucky two term Presidents usually stagger away, destroyed in one form or another.
What does that mean? It means being a two term President is an Iron Man competition, it requires being able to go the distance. Any halfway competent politician with decent political instincts can survive one term in office. It's the second term where the consequences of the decisions, good and bad, you made in the first term catch up with you. When the public has lost patience with excuses and your political opponents have finally figured out your weak points. You're a lame duck and the worst is just beginning.
The last round of elections just determined what had already been a done deal, that Bush couldn't go the distance, couldn't handle a second term. Long before Democrats had smelled blood, the Republicans were falling apart fighting each other tooth and nail and heads were rolling to corruption scandals. It wasn't Iraq that lost the election, it was a lack of leadership going from the top on down.
A President who increasingly treated Congress and the rest of his party with disdain, a party that had allowed itself to be filled with congressmen wrangling for pork and bribes, with jumped up Senators and Congressmen who decided the best way to get what they wanted and stand out was to pick fights with the President, with party leaders, with just about everyone. Consensus had been lost, agendas were going nowhere and the Democrats demolished a battered Republican party that had alienated its base as well as much of the American people.
When the election results were in, Bush turned tail as decisively as Arnold Schwarzenegger had after his own drubbing in the referendums. Like any actor when confronted with evidence that he's turning off his audience, Austrian Steroid Head had promptly turned as far to the Democratic side as he could. Bush followed suit jettisoning Rumsfeld, jettisoning the war and taking a back seat to the victorious Democrats.
The connection between the two men, is that both Bush and Schwarzenegger had run based on image. Schwarzenegger as the tough action star quoting his own lines in campaign appearances and Bush positioning himself as a cowboy. Both of course were facades, brands used to sell a candidate. Republicans eagerly embraced both only to slowly realize that they hadn't gotten what they thought they were voting for. Despite running as Republicans, their conservative credentials weren't very much more than skin deep.
Back when Bush was first running for office, I denigrated him and his 'Compassionate Conservative' branding as 'the Republican version of Clinton.' With the passage of time I was proven partially wrong but also partially right. Bush isn't Clinton. He lacks Clinton's egomania, selfish and complete disregard for anything that doesn't give him immediate gratification. Bush is generally sincere and when given a proper course can stand tall and serve as the head of state. After 9/11 he did just that until in Iraq he increasingly ran into a morass of policies he couldn't understand and reacted like most CEO's do, by sticking to the official line of success while pushing aside his advisers and cabinet members for failing him.
Not only were neither Bush or Clinton leaders, but neither were grown-ups. Their ideas about politics came from their backgrounds in college and for Bush, briefly in the business world. Their key skills lay in people management, in convincingly talking up their plans and forming alliances. In projecting an 'ordinary folks' image that got people to like and trust them. Those skills though only went so far. Neither Bush nor Clinton really learned very much after that. They never learned to properly reason or to take stock of their decisions and learn the errors of their ways. They were attuned to people without being able to examine and understand the bigger picture. Their people skills made them excellent politicians and bad at everything else. They were populists rather than leaders, glad-handlers rather than world-shakers.
Bush's second term was a failure, because it required battling against the tide instead of swimming with it. Anyone can get out in front of a cause and cheer when it's winning but it takes a great man to stand there in front of it and battle it out when it appears to be the losing side. Winston Churchill did it, even Tony Blair maintained support for Bush while facing political battles and attacks more bruising on a daily basis than Bush had ever experienced.
But Bush was not a man who actually had political beliefs, he was and is a manager out of his depth. He did not run for the Presidency or aspire to it because he wanted to change the world or make a difference or because he believed certain things needed to be done and others undone. He ran for the Presidency because he wanted to be President. Nothing more. He has deep rooted beliefs but they are crude and intersect weakly with his political life.
To hang on to a boat in a storm when you can escape instead requires the firm belief that your survival is worth less than that of getting the boat to shore. Bush never believed that and he's swimming to shore now.
Comments
This was a wonderful post.
ReplyDeleteInsightful .
Its sad though that things are this way.
Seeing it all put down as you have done though brought it into focus and you are right.
Mom calls Shrub "the spoiled brat". The look on his face after the elections showed it. LOL
ReplyDeleteShrub screwed up immediately after 9/11. He did everything but tell Iraq the day the war would start and give them the weapons to defend themselves. You don't warn people when you're going to attack. You attack and annihilate before they know what's hit them. Then again, Shrub knows nothing of military strategy. He was never a real soldier. :]
as someone much funnier than i, said: the last time the jews listened to a bush they ended up wandering in the desert for forty years!!! great post...thanks sultan...stay safe
ReplyDeleteBush let the unquestioning support of his fellow southern evangelicals go to his head. He wanted to play sheriff and the country indulged the silver spooned brat.
ReplyDeleteThis is bullshit. Bush has very sincere and deep political beliefs and he has articulated them very consistently. But he's tired.
ReplyDeleteDebate his policies and principles if you want, but at least admit they exist and understand what they are. This op-ed is typical of the media disinformation Bush has to contend with day in and out.
I have read/heard his speeches and then seen how the media twists them around. I am not imagining that.
It seems he is trying to please his opponents and to heck with the rest of America.
ReplyDeleteThe consensus with our soldiers in Iraq is that its working over there, contrary to the media propaganda which shows a false face.
Bush should stick to his guns and keep to his promise about ending terrorism.
He should also see islam for what it really is: a death cult.
it's a war, everyone's tired but he can't afford to be tired and that's the point
ReplyDeleteBush has very sincere and deep beliefs, my piece stated that
what he doesn't have are political beliefs because his understanding of the world is shallow at best
I voted for him twice but I have scraped the Bush stickers (from the 2000 primary) off my truck.
ReplyDeleteHe was never Presidential timber but he was all we had. His father was a quizling traitor to the Reagan Revolution (a revolution in name only) and GWB cannot even spell Conservative. I would really like to know who dicides who shall be President in this country. It's so obviously a put-up job.
We no longer allow real leaders in America. We asassinate their character way before they get to any real power position.
Our true leaders go for the money. The business world. And who can blame them?
America is imploding from it's own greed. We care nothing for anything but fun and profit and we shall die becaue of it. Trouble is the rest of the world will go down with us.
Near as I can tell we are on the verge of a Muslim Dark Age. Glad I was smart enough not to have kids.
Judith do you often think in terms of bovine excrement? Just wondering.
ReplyDeleteBeing in lock step with the administration no matter what they do helps no one Judith.
You could not be more wrong here.
Bush is now dropping the ball on Iraq and with Israel.
Sultan is right on this one.
To accuse him of being like the liberal media is heavy handed and unfair as he has been even handed throughout his blogging career letting both sides have it when needed.
I dont think you will find a more fair minded blogger.
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