Rachel Maddow
In the eight years of the George W. Bush administration, no hearty saplings were ever able to take root in the shade of that big tree. No one expected Vice President Dick Cheney to ever be a contender for the presidency — part of his effectiveness was his willingness to say and do very unpopular things. When he snapped at ABC’s Martha Raddatz, “So?” as she questioned him about public disapproval of the Iraq war, he wrote the perfect epitaph for his vice presidency.It poisoned the whole fucking nation and it will take decades, if not generations, to repair itself.
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The unpopular presidency of George W. Bush has proved to be a blackball on the résumés of a generation of Republican leaders. Maybe Cheney’s daughter Liz will break the pattern next year with a successful Senate bid in Wyoming, but if you made it through that sentence without spitting coffee out your nose, you’re in rare company.
The fascinating turmoil in the Republican Party since 2008 is not just a personnel problem — it’s also ideological. If you were putting together a legacy to inspire the next generation of conservatives, you wouldn’t pick the Bush administration’s trailing ends of land wars, budget deficits, torture, a crusade against gay rights and a financial collapse to rival the Great Depression. The isolationism and libertarian iconography of the Ron Paul wing of the party really does appeal to young people more than Bush-Cheney Republicanism. Social conservatives really do feel backed into a corner and ready to fight against a country that is turning against them faster than most pollsters can keep up. There really is something ripe for renewal in Republicans’ self-conception as fiscal conservatives, when the clear pattern is that budget deficits grow under Republicans and shrink under Democrats. The Republican Party is a churning swirl of conflicting ideological currents, and that’s going to take some time to work out.
But part of the reason it may be taking so long already is those lost years: the period from 2000 to 2008 that effectively obviated the authority and the leadership potential of all of Washington’s Republican elites. The George W. Bush administration didn’t just cast too much shade on the next generation of leadership — it also apparently poisoned the ground.
Inside the White House, the task of growing one’s own successors must seem like one of the less pressing items on the president’s long daily to-do list. But the previous administration’s trail of scorched earth and exiles has curtailed the prospects for the Republican Party and governing conservatism more profoundly than almost anything that administration pursued in terms of policy. It is a cautionary tale that Democrats and the Obama White House should heed sooner rather than later. Grow your successors, nurture your legacy.Bush's failures were the culmination of failed Repug policies that started under Nixon, accelerated under Reagan, and hit overdrive under Bush, who drove us into the ditch at top speed. We probably would have been OK after 9/11 were it not for his weakness to go along with Cheney's criminal Iraq war. The things he did as the most incompetent President in our history were terrible to be sure, but it put an end forever to Turdblossom's "permanent Republican majority" and for that small silver lining we should be thankful.
And for this: the next Repug President hasn't been born yet.
3 comments:
Hmmm, I don't agree.
Rove was just one legislative move short of winning. If Bush had been able to Steal Social Security in 2005/2006 with the help of the Republican Congress that influx of 2.7 billion plus would have forestalled the bursting of the Republican Bubble Economy at least a couple of years towards 2010 instead of 2007.
Then Faux and every Republican would run on how Democrats destroyed the Awesome Bush Economy. Hell, they still try to do that today, but a vast majority of Americans still blame Bush.
President George W(orst Ever) Bush himself, still proudly claimed 9/11 as one of his successes, "In terms of accomplishments, my biggest accomplishment is that I kept the country safe," Bush said. But, he lamented his greatest failure that he wasn't able to privatize Social Security.
The Right would have run on Bush winning Iraq and the phony GWoT and Bush's fabulous economy in 2008, 2010, 2012 and beyond if he had been able to swindle America just one more time.
Bush didn't win Iraq, Iran did, but you're right, they'd have run as if he did. By the time he left office Wall St. etc. had already stolen all the money in the country (and most of the world) and there was nothing left to swindle.
Gordon, I have incontrovertiable proof that Bush "Won" Iraq...
We won. The Iraq War is over.
I declare November 22, 2008 to be "Victory in Iraq Day." (Hereafter known as "VI Day.") ~ Zomblog, Zombietime
Scroll down to the bottom of this post for the hundreds of Right-Wing blogs which declared VI Day right after Barack's election in order to cravenly give a Win to the George W(orst President) Ever.
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