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Bush’s Untouchable State of the Union

He sure didn't leave the Democrats much room to maneuver. When George W. Bush delivered his first State of the Union address--a two-ply speech divided bet...

David Corn

January 30, 2002

He sure didn’t leave the Democrats much room to maneuver. When George W. Bush delivered his first State of the Union address–a two-ply speech divided between a so-called war on terrorism and a supposed war on the recession–he depicted himself as a Rooseveltian president, as in both (Republican) Teddy and (Democrat) Franklin Delano.

In Speech One, Bush warned the war on terrorism–now targeting “tens of thousands of trained terrorists” throughout the world, in jungles and in cities–has only just begun and may extend for years beyond his time in office, and he declared himself a roughrider ready to take this war to nations that are “threatening America or our friends and allies with weapons of mass destruction.” Never referring to Osama bin Laden by name, he announced that North Korea, Iran and Iraq–especially Iraq–were in his crosshairs and noted, “I will not wait on events, while dangers gather. I will not stand by, as peril draws closer and closer.” In other words, if those wimpy coalition partners don’t have the stomach for this, if Americans, as heroic as they were on and after September 11, are not be ready to invade Baghdad, none of that will matter. Bush will still lead the charge.

In Speech Two, he came across as a New Dealer. Without providing details, he called for extending unemployment benefits and direct assistance for health care coverage, for strengthening Head Start and early child development programs, for enhanced teacher training and recruitment, for a Patient’s Bill of Rights, for extending Medicare to include coverage of prescription drugs, for protection of 401(k) plans and pension fund protection (without mentioning a certain belly-up energy company), for greater accountability within corporate America. He said he was in full favor of “jobs.” There was no standard-fare GOP rhetoric about the need to limit big-government or the wonders of unfettered, entrepreneurial capitalism.

This was calculation, not conversion. Taking a cue from Bill Clinton, Bush has learned the value of strategically appropriating portions of the rhetoric and policies of his foes. His Medicare drug prescription plan is meager. It would devote about $77 billion for medication for only the poorest of senior citizens. Even Republican House Speaker Dennis Hastert has suggested spending $300 billion in this area. His Patient’s Bill of Rights? Bush, no surprise, didn’t say how far he is willing to go in permitting consumers to sue HMOs. And while he urged the lawmakers sitting before him to work “on these important domestic issues in the same spirit of cooperation we have applied to our war against terrorism,” Bush was not above sticking it to the Democrats by pressing those items that cause them to see red: ballistic missile defense, Social Security privatization, a pro-industry energy bill that plunders the Alaskan wilderness, and his tax cuts. (He asked Congress to make the ten-year tax-cut legislation passed last year permanent.)

Karl Rove and Company could be proud of the speech, for it provided few openings to the opposition. One cliche among Washington commentators has long been that the Republicans are the Daddy Party (the warriors, the tough-on-crime guys) and the Democrats are the Mommy Party (the gang that worries about health care, education, and such.) Bush was striving to be both Ma and Pa. Seeking the holy grail of most presidents–a strategic political realignment–Bush is attempting to turn the GOP into the Both Parents party, which smites enemies abroad and then tucks you in when the economy falters.

The Democrats have already signaled they have no intention of undermining Bush’s daddy credentials. So far they have pledged no-questions-asked loyalty to Bush as the commander-in-chief. Will any prominent Dems now challenge Bush on his intention to expand–unilaterally, if need be–the war on terrorism, or on his blank-check attitude toward military spending? Regarding foreign policy matters, Bush has rendered it tougher for the Democrats by making sure not to sound only like a go-it-alone militarist. He pledged to double the size of the Peace Corps, as part of an initiative to create a USA Freedom Corps, which, he said, “will expand the good efforts” of AmeriCorps. Thus, Bush was celebrating and building upon the accomplishments of John Kennedy and, yes, Bill Clinton. And he even got a bit Wilsonian. He loftily remarked, “America will always stand firm for the non-negotiable demands of human dignity: the rule of law, limits on the power of the state, respect for women, private property, free speech, equal justice, and religious tolerance. America will take the side of brave men and women who advocate these values around the world–including the Islamic world.” Now there’s something for the princes of Saudi Arabia to consider, as well as Bush’s not-so-freedom-loving allies in Turkey and Uzbekistan. The President just placed the United States on the side of dissidents in these nations and elsewhere. Was he serious? (Don’t email me; that’s a rhetorical question.)

So what was House minority leader Dick Gephardt to do when he delivered the Democratic response to Bush’s speech? He surgically attached his party to the President on matters of war and homeland protection. (There is “no daylight between us” on the war of terrorism, he assured the public.) And when he offered the Democrat’s domestic agenda, it did not seem that distant from what Bush had proposed: helping the unemployed, recruiting high-quality teachers, protecting pensions. Gephardt, of course, referenced that particular energy company.

There were a few differences. Gephardt advocated raising the minimum wage and providing a tax deduction for the first $10,000 spent on college tuition. He took a glancing shot at Bush by opposing “gambling” on Social Security privatization. And he cried out for campaign finance reform. But Gephardt presented little to distinguish Democrats from Bush in a meta way. Confronting a wartime president with an approval rating somewhere in the area of 137 percent, Gephardt and other Democrats cannot bring themselves to bash Bush as a tool of Big Bidness–or a conservative ideologue or anything else. Gephardt did not question Bush’s intentions or overall aims. He did not even mention the tilted-to-the-rich tax cuts Bush rammed through Congress.

Perhaps Democrats are hoping that in this election year Americans who vote will eventually pay sufficient attention to the policy fights of Washington to conclude the Democrats are indeed the better mommies and that voters will believe that even during a war economic concerns come first. But with the Democrats praising Bush’s performance as a daddy, and with Bush using his wartime-enhanced standing to score points as a mommy, there is not much of a contest at the moment between Bush and the Democrats.

“Those of us who have lived through these challenging times have been changed by them,” Bush said toward the end of his address. That surely is true for him. As crass as it may be to suggest, he was lucky September 11 happened on his watch. (It’s easy to believe those post-9/11 reports that quoted Clinton saying he wished he had been confronted with such a tragedy.) But, as this speech demonstrated, Bush–now an amalgamation of TR, WW, FDR, JFK, WJC and (don’t forget) RR–and his posse have been damn smart in figuring out how to make the most of it

David Cornis Mother Jones' Washington bureau chief. Until 2007, he was Washington editor of The Nation.


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