George W Bush: was he really that bad?

Loading

Alex Spillius @ The Telegraph:

It is George W Bush’s particular achievement to be disliked by both sides in American politics

Democrats of course excoriate the damage done to the budget by waging two wars while cutting taxes, his conduct after Hurricane Katrina and his shoot from the hip style, not to mention that fact that he presided over the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression.

His own Republican party utterly rejected him during the 2012 campaign. Tea Party types saw him as a big-spender guilty of extending federal government, while few who once stood with him were prepared to defend his military achievements.

But presidents tend to look better, or at least different, from a distance, and with the opening of his presidential centre in Texas, there are suggestions that Bush the younger may be more fondly remembered than was thought possible when he left the White House in January 2009 as the most unpopular president in living memory.

He was certainly more socially liberal than his critics give him credit for. No Child Left Behind, whatever its faults and funding, was a centralised attempt to raise educational standards across the board.

A new prescription drug benefit scheme may have been expensive (though Bush himself argues its cost has been exaggerated) but its aim was to make medicines more affordable for the elderly.

Bush failed in his most ambitious social reform of immigration law, but he was defeated primarily by the Right of his party, not the Democrats.

The Obama administration may blame Bush for the crippled economy it inherited, but it has for the most part been unable to rescind his tax cuts. For the time being, the tax argument has been won by conservatives. Liberals may have berated Bush for the security policies of his “war on terror”, but they have been continued and in some regards expanded by President Obama.

Writing in the Washington Post recently, Jennifer Rubin argued that “Bush seems to be a more accomplished Republican figure in the Obama era”, while summarising his successes.

Bush himself has told the Dallas Morning News, in an exclusive interview, that he still stands for the “compassionate conservatism” that he ran on in 2000.
“I’m comfortable with what I did,” he said. “I’m comfortable with who I am.”

On the debit side, the list remains heavy. His tax cuts and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq produced budget deficits, which were compounded by a recession and economic stimulus spending. Bush inherited a $5.7 trillion debt, which became a $10.6 trillion debt, and bequeathed his successor an economy on the verge of collapse.

Obama duly expanded health care and stimulus spending, endured a second recession, deepening the debt still further.

Read more

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
5 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Ask the 500,00 or so he killed or displaced in Iraq. Ask the American soldier who died in his lie of a war. Ask the middle class whose economy he crashed.

John, he single handedly crashed the economy huh? What about Bawny Frank, Andrew Cuomo, The CRA and the complicity of too many Democrats to name here. They were all just observers I suppose? You are I moron, I suppose.

Oh by the way, John. your heart truly aches for the Iraqis killed or displaced by the Iraq war? or could they perhaps be one of those groups of people you only care about out of convenience? If that’s not the case, then you must be equally outraged over the killing of Coptic Christians by the Muslim Brotherhood. Are you?

Hey John, what were the most endearing traits Saddam Hussein had which you admire? I’ll bet it was his acid dipping of his opponents. Or maybe, and I think this was your fav. He put people into wood chippers. Head first if they liked you. I’ll bet you defended Hitler. Are you also a fan of the Taliban in Afghanistan? I know you liked the fact they shot little girls for going to school. I truly hope you and all of the people you are related to get to live under one of these monsters on day. You would pray for someone like George Walker Bush to come to your rescue.

@John:

Ask the 500,00 or so he killed or displaced in Iraq

How many of those 500K were killed by Islamists? How many were killed by their own people? You don’t know the answer to that so you just accuse Bush of being the culprit.

And what about Afghanistan, the “good” war according to Obama. We were there 8 years under Bush for an average of 78 dead a year. Under Obama there has been an average of 31 a month. But then, to left wingers like yourself, dead American soldiers under Bush is a horrific problem; dead American soldiers under Obama is simply a fact of war.