Saturday, November 21, 2009

Politics

Bush's Strategy to Stay 'Relevant'

White House aides see a president who still gets his way

Posted June 27, 2008

To his critics, it may seem a flagrant example of spin or a bizarre case of denial, but President Bush and his senior staff say he is having quite a successful final year in office. He has blocked Democratic attempts to slash funding for the Iraq war and has stopped what he considers unwise constraints on commanders in the field. He is headed for a victory on legislation to authorize eavesdropping on terrorism suspects. And he seems on the verge of getting a compromise on a housing bill to alleviate the problems of Americans who are having trouble making mortgage payments. "For the president to be this relevant this late is a pleasant surprise to us," says a senior White House official.

A big reason for Bush's continuing influence, the official argues, is that he proved he was willing to veto legislation he opposed even if it was popular, like the recent farm bill. Once he showed he was serious, Democrats backed off their plans to confront him rather than face a series of override votes they couldn't win. "It's a mistake to underestimate the institutional power of the presidency, and he has utilized that power intelligently," the senior adviser says.

There's another aspect of the White House's upbeat mood. When he travels around the country, Bush feels less "antipathy" than he used to in the crowds, along the motorcade routes, and expressed by the individuals who talk to him at his events. "He feels there has been a shift in attitudes out there that's not reflected in polling data," the aide says.

Democrats say Bush is living in a dream world if he fails to recognize how unpopular he is and how much he is dragging down his party and GOP presidential candidate John McCain. In fact, advisers to Barack Obama say Bush is a big reason why Obama's message of change resonates so widely and why the Democrats now lead the GOP in voter preference. "None of this is possible without George Bush," says Cornell Belcher, Obama's pollster.

Reinforcing his point, the latest AP-Ipsos poll, released in mid-June, found that only 29 percent of Americans approved of Bush's job performance, one of the lowest presidential ratings ever. White House officials, by the way, say they aren't sure such polls should be believed because the questions are biased and the population samples are flawed.

Reader Comments

All here

How are you. You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is an ocean; if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty.

I am from San and learning to read in English, give please true I wrote the following sentence: "Sifting through all the ideas of how to make money online can be time consuming and very confusing."

With love ;), Christy.

And we bought it

It has been partly our fault that we have well... A President that doesn't know how long the wall ahs fallen on him.

Let's just hope that when the history books are written, Hubert Humphery and Richard Nixon will pale to the lambasting George W. Bush will get...

It's like well...Daddy can only get you out of just sooo much, and the smart brother will now not have any future in politics.

Bush's Legacy

Do nothing when one of our greatest cities was destroyed? How about the war on terrorism? that's nothing isn't it? What would the omniscient, infallible john kerry have done in that situation?

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