George W. Bush and Bill Clinton: the Ghosts of the Presidential Election
These two largely absent figures will be haunting the campaign for the White House in the coming days
It seems fitting that, in the run-up to Halloween, two spectral presidents are haunting the campaign for the White House—George W. Bush and Bill Clinton.
Bush is rarely seen on the stump in person. Few GOP candidates want to appear with him, except at private fundraisers, because his policies have become so unpopular and fewer than 3 in 10 Americans think he is doing a good job. But Bush casts a very long shadow. He is a regular target for Barack Obama and other Democratic candidates and, increasingly, for Republican nominee John McCain. Day in and day out, Bush is being blamed for America's economic meltdown, for the soaring budget deficits, for the Iraq war, and for America's lowered standing around the world.
Even Bush's attempt to address the international financial crisis by convening a meeting of world leaders next month is being met with derision. "It's like the captain of the Titanic holding a seminar on how to navigate the Atlantic shipping lanes," says Matthew Dowd, a former Bush political adviser who broke with him over the Iraq war.
McCain had been walking a tightrope between criticizing the president and remaining loyal to his party's two-time standard-bearer. But Bush's popularity is at such a low ebb that, in the past week, McCain has jumped away from Bush more than ever.
On Monday, the Arizona senator told supporters in Hershey, Pa., "We cannot spend the next four years as we have spent much of the last eight: hoping for our luck to change at home and abroad. We have to act. We need a new direction, and we have to fight for it." McCain argues that while he and Bush share a "Republican philosophy," he has broken with the president on some major issues, such as McCain's willingness to aggressively combat climate change and his support for campaign finance reform.
Obama is stepping up his criticism of Bush and is forever attempting to tie McCain to the incumbent. In Chester, Pa., on Tuesday, Obama said, "Now, in the closing days of this campaign, my opponent is trying to distance himself from the president he has faithfully supported 90 percent of the time. He's supported four of the five Bush budgets that have taken us from the surpluses of the Clinton years to the largest deficits in history. John McCain has ridden shotgun as George Bush has driven our economy toward a cliff, and now he wants to take the wheel and step on the gas."
White House officials declined comment on Bush as a lightning rod, saying they want to keep out of the campaign debate.
Not so for Bill Clinton. He is back on the campaign trail, again, seeking a measure of redemption. He was very critical of Obama—some Democrats said harshly divisive—during the primaries. But he is now starting a final campaign swing for the man who defeated his wife for the Democratic nomination.
Obama and Bill Clinton will appear together Wednesday in the Orlando area, and the former president has a full schedule of other events designed to boost turnout for Obama and the party's other candidates in Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Ohio, New Hampshire, and elsewhere.
As the campaign builds to Election Day on Tuesday, Clinton is sure to make news. The former president has up to now seemed relatively ambivalent about Obama, especially when compared with the strong endorsements given to Obama by Hillary Clinton.
Last month, the former president praised McCain as a "great man" in an interview with NBC's Meet the Press, but he added that Obama's policies are superior to McCain's. In addition, Clinton said, Obama has shown "a remarkable ability to learn and grow...and he just keeps getting better."
Clinton added: "I am developing a really good relationship with Senator Obama."
The nature of that relationship will become clearer in the next few days.
Reader Comments
Government Check and Balance
If Obama is elected the U. S. will become a dictatorship with Democratic Party controlling all branches of the government. The political system will be without check and balance. The Democrats will be free to pass any legislature taking away all the freedom of all Americans.
Bill Clinton Is The Worse In The World Environmental History, By: Jordan C. Fan, Prophet Of Environment.
Bill Clinton And The Democrats The Worse In The World Environmental History.
By: Jordan C. Fan, Prophet Of Environment.
To begin this discussion, Bill Clinton and the Democrats had rejected the Kyoto Treaty to reduce "Green House" gases. The Clinton Administration never had any intention of slowing down the economy, development and expansion which wasting the largest amount of natural resources, most pollution and destruction to the Environment. While the Nixon Administration had initiated the EPA and subsequent Environmental works were performed by Reagan. Clinton never initiate any projects and improvement while the Democrat falsely claimed they are the political party for the Environment which was certainly a lie and deception. The Democratic is a total racially controlled political party with no commitment to Environment but devoted exclusively for the some racial gruops to get rich at the expense of the Environment.
It is definitely not the intention of the Environment or God for Obama and any Democrats to be elected to any office after such crimes have been commited against the Environment and God during the Clinton Administration. Try pushing Democrats into any American government office will only result in great disasters such as the Great Depression II we are current facing in addition to endangering themselves.
Rubbish
What a load of rubbish talk. Obama has the far better environmental policies than McCain has. Lets all vote for America's very best future. Vote Obama/Biden!!!
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