Who would have thought? It's another October Surprise! But this time, no fake-raising of the Terror Alert chart to scare voters. Former president George W. Bush has returned! Twelve days before the election. On a silver platter for Democrats. Telling voters that his greatest failure while president was not privatizing Social Security!
George Bush, Republican icon, is the gift that keeps on giving.
Oh, sure, most of those gifts you'd love to return unopened - the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression, two wars that include one started on a lie, approving torture, doubling the national debt to $10.7 trillion, creating a $482 billion budget deficit from a surplus, and causing disastrously-high unemployment.
But this gift? O it's an early Christmas! Fa la la.
Among other things, it gives lie to the snarky quip from Republicans on behalf of Mr. Bush - "Miss Me Yet?" Sarah Palin, the former half-term Republican governor, has had joyful fun describing how much she misses George Bush. John Cornyn (R-TX), chair of the Republican Senatorial Committee, told C-SPAN, "I think a lot of people are looking back with a little -- with more fondness on President Bush's administration."
Yet somehow, Republicans have avoided embracing Mr. Bush's glorious return. Go figure. But then, it's always easy to glorify the distantly remembered past, but once it reappears in full view the angst comes rushing back. It's like pining for an old boyfriend, and then after running into him, agonizingly remember, "Oh, my God!!!," why you despised the guy and broke up.
When George Bush left office, he had a 20% approval rating. (By comparison, in the latest Newsweek poll, Barack Obama is up six points, to 54% approve, with only 40% unapproving.)
And now George Bush is back. And the voting public gets to remember how oh-so-very-little it misses him.
The thing is, he makes it too easy. Perhaps that's what comes when you don't have Dick Cheney and Karl Rove whispering in your ear. Consider:
At a financial convention in Chicago last Thursday, Mr. Bush defended his $700 billion TARP package, explaining. "I did not want to be a president overseeing a depression greater than the Great Depression."
Who would?! Instead he left it to his successor. The cluelessness and total coldness of this statement is breathtaking. Avoiding a "depression greater than the Great Depression" is a pathetic accomplishment, as if "second worst" is okay. But more deplorable, his suggestion of success blithely ignores the financial disaster he did oversee.
Yet better still for Democrats, by acknowledging that it was he, George Bush, who created TARP, it explodes the myth that it was Barack Obama. (Mind you, many consider these payments important. But TARP is despised by today's Far Right and members of the Koch-sponsored Tea Party corporations, so, for them it's important to give full credit where due. George Bush.)
But it's even better still for Democrats. Because Mr. Bush also said, amazingly, "I would like to be remembered as a guy who had a set of priorities, and was willing to live by those priorities," adding, "my biggest accomplishment is that I kept the country safe amidst a real danger."
How honestly clueless does one have to be to say this? Having priorities and living by them sounds noble, but it's the same thing likely said by Saddham Hussein or Osama bin Laden. Or Dick Cheney. Or Lord Voldemort. Or Count Chocula. What's important is what the priorities are. But worse, to say he "kept the country safe" is spitting on the graves of the 3,000 who died when America was attacked as he sat reading My Pet Goat after ignoring a Presidential Daily Briefing.
But it's even better than that for Democrats. Because at his speech, Mr. Bush also told the audience - are you ready? - that his biggest failure as president was...not passing Social Security reform.
Never mind that he doesn't view crushing the U.S. economy as his greatest failure, or having American soil attacked. No, his top failure was not privatizing Social Security - an idea that a recent Wall Street Journal poll shows 68% of Americans view either "very uncomfortably" or unfavorably.
Some estimates are that seniors might have lost up to 40% of their retirement funds if he'd succeeded, had they needed them when the stock market crashed.
"Miss Me Yet?"
You can almost hear the agonized gasps from Republicans nationwide when seeing Lazarus rise this close to the election, in time to remind independent and moderate voters how horrifically bad George Bush and the Republican Party was.
But even worse, this is the start of Mr. Bush's book tour for his autobiography. In time to remind those undecided voters what going back to the Bush Era would actually mean for America. And it ties George Bush directly to the words of John Boehner (R-OH), the man hoping to be Speaker of the House, when he recently presented the GOP "Pledge to America" -
"We are not going to be any different than what we've been."
His words.
And now we have George W. Bush's.
And that is the most important thing about George Bush re-appearing, just in time for the elections. And Halloween. Because it gives full body and memory to precisely what the Republicans want to do if elected, what the Far Right and Koch-sponsored Tea Party corporations have on their agenda, and what return to the days of George W. Bush are about.
"Miss Me Yet?"
Boo!
And thanks!!
Robert J. Elisberg
Tidbit Bay
Robert J. Elisberg
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- Robert J. Elisberg has been a regular contributor to the Huffington Post since 2006. His writing has appeared in such publications as the Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Daily News, and Los Angeles Magazine, and served on the editorial board for the Writers Guild of America. He has contributed political writing to the anthology, "Clued in on Politics," 3rd edition (CQ Press).
Born in Chicago, he attended Northwestern University and received his MFA from UCLA, where he was twice awarded the Lucille Ball Award for comedy screenwriting. Most recently, he wrote the comedy-adventure screenplay, “The Wild Roses,” for Callahan Filmworks.
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Comments
I doubt very many people who find themselves ticking a few R's on their ballot next week will be doing so because they have fond memories of GWB.
PT Barnum was wrong: you CAN fool all the people, all the time; they really ARE that stupid.
They believe what Rushbo and the Tea Party tell them!
could help a bit.
i'll have to go check his amazon rank and see how it's doing. i have not seen him on tv.
Do NOT fuck with me.
It's MY money.
This punk bush is/was/always will be wrong about everything.
Remember your words when the Rethuglicans take back the elections. As Mr Elisberg quoted Speaker-wannabe Mr Boehner: "We are not going to be any different than what we've been."
I'm no fan of Obama's either, but neither do I knowingly and willingly poke out my OTHER eye when I've blinded myself once. These are mostly problems of Dubya's making. Had Jesus Christ Himself been elected, He couldn't have gotten us out of this mess, not right away anyway.
Mr Cheney would be proud of you, knowing once again that Americans are still afraid of the boogeyman. That was his entire schtick: keep Americans afraid so they won't notice how we're robbing them blind and destroying their country.
Yes, THEIR country--OUR country. I guess Cheney, Rove ad nauseum plan to fly to Mars w/their ill-gotten gains once they're re-elected and able to punch the red button...
Think about just the major blunders by the Repubs (post Bush blunder of course) – first John McCain is selected to run against the Dems and he picks as a running mate, some moronic, obscure, buffoon, simply because she’s female in hopes to counter the votes for Hilary.
Then the venomous, idiotic tea party appears, not only embarrassing the Republican’s, but the entire damned country as well.
Next comes Arizona’s Jan Brewer defying the Constitution, I guess following in the path of King George II, using her own version of shock doctrine to contribute to the Patriot Act’s reduction of civil liberties by passing AZ’s immigration law. But she had “done so much” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b65i1IXHkwE
And Christine O’Donnell, a seemingly cloned Sarah Palin (except she’s cuter). Hell, she even dresses like Palin. But she’s not a witch http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uqQJB8DR_Zo
I’m beginning to wonder if all these people are actually Democrats covertly masquerading as Republican idiots to help all the morons out there to understand the err of their ways.
This should be more accurately worded as "giving those who want to invest their own Social Security accounts privately the freedom to do so."
What you don't understand is this would actually have the effect of saving social security for people like you who prefer to keep their accounts the way they are.
Generally people don't understand this, and this misunderstanding is reflected in the polls that you cite.
Obama and Bush have crossed paths in the popularity polls of several states. Obama is desperately sinking to new lows in campaign rhetoric even evoking metaphors based on segregation. An air of impending defeat hangs heavy on Democrats which many seek to dilute by distancing themselves from Obama and his policies.
To pretend or suppose that the release of Bush's autobio will change a single vote to choose Obama is wishful thinking at best.
American voters hardly needs to go back two years to conjure up visions of bad times. They wake to them daily.
Maybe the RNC is really mary lin, Sheldon1027Shel, et al...