Getting It Right in 2006,
and Beyond
Bush and the GOP need to get
past the Old Media
If President Bush is to have a legislatively meaningful
remaining term in office, he must know the difference between
the people, and the press.
In the Eighties, when diplomat Clark Clifford unceremoniously
dubbed Ronald Reagan as an “amiable dunce,” and journalist
Nicholas von Hoffman petulantly quipped that it was “humiliating
to think of this unlettered, self-assured bumpkin [Reagan] being
our president,” Reagan lost little sleep.
Besides losing little sleep, Reagan also lost none of that most-precious
of commodities: time. Reagan just went around--or over--the collective
heads of the liberal press to connect with those who truly matter:
the American people. Reagan knew that, in the end, it is a person’s
character and real-life actions that people make judgments upon,
and not from the editorial pages of the liberal-toned New York
Times. Reagan knew that those pages were for the societal
egalitarian--or culturally attuned--elites that read them, and
not the masses in general. With Reagan, people readily believed
it when he said it was “morning again in America,”
a not-so-veiled reminder of the misery-indexed presidency
of Jimmy Carter.
Twenty years later, another Republican President bestrides the
halls of Washington, and comes to meet the same resistance that
Ronald Reagan did, but with different results. When George W.
Bush came to Washington in 2001, he did so saddled with the leaden
polarization of a post-election battle between himself, and former
Democratic vice-president, Al Gore. Bush introduced, and then
attempted to govern with, his wholly sincere yet sophomoric “new
tone,” a Texan-style mix of compassion and pragmatism, coupled
with good-ole-boy proclivities.
While Bush may have charmed the boots off of Texas Democrats
as Governor, no such bipartisanship was to be achieved in the
Beltway. Washington is some 1500 miles away from the Texas State
House, yet it is a whole lot further away than that from civility.
Bush would come to learn this soon enough. If anything, the last
two years alone have been a textbook study on the articulateness
of the “educated and enlightened” crowd in Washington,
explaining to Bush just what they thought of his “new tone.”
It is as if the presidential wardrobe came equipped with the standard
“kick me” placard posted just northward of the presidential
derrière.
Out of Bush’s five years in office, this last year was
probably his personal worst. Almost immediately after introducing
his reforms for Social Security, Bush seemed to be always swimming
upstream. It is easy to blame the old media, who, through their
negative parlaying of even the most innocuously optimistic of
events, have daily blazed a trail for willing congressional Democrats
to follow.
If Bush is to make 2006 a more legislatively memorable year than
2005, he must continue his recent foray into raw “party
politics.” By branding Democrats as being “irresponsible”
as he did in his recent speeches regarding the war on terrorism
and Iraq, Bush has begun to see an ascent in his polls, which
at one point were in the low thirties in job approval. (http://washingtontimes.com/national/20051214-115710-4904r.htm)
Also, there is the conservative base to consider. It may never
be done, but one wonders what kind of numbers would come up if
this poll question were asked of the base:
Would you say upon seeing George W. Bush select Harriet Miers
to the Supreme Court in October, 2005, that you--as a conservative--are
now “much more likely,” “more likely,”
“much less likely,” or “less likely” to
support the GOP in future congressional and presidential elections?
In my mind, the replacement of Miers for 3rd Circuit Court of
Appeals jurist Samuel Alito was nothing short of political divineness.
It saved the Bush presidency, and enabled Bush to reestablish
himself with his base, and the moderates that voted for him in
2004. It set Bush up to be able to withstand the withering attack
by Democrats and the media, and successfully counterattack with
Iraq, and the war on terrorism. With the State of the Union address
approaching, Bush must lay out an appropriate--and doable--conservative
agenda for 2006, and beyond.
Bush may not be running again in 2008, but conservatism is forever
running, crafting, and breaking new ground. With these last three
years, Bush has an opportunity to shape the political zeitgeist,
and curtail liberalism for a generation to come. This is more
than possible, and to some, it is expected. Look no further than
the Reagan presidency to see how powerful a single, optimistic
voice can be when applied within the exhortation of conservative
principles. There was no Rush Limbaugh for most of Reagan’s
term; no Internet to fact-check a liberal-poisoned media; no balanced
reporting of a Fox News to help tell both sides of a given issue.
In 1980, there was only Ronald Reagan, and his conservative principles.
Twenty years later, it is George W. Bush, and these same conservative
principles. Bush, and maybe the GOP in general, will not have
a better opportunity than they do now at getting it right in Washington.
We have talked about the Republican Party ruling as the majority
party in Washington. Let us now talk of a president leading that
majority. Success in 2006--and beyond--starts and stops with George
W. Bush.
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Citizen Politican"
Politics came to Vincent in 1992, when he became
intensely interested in the presidential fall debates. Starting
to put his thoughts down on paper in the fall of 2000, Vincent
revels in the joy of writing opinion and commentary. "I think
the most profound statement I ever heard was when Rush Limbaugh
said, 'Words mean things.' Simple, yes, but no less true for it.”
One of Ronald Reagan's “Citizen Politicians,” Vincent
seeks to pen today's political discourse with integrity, and a
bit of levity when applicable.
Vincent writes for a host of web sites as a featured or guest
writer, including Gopusa.com, Newsmax.com, Opinioneditorials.com,
acuf.org, ChronWatch.com, Intellectualconservative.com, and is
a staff writer for CommonConservative.com. Vincent’s work
has been cited by U.S. Congressman, radio talk show hosts, and
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as well as print media. Your comments, yea or nay, are always
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