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The Most Dangerous President
Ever
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| Harold Meyerson is the
editor-at-large of The American
Propsect. |
I miss Ronald Reagan.
I know, I know: Reagan was our first president to proclaim
government the problem, to cut taxes massively on the rich, to
deliberately create a deficit so immense that the government's
impoverishment did indeed become a problem. He waged a war of
dubious merit and clear illegality in Central America; he pandered
to the most bigoted elements in American society.
The United States would be a far better place had he not been
elected.
But politics deals in comparatives, not absolutes. And when I
compare Reagan with his ideological heir currently occupying the
White House, I'll take the Gipper, hands down. George W. Bush is
much the meaner president (and man). He is far more factional than
Reagan was. And he is incomparably more dangerous than Reagan or any
other president in this nation's history.
Forces that first assembled and ideas that first appeared during
Reagan's presidency have now had two decades to develop -- to grow
more powerful and more marginal simultaneously. That is one reason
why Bush is so dangerous now. Policies that were but twinkles in the
Reaganites' eyes -- a war on the mixed economy and the multilateral
world order -- have reappeared fully grown in Bush's presidency.
What Bush seems determined to extirpate are the basic forms of
common security in America. His particular targets seem
disproportionately the handiwork of years ending in "5." From 1965,
there's Medicare, which he seeks to subordinate to the
pay-as-you-can calculus of HMOs; from 1945, there's the United
Nations and the whole structure of postwar alliances, which he seeks
to subordinate to an imperial America freed from international laws
and treaties; from 1935, there's Social Security, which he still
seeks to privatize, and the Wagner Act, whose pro-labor tilt he
seeks to obliterate in his tax policy.
Underpinning these assaults is a decided preference for a more
social (and international) Darwinistic order -- though in this
uniquely Old Testament White House, Darwinism is the love whose name
cannot be spoken.
If this is an agenda that the Reaganites could only dream of,
it's just partly because they didn't have enough support in
Congress. It's also because they had too many fair-weather friends
across the nation, many of whom would never have contemplated such
radical reorderings. The Republican congressional leaders in
Reagan's time were Bob Michel in the House and Howard Baker in the
Senate -- moderates, respectively, from the Midwest (Illinois) and
the Upper South (Tennessee). Reagan won election in 1980 by a 10
percent margin over Jimmy Carter in the popular vote and a 489-to-49
majority in the Electoral College. He prevailed over Carter and John
Anderson in every region of the country (only New England was
close), winning both California and New York.
Bush, of course, is not even a plurality president, and his
victory in the Electoral College was entirely regional in nature. In
the two decades since Reagan, the Republican Party has grown smaller
but deeper -- becoming above all the party of the white South, as
well as the Mountain States, the depopulating prairie and
church-going America. But for House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert
(R-Ill.), the Republican legislative leaders in Bush's time -- Rep.
Tom DeLay (R-Texas), Rep. Dick Armey (R-Texas), Sen. Trent Lott
(R-Miss.), Sen. Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) -- have been southern
right-wingers. Bush's nonplurality is less diverse and more
embattled than Reagan's majority. And Bush himself is less
confident, more confrontational than Reagan.
Reagan, in Hendrik Hertzberg's memorable phrase, was "a closet
tolerant." While he'd grown up in the small-town Midwest and
inherited its provincialism, he'd spent his adult years in the
fleshpots of Hollywood. Bush's provincialism, by contrast, was the
result of his own existential choices. His grandfather was a pillar
of the old Wall Street-dominated GOP; his father -- as special envoy
to China, CIA director and UN ambassador before becoming vice
president and then president -- was as cosmopolitan a figure as the
old Republican establishment had produced in years. That W. traveled
to Europe just once before his election as governor of Texas
bespeaks a curiosity about and comfort level with the wider world
that is almost a rebuke to preceding generations of Bushes.
At heart, the current Bush is a warrior for a region, a faction,
a part of America. No national calamity has tempered his zeal for
his factional agenda. His determination to reward the "investor
class" (that is, still, the rich), to appoint socially reactionary
judges, to favor his business cronies has not waned in wartime. His
desire to make Americans reliant on the market, rather than social
savings, has not been deterred by the worst decline in the markets
since the Great Depression.
Throughout American history, presidents have downplayed the most
divisive elements of their agenda at times of crisis. As the nation
moved toward World War II, Franklin Roosevelt announced a cessation
to New Deal experimentation and brought in Republicans to run the
War and Navy departments. Lincoln came to power in a disintegrating
nation and appointed all his major Republican rivals -- such
national leaders as William Seward and Salmon Chase -- to his
cabinet. (Imagine George W. Bush giving the Department of Defense to
John McCain!) Bush, by contrast, has in his policies and
appointments remained resolutely a president of faction. Colin
Powell is the one exception here, but consider whom exactly Powell
represents in the Bush coalition: Bush's father.
This factional tilt is partly a matter of strategy. Bush and his
political consigliere, Karl Rove, place great stress on rewarding
the Republican right-wing base. As they see it, George Bush Senior
was defeated in 1992 because he broke his pledge never to raise
taxes, thereby alienating the conservative activists without whom a
Republican cannot win. In fact, the senior Bush's failure to
alleviate, or even address, a serious recession is what cost him the
election, but Rove is convinced that by governing on the right,
providing military security for all and voicing a threadbare
rhetoric of compassion, his boy George can win re-election.
And so, by strategy, inclination and conviction, George W. Bush
has been pursuing a reckless, even ridiculous, but always right-wing
agenda -- shredding a global-security structure at a time requiring
unprecedented international integration, shredding a domestic safety
net at a time when the private sector provides radically less
security than it did a generation ago. No American president has
ever played quite so fast and loose with the well-being of the
American people.
In foreign policy, the Bush administration seems above all a
coalition of religious and secular millenarians. For many
fundamentalists involved in Republican politics, the United Nations
and other instruments of "world government" are literally satanic.
For the almost entirely secular neoconservatives who provide most of
the intellectual direction for this administration, the United
Nations, the European Union, the International Criminal Court and
kindred institutions are all obstacles to the emergence of
unchallenged American hegemony. The neos don't view the coming
American empire as God's kingdom, of course; they see it -- better
yet -- as their own.
But the neos', and the administration's, ability to see anything
other than their own desires is in question. The fact that U.S.
power has long been enhanced by America's alliances and its
reputation for liberal egalitarianism is nowhere on their radar
screen. And a couple of weeks into the war, it's now apparent just
how ideologically blinkered the administration's view of Iraq
actually was, and how that view has already imperiled our troops,
the Iraqi people and any larger strategic objectives the war was
supposed to serve.
In its overreliance on a small number of neo-friendly Iraqi
expatriates to gauge the mood of the Iraqi people, in its belief
that our forces would be greeted as liberators, the administration
has made almost the identical error that the Eisenhower and Kennedy
administrations made at the Bay of Pigs. In each instance, ideology
and hope were substituted for factual assessment; in each instance,
the people have not risen to join U.S.-backed forces (in Cuba) or
U.S. forces (in Iraq) to overthrow their tyrant. In Iraq the
administration has underestimated the size and intensity of the
forces committed to fighting for Saddam Hussein -- forgetting
everything we have learned about the infrastructure of a modern
totalitarian state. It has forgotten, too, the power of nationalism
in human affairs, especially in postcolonial nations. And in
proposing to subordinate postwar Iraq to direct Pentagon control, it
has all but ensured that our liberation (in the administration's
assessment) of Iraq will be viewed as a neocolonial occupation, by
Iraqis and just about everybody else. In so doing, it has inflamed
anti-American sentiment throughout the world, and in the Arab world
particularly, for years if not decades to come. Finally, because
this is explicitly a war of choice rather than necessity, and
because we have chosen to fight over the popular opposition of
virtually every other nation, we are naked before our enemies. As an
already apprehensive Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has noted, we
have likely created a hundred new Osama bin Ladens with this war.
Some experienced Washington journalists -- Robert Dreyfuss in
this magazine [see "Just the Beginning," TAP, April 2003], Joshua
Marshall in The Washington Monthly -- have spent time with the
neocons and come back to report that growing Islamic militance in
the Arab world is precisely what the neos want; it justifies the
United States in extending the conflict to other nations until the
entire region is transformed. In a sense, this parallels the beliefs
of the growing number of religious Armageddonists who see chaos in
the Middle East as a prelude to the coming rapture. It's hard to say
which idea is loonier, or more dangerous.
For Bush himself, overthrowing Saddam Hussein serves political,
ideological and personal agendas. Politically, Hussein is the best
available substitute for the unlocatable bin Laden -- and even if we
can't find Hussein, we can at least, as is not the case with bin
Laden, depose him. Ideologically, the war and the doctrine of
preemption express the militarism, unilateralism and fear of
international institutions that characterize much of the Republican
base in the South and the Mountain States. Personally, by
overthrowing Hussein in this manner, Bush completes the unfinished
work of his father while consigning to history Bush Senior's world
of alliances and multilateralism.
No wonder Bush seems at ease with this war -- at least more at
ease than with the diplomacy that preceded it.
As with his foreign policy, no level of factual refutation seems
to make a dent in Bush's economic policies. His programs not only
shift the burden of Americans' economic security to an increasingly
deregulated private economy, they do so at a time when the
deregulated private economy is singularly unable to provide economic
security. Given how the market has performed over the past two
years, you might think that that would slow the course of the
administration's economic agenda. But, as with foreign policy, that
would understate the role of blind faith within George W. Bush's
White House.
Behind Bush's economic policies lurk a novel political strategy
and a malignant ideological viewpoint. Politically, the
administration is counting on its proposed elimination of the
dividend tax to win the support of what it says is the fast-growing
and newly decisive shareholder electorate. Here again wish outruns
reality: As Jeff Faux has noted in these pages [see "Who Gets to
Retire?", TAP, June 17, 2002], fewer than half of the private-sector
employees in the United States have any kind of pension or savings
plan on the job. Only the wealthiest 10 percent of Americans have
major investments in their 401(k)s, and it was only they who truly
flourished in the boom of the 1990s. That leaves roughly 40 percent
of Americans for whom stock values matter, but probably not nearly
so much as wages, and 50 percent for whom stock values have no
direct effect whatsoever.
Still, even if the vision of a shareholder majority is a chimera,
rewarding the rich remains the linchpin policy of playing to the
Republican base -- in this case, its funder base. So, too, is
lifting regulations on those sectors of American business that find
regulations most onerous: low-wage employers, extractive industries
-- the industries of the historically low-wage South. Indeed, an
animus against wage labor is at the center of Bush economics. In
proposing to eliminate the dividend tax and the estate tax, and to
enable families to shelter up to $60,000 in investment income every
year, Bush is essentially proposing to eliminate taxation on all
income except wages. Bush also opposes any federal increase in the
minimum wage, unless a state can opt out of it.
But then, as Michael Lind reminds us in his new book, Made in
Texas, Bush's Texas, like the South generally, is historically and
currently a low-wage, nonunion region with an abysmal level of
social protections; only federal military and aerospace projects
have paid blue-collar workers a decent wage there. When Bush
commends the privatization of Social Security or the HMO-ization of
Medicare, it's worth noting that the percentage of Texans under 65
without medical insurance for all or part of 2001-2002 -- 39.9
percent -- was the highest in the land.
That government which governs in secret is inherently dangerous.
Contracts go to cronies, regulations get lifted, troops get
deployed, all with no public scrutiny. Halliburton is currently
putting out fires in Iraqi oil wells, on a contract that didn't go
out for bid.
Which brings us to Dick Cheney, the most influential figure in
the administration after Bush and the most influential vice
president in U.S. history. By a number of accounts, it was Cheney
who convinced Bush, early last July, that we had to go to war with
Iraq. But Cheney's most distinctive contribution to this
administration is his penchant for near-absolute executive power.
Serving in the House during the Reagan administration -- and as the
first leader of the more militant conservative forces that later
came to power with House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) -- Cheney
argued that the president should be able to back the Contras' war in
Nicaragua free from congressional oversight. As Bush Senior's
defense secretary, he contended that the president needed no
congressional approval to wage the Gulf War. As vice president,
Cheney has insisted that the composition of his energy-policy task
force be kept secret, and opposed going to the United Nations for a
second resolution. In an administration determined to free American
power from all constraint and business power from most regulation,
Cheney's particular contribution has been to keep power as unchecked
-- and often as unseen -- as possible.
So where, in the panoply of American presidents, do we situate
Bush? He's not the first president to try to reconstruct the
economic order. But the president who really attempted a general fix
-- Franklin Roosevelt -- did so because the old order was plainly
collapsing. No such situation exists today. Worse yet, what Bush is
proposing is to erect a new economy by giving more power to the
shakiest element -- the private-sector safety net -- of the old.
Just over a century ago, William McKinley set America on the
course of acquiring a colonial empire, setting off a debate over
America's proper role in the world every bit as impassioned as the
one raging today. McKinley's path was a radical departure from past
practice, but the United States was still a second-tier power. The
shift did not destabilize the world. A half-century before that,
James Polk plunged us into war with Mexico over considerable
northern-state opposition (including, in the later phases of the
war, that of Congressman Abraham Lincoln), but at that point,
America was a third-tier power.
The three presidents who sought to build a multilateral framework
for international affairs were Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt
and Harry Truman. Wilson's plan was killed in its crib when Congress
refused to ratify our entry into the League of Nations. Roosevelt's
and Truman's contributions -- setting up a structure of
international law, bringing prosperity and freedom to Western
Europe, cementing alliances with other democracies, containing and
eventually defeating Soviet communism -- are the enduring triumphs
of U.S. foreign policy. Bush seems bent on destroying Roosevelt's
and Truman's handiwork, however, and substituting a far more
grandiose version of Polk's and McKinley's, in what is distinctly a
postcolonial world. As with his assault on Roosevelt's New Deal
order, he professes to replace an architecture that may be flawed
but certainly isn't broken -- in this case, with an empire not
likely to be backed up by the consent of the governed.
None of these presidents, great or awful, seems quite comparable
to Bush the Younger. There is another, however, who comes to mind.
He, too, had a relentlessly regional perspective, and a clear sense
of estrangement from that part of America that did not support him.
He was not much impressed with the claims of wage labor. His values
were militaristic. He had dreams of building an empire at gunpoint.
And he was willing to tear up the larger political order, which had
worked reasonably well for about 60 years, to advance his factional
cause. The American president -- though not of the United States --
whom George W. Bush most nearly resembles is the Confederacy's
Jefferson Davis.
Yes, I know: Bush is no racist, and certainly no proponent of
slavery. He is not grotesque; he is merely disgraceful. But, as with
Davis, obtaining Bush's defeat is an urgent matter of national
security -- and national honor.
Copyright © 2003 by The
American Prospect, Inc. This piece is the May 2003 cover
article.
Published: Apr 18 2003
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