[Mb-civic] Bush's leadership: running on empty - Joan Vennochi - Boston Globe

William Swiggard swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Sep 28 04:09:18 PDT 2005


Bush's leadership: running on empty

By Joan Vennochi, Globe Columnist  |  September 28, 2005

GEORGE W. BUSH is running out of gas, and the country knows it.

This week, the president asked Americans to drive less to conserve 
gasoline. Bush also issued a directive for all federal agencies to cut 
their own energy use and to encourage employees to use public 
transportation.

How about parking Air Force One for awhile, Mr. President?

Bush took his seventh trip to view hurricane rebuilding efforts along 
the Gulf Coast. Storm-chasing, like mountain-biking, is now a 
presidential obsession. Instead of calories, this latest compulsion 
burns time and jet fuel.

After Hurricane Katrina, Bush and federal relief agencies took too long 
to show up when it mattered. But showing up when it doesn't matter will 
not repair the damage to Bush's battered image. Having Michael Brown, 
the deposed head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency blame 
"dysfunctional" Louisiana for hurricane response problems doesn't help 
Bush either. "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job" is a presidential 
assessment that already stands to haunt Bush for a long time.

It's time for the president to get out of the floodwaters. A successful 
CEO does not work the assembly line, although showing up to watch it 
once in a while isn't a bad idea. A successful CEO has a strong vision, 
can articulate it, and makes certain to hire competent professionals to 
implement it from top to bottom.

Americans are losing faith in Bush, the country's CEO, on all three 
counts. Restoring public confidence takes more than photo-ops to 
hurricane-ravaged territory.

During last year's presidential campaign, Bush cultivated a 
cowboy-booted, man of the people image. It helped him come across as 
more approachable than his opponent. More recently, from Cindy Sheehan 
to Katrina, the country saw the arrogance of power a Bush presidency can 
breed. The president who could drive past a Gold Star mother because he 
does not agree with her politics could also fly over a drowning city.

Katrina unleashed such public and political fury that Bush was forced to 
address it. But his efforts to connect with the American people have 
fallen fall short of his iconic "bullhorn" moment at Ground Zero after 
the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Belatedly accepting responsibility for the 
system-wide breakdown after Katrina helped Bush a bit. His follow-up 
speech from New Orleans was relatively well-received, but its policy 
implications were controversial within his own party. Since then, 
Hurricane Rita struck Texas and Lousiana with less force than predicted. 
Even so, hurricane-related disruptions in oil production leave the 
country facing higher energy costs in the coming winter.

Now, belatedly, the president asks for sacrifice from the average 
citizen. That concept, like many, is foreign to Bush. Because of his 
administration's policies, sacrifice is foreign to us, too. And that is 
a problem for the president.

His entire presidency is based on the premise that Americans can have it 
all, without sacrifice. We can wage a bloody, costly war and not feel 
any pinch in resources at home. We can cut taxes and still have No Child 
Left Behind. We can drive gas-guzzling SUVS without regard for 
dependence on foreign oil. We can eliminate the estate tax and still 
rebuild New Orleans.

This administration believes in new oil production, not conservation. It 
chose not to impose higher mileage standard on automakers. Bush's 
indifference to repeated warnings of global warming is now coming back 
to haunt him, too, in the form of rising seas. The next time, those 
waters may wash right up the Potomac to engulf Washington, D.C. The 
political waters already have.

Where in the president's call for sacrifice is any sense that he now 
understands the disconnect between his policies and better government, 
responsive to all, not just the wealthy few? Where in his call for 
sacrifice is any sense that he is in this post-Katrina-Rita mess with 
the rest of us?

Bush and his father may get gussied up like cowpokes every so often so 
the press corps will think they are self-made men. But more Americans 
understand a Bush administration operates the federal government as a 
wholly owned subsidiary of America's capitalist class. Bush has nothing 
but disdain for those clinging desperately to society's bottom rungs. 
And Bush's weak call for our sacrifice shows disdain for those clinging 
to the middle rungs, too.

The simple truth: Making an actual sacrifice is less painful than 
listening to Bush talk about it.

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/09/28/bushs_leadership_running_on_empty/
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