by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, and Ryan Powers
Bush's 'Ultimate Exit Interview'
Yesterday, President Bush appeared before the White House press corps
for his 47th
-- and last -- full-scale press conference, taking questions in what he
called "the
ultimate exit interview." Though
the White House had high
expectations for Bush's farewell
meeting with the media, telling reporters that it would be "standing
room only," the last two rows in the seven-row briefing room
were
empty. Subsequently, a press aide had to tell White
House interns to fill the seats.
Despite job approval ratings around
or below 30 percent since
February 2007, Bush "seemed largely
in good spirits" as he
pontificated on his years in office. Bush "was
by turns impassioned
and defiant, reflective and
light-hearted,
even as he conceded that some things 'didn't go according to plan,'"
notes the New York Times.
"Clearly putting a 'Mission Accomplished' on an aircraft carrier was a
mistake," said Bush. "Running
the Social Security idea right after
the '04
elections was a mistake." Bush continued his administration's efforts
to paint
his legacy
in a positive light, declaring that he had "a
good, strong record."
Unfortunately for Bush, the American public believes
his administration "will be remembered more
for its failures than its accomplishments."
BUSH DEFENDS KATRINA RESPONSE: Asked
if he "made
any mistakes" while in office,
Bush said he had "thought long and
hard about Katrina" and admitted that "things [could] have been done
better." However, he denied any problem with the
federal response to the disaster, insisting, "Don't
tell me the federal
response was slow." The fact is
that the federal response was
disastrously
slow.
As the White House itself acknowledged in a
February 2006 report, "the
response to Hurricane Katrina revealed a
lack of familiarity with incident management, planning discipline, and
field-level crisis leadership." A 2006 report compiled by House
Republicans slammed what it called "a
failure of leadership," saying that the federal government's "blinding
lack of situational awareness and disjointed decision making needlessly
compounded and prolonged Katrina's horror."
The report specifically blamed Bush, noting that "earlier presidential
involvement could have speeded the response" because the President
alone could have cut through bureaucratic resistance. In
fact, despite
a FEMA official's eyewitness accounts of New Orleans's levees being
breached starting at 7 p.m. on Aug. 29, the Bush administration "did
not consider them confirmed"
until 11 hours later. FEMA did not order the evacuation of New
Orleans until 1:30 a.m. on Aug. 31, two full days after Katrina made
landfall. Bush even praised the rescue efforts as a "pretty good
response."
BUSH
DEFENDS U.S. STANDING IN THE
WORLD: Asked about
President-elect Obama's desire to restore
"America's moral standing in the world," Bush bristled at the idea,
saying, "I strongly
disagree with the assessment
that our moral
standing has been damaged." "It may be damaged amongst some of the
elite,
but people still understand America stands for freedom, that America is
a
country that provides such great hope." But it isn't just "the elite"
who question the negative effect that Bush's presidency has had on
America's standing in the world. As a Gallup fact-check of Bush's
comments points out, 69
percent of Americans believe
that the "U.S. position in the
world" lost ground under Bush. According to the Pew Global Attitudes
Project, "positive views of the United States declined
in 26 of the 33 countries where
the question was posed in both 2002
and 2007." "Mounting discontent with U.S. foreign policy over the last
eight years
has translated into a concern about American power. In the view of much
of the world, the
United States has played the role of bully
in the
school yard, throwing its weight around with little regard for others'
interests," according to Pew.
BUSH
DEFENDS HIS ECONOMIC RECORD:
Asked to give his "closing message" to the American people about his
economic policies, Bush acknowledged that "obviously these are very
difficult economic times" while deflecting much responsibility for the
economy's troubles. "This
problem started before my
presidency, it obviously took
place during my presidency," said
Bush. He also vigorously
defended his 2001 and 2003 tax
cuts, adding that he "will
defend them after my presidency as the right course of action."
"There's a fundamental philosophical debate about tax cuts," said Bush.
"Who best can spend your money, the government or you? I've always sided
with the people on that issue."
But as the Washington Post noted
yesterday, Bush "has presided over the weakest eight-year span
for
the U.S. economy in decades." The federal government "had a modest
budget surplus when
Bush took office," but his
administration ran
up deficits "even as the economy was growing at a healthy pace." When
Bush took office, it was
projected that the federal
government would run a $710 billion
budget surplus in 2009. Now, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
has calculated that Bush's tax cuts accounted for 42 percent
of the fiscal
deterioration between 2001 and
2008. Though Bush claims he "sided
with the people" through his
economic policies, he really just squandered
their money.
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One of President-elect Obama's "first duties in office will be to order the closing of the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay. That executive order is expected during Obama's first week on the job -- and possibly on his first day."
THINK
PROGRESS: Former Arkansas
governor Mike Huckabee: I'm not "pro-gay."
WONK
ROOM: President Bush's final
press conference ignores his legacy of
planetary destruction.
YGLESIAS:
U.S. News and World Report's James Pehtokoukis changes the meaning of
other people's words.
PROGRESS
ILLINOIS: Rep. Mark Kirk (R-IL)
on Gaza: "It's time to take out the
trash."
ILLINOIS:
The U.S. Senate will swear in Roland Burris as the junior senator from
Illinois this week.
MASSACHUSETTS:
Gov. Deval Patrick (D) considers raising the gas tax in order to
increase revenues.
ECONOMY:
"As a federal bailout takes shape, many states continue to spend money
at boom-time rates even though revenue is sinking."
Q: Well,
how can you say that ahead of time?
SPECTER: Well, I can't
say that ahead of time. I wouldn't and haven't.
--
Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), 1/12/09,
on Sen. Pat Leahy (D-VT) saying that Attorney General nominee Eric
Holder will be confirmed
VERSUS
Q: Can John Ashcroft be confirmed?
SPECTER: Yes, I think he can be, and will be.
-- Specter, 12/24/00







