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Bush addresses the US Congress: An illegitimate president,
a dubious surplus, a mounting social crisis
By Patrick Martin
1 March 2001
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There was more than the usual degree of political hokum in
the nationally televised speech to Congress delivered by George
W. Bush Tuesday night. Both the political events surrounding Bush's
entry into the White House and the policies advanced by the Republican
president contributed to an air of unreality, if not outright
fraud.
There was the traditional pomp and circumstance of a presidential
address: a joint session of Congress; the presence of the cabinet,
the diplomatic corps, the military brass and other assorted dignitaries;
a simultaneous broadcast on all the major television networks.
But these could not disguise the fact that Bush took the rostrum
as a political pretender.
Bush owes his presidency not to the will of the electoratewho
preferred Democrat Al Gore by a margin of 600,000 votesbut
to the anti-democratic intervention of a 5-4 majority on the US
Supreme Court. No president for more than a century has assumed
office with less of a popular mandate for his policies.
Opinion polls published on the eve of the speech showed Bush
to be less popular after his first month in office than any president
at a similar point in his administration over the previous 50
years. He stands lower in the polls than Clinton did before the
latest wave of media scandal-mongering about presidential pardons.
Despite the efforts of Bush and the Democrats to appear cordial,
the tensions stemming from the Florida election crisis were visible
at the joint session. When the House usher announced the arrival
of the Supreme Court justices, there was audible booing from the
Democratic side. In the event, only one justice entered the chamber,
Stephen Breyer, who had voted in favor of continuing the recount
in Florida. As he passed down the aisle, a top Republican, House
Majority Leader Richard Armey, refused to shake his hand.
The absence of the remaining eight justices, including all
five who favored the Republican candidate in their December 12
ruling in Bush v. Gore, has a political significance. Most
likely the right-wing majority calculated that their presence
at the speech would have focused attention on their unprecedented
role as kingmakers in the presidential contest.
The surplus and its uses
Bush devoted the bulk of his speech to arguing that the federal
budget surpluses projected over the next decade are so massive
that his proposed $1.6 trillion tax cuthalf of which goes
to the wealthiest one percent of Americansis really quite
modest and affordable.
This policy is based on willful blindness to economic reality.
It assumes that American capitalism will never again experience
a significant recession; that the United States can continue an
unprecedented financial boom indefinitely, regardless of global
conditions; that the contradictions of the profit system, expressed
in the fluctuations of the business cycle and in larger and more
protracted financial crises, are no longer a factor.
This is assumed under conditions where the US economy is visibly
moving into recession. Bush hinted at this trend, suggesting that
his tax cut plan would stimulate the economy and guard against
a slump. The president did not address the obvious corollary:
any slowdown in the US economy, especially in the booming financial
markets, will cut government revenues, sharply reduce the projected
surpluses, and make a mockery of the budget forecasts on which
the administration's tax cut plan is based.
Even a right-wing supporter of Bush's policies, retired congressman
Bill Archer of Texas, former chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee, suggested that making firm predictions about the performance
of the US economy 10 years into the future means entering into
never-never land. Yet it is precisely on such financial
fairy tales that Bush's budget plans are predicated.
While the surplus is largely hypothetical, the use which Bush
plans for it is not. He proposes to begin immediately the biggest-ever
transfer of wealth from working class Americans to the super-rich.
This includes the abolition of the inheritance tax, costing upwards
of $200 billion as it is phased out over 10 years, and $50 billion
a year thereafter; a reduction in income tax rates across the
board, with the biggest reduction for the highest incomes; and
other provisions that will disproportionately favor the wealthy.
It is remarkable that an American president can deliver a speech
which begins with a litany of unmet social needspoverty,
failing schools, elderly people unable to afford prescription
drugs, an energy crisisand yet propose, as his single largest
outlay, funneling nearly $800 billion into the pockets of the
wealthiest Americans.
It is even more remarkable that the speech meets virtually
no serious opposition within the political establishment. Bush
proposes to give the surplus to the wealthy. His spineless Democratic
opponents, together with some Republicans, suggest that it is
more important to pay down the national debt. Not one Democratic
or Republican politician suggests that the budget surplus should
be used to increase spending to meet social needs.
A nonentity in the White House
Bush's budget speech was more than a manifestation of right-wing
politics, catering to the crass self-interest of the wealthy.
It demonstrated the disorientation of a government and a ruling
elite that are poorly prepared for the inevitable emergence of
a sharp economic, social and political crisis.
An important factor in this crisisalthough concealed
by the fawning press coverage of Bush's first month in officeis
the intellectual and political vacuity of the man who occupies
the White House. As in his two press conferences, the first in
Mexico and the second last week in Washington, the speech to Congress
provided an embarrassing glimpse of the inner Bush.
His language was banal in the extreme, crafted by speech writers
intent not so much in talking down to the American people as in
keeping the argument on a plane commensurate with the intellectual
abilities and knowledge of the speaker. Any and all phrases that
might have led to a repetition of the verbal stumbles of the election
campaign were avoided. Hence the short, simple, declarative sentences,
the quotes from Yogi Berra and the echoes of the children's tale
about Goldilocksa tax cut not too big, not too small, but
just right.
Following Bush's press conferences, Michael Allen of the Washington
Post wrote, somewhat charitably: Throughout his first
month in office, the president's remarks on substantive issues
have been consistent but in every case brief, leading policy analysts
and congressional leaders to question whether the pattern is more
indicative of an exceptionally disciplined politician, or one
with a shallow grasp of the issues at hand.
As bizarre as it might seem, the president of the United States
appears to be a man not terribly interested in politics. A barely
noted fact about Tuesday's speech is that it was the first such
event which George W. Bush has ever attended personally, even
though his father delivered three State of the Union addresses
to joint sessions of Congress, and sat in the vice presidential
chair as Ronald Reagan delivered eight more.
During the four years of his father's presidency, the younger
Bush indicated no real interest in politics or policy, preferring
instead the fellowship of oil millionaires and baseball owners.
Not until 1994, at the age of 46, did he decide on a serious political
commitment, running for governor of Texas, against the advice
of his parents and Republican Party professionals.
George W. Bush enters the White House, not only as the least
experienced president of the past century, but also as the least
traveled. The American ruling elite likes to think of the United
States as the world's only remaining superpower, but the new chief
executive knows little or nothing about that world.
Bush has traveled to Europe only once in his life, despite
the opportunities provided by wealth and his father's political
position. His one visit was a brief stopover in Italy to visit
his daughter while she was studying there. He has never visited
Britain, France, Germany, Japan or Russia. His only long overseas
trip was to China, while his father was US envoy there, and he
has been to Mexico, mainly brief trips across the Rio Grande from
his home state of Texas. He has never been to South America, Africa,
India or Australia.
The new president not only does not like to travel, he does
not like to readreportedly preferring executive summaries
to the texts of documents, and avoiding books unless they concern
sports. (During the Florida election crisis he was engrossed in
a biography of baseball player Joe DiMaggio.) His weekends resting
at the ranch, his abbreviated office hours and frequent napsdespite
apparently excellent healthsuggest that President George
W. Bush does not like to work very hard.
These facts are largely concealed by the press. The New
York Times, for instance, in its editorial on the budget speech,
called it a poised, focused and warmly received address
... with some eloquent flourishes that showcased Mr. Bush's likability
[and] self-confidence. CBS news anchor Dan Rather said the
speech demonstrated Bush's political growth in the
brief period since his inauguration.
Bush and Cheney
In the initial stages of the Bush administration, there were
attempts to put a good face on the president's less than strenuous
activity level, suggesting that Bush and Vice President Richard
Cheney would team up in the style of a corporate CEO and Chief
Operating Officerone setting policy, the other supervising
its day-to-day execution. Another interpretation was that Bush
would act as ceremonial head of state, with Cheney serving as
de facto prime minister.
Such musings ignore a fundamental fact of the US constitutional
structure: there is not a separation, as in other capitalist democracies,
between the head of state and head of government. While in many
countries a constitutional monarch or president carries out ceremonial
functions, while the prime minister actually directs policy-making
and the daily operations of government, in the United States these
roles are combined in a single office.
The US president is ultimately answerable to the ruling corporate
and financial oligarchy, but his office is not that of a mere
figurehead. The presidency is at the center of a vortex of conflicting
social and political forces. The occupant of the White House holds
the highest office in a massive, highly complex and volatile society.
Recent eventsthe impeachment of Clinton, the election crisis
of 2000have revealed an enormous sharpening of tensions,
both between the major social classes, and within the ruling economic
and political strata. There are many signs of deep divisions and
the growth of centrifugal tendencies within the political establishment.
Especially under such conditions, the political, emotional and
intellectual demands on the president are considerable.
The divisions that exist within the US ruling elite as a whole
are reflected within the Bush administration. Overseas commentators
have raised concerns over the apparent lack of cohesion within
the Bush administration, especially in foreign policy matters.
It is well known, for example, that there are divisions within
Bush's foreign affairs team over US policy toward Iraq, with Cheney
and Defense Secretary Rumsfeld skeptical, at best, over the proposal
of Secretary of State Colin Powell to scale back the sanctions
regime against Baghdad.
But with the installation of Bushin a manner that has
compromised his legitimacy from the outsetthe American ruling
elite has elevated a man wholly unqualified and unequipped to
meet the demands of his office. There exists a gaping vacuum of
leadership at the center of the American government, a vacuum
that, like the tax cut plan, expresses both disorientation and
recklessness on the part of decisive sections of the US ruling
elite. They are consumed by the most short-term considerations,
above all, by the state of their stock portfolios. All other issues
are subordinated to the overriding question of how to enrich those
who are already wealthy beyond belief.
Not since the waning days of the Reagan administration has
a US president been so visibly out of his depth and politically
disengaged. The consequences then were the Iran-contra affair
and the emergence of a secret government within the governmenta
network of military and intelligence operatives that carried out
its own foreign policy, with the tacit approval of the president.
The American ruling class is unprepared, both in terms of its
policies and its leading personnel, for the shocks that it will
inevitably encounter. It faces a host of political flashpoints
overseas, from Russia to the Middle East, from Indonesia to Colombia.
It faces a mounting economic and financial crisis both within
the US and internationally. And most importantly, it faces powerful
but as yet inarticulate opposition from the great mass of working
people at home.
See Also:
Bush's first press conference:
a craven media welcomes a political impostor
[24 February 2001]
US-British air strikes on
Baghdad: Bush draws first blood
[17 February 2001]
Bush's political honeymoon:
why the Democrats are rallying behind an illegitimate government
[13 February 2001]
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