WASHINGTON, Jan. 25, 2008

Bush Speech To Offer Few New Ideas

Last State Of The Union Address Will Be Modest As President Bows To Shrinking Influence

  • President Bush tells reporters that he and leaders of the Democratic-led Congress have agreed to work together on an economic stimulus package to boost the sagging U.S. economy, in the White House press briefing room, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2008.

    President Bush tells reporters that he and leaders of the Democratic-led Congress have agreed to work together on an economic stimulus package to boost the sagging U.S. economy, in the White House press briefing room, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2008.  (AP Photo /J. Scott Applewhite)

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(AP)  In a bow to political reality, President Bush's final State of the Union speech will skip bold proposals in favor of ones the country has heard before, a modest approach for a White House that prides itself on big ideas.

Mr. Bush's strategy reflects what he is up against: little time left in office, confrontational relations with a Democratic Congress and a diminishing role on the national stage.

White House aides say there is not much point in using Monday's speech to unveil grand ideas sure to go nowhere.

"It's just not realistic," acknowledged White House press secretary Dana Perino on Thursday.

The economy will be a dominant theme in the annual speech, offering Mr. Bush one more chance to reassure a jittery nation that better days are ahead. He will start off with domestic matters and then move into foreign policy in a speech to run about 45 minutes, roughly in keeping with the length of his past addresses.

Barring a last-second change, this State of the Union will be about unfinished business - meaning items that Mr. Bush considers both vital and doable. The White House promises at least some new items, but nothing enormous.

There's not much panache in rehash. But the White House line is that important ideas don't lose value just because they haven't been enacted.

Mr. Bush will ask Congress to make permanent the tax cuts that are set to expire in 2010. He will prod Congress to extend a law allowing surveillance on suspected terrorists, renew his education law and approve free-trade pacts with Colombia, Panama and South Korea.

He is also likely to recycle ideas on alternative energy, affordable health care and housing reform.

Mr. Bush's inclination is to go for the kind of change that would last a generation or beyond, the equivalent of a home run. But not this time.

"There's a bunch of singles and doubles you can get done in the last year," said Grover Norquist, a conservative strategist with ties to the White House. "If you ask for more and you don't get it done, then you fail. So why not ask for things that are accomplishable? It's the last year, not the first year."

Just in time, House leaders and Mr. Bush have reached a deal to put money in people's pockets and pump up the economy. Mr. Bush could use his speech to nudge it along and hail a rare bipartisan partnership.

Shifting to foreign affairs, the president will promote the U.S.-backed Middle East peace effort and his administration's efforts to fight disease and hunger.

Quote

After hearing the president's speech Monday night, Americans will be more convinced than ever that it's time for a change.

Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
On Iraq, Mr. Bush is expected to tout security improvements and restate that more U.S. troops will come home only as conditions merit. Given the military progress there and the Democrats' inability to force a change in strategy in 2007, he is in a different position this time around.

"A year ago, he was in a very precarious situation when he announced the surge (of U.S. troops.) There were about 15 people in America who supported him," said Peter Wehner, a former Bush adviser who is a senior fellow at The Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington. "Now there's an overwhelming consensus that that's been successful. So he's got a story to tell there."

This speech, however, will not be a retrospective on the seven years of Mr. Bush's presidency. He is no fan of looking back.

His mission is to chart a course for what's left and remind people that, yes, he's still here and engaged. He was written off as a lame duck last year but then used his veto authority with great success, staying relevant and forcing changes in legislation.

Inside the White House, Mr. Bush's advisers know the obstacles.

The legislative calendar is considered even shorter this election year. And despite a sudden interest in cooperation on the economic boost, Mr. Bush and the Democratic Congress are at odds on most matters.

"I predict that after hearing the president's speech Monday night, Americans will be more convinced than ever that it's time for a change," said Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.

Attention is fleeting. Within a matter of weeks, Republican Party voters will likely choose a new face for their party ahead of the November presidential election. Even those who pay modest attention to politics are interested in whom the next president will be. Mere hours after Mr. Bush's speech, the media focus will be on Tuesday's Florida primary.

Meanwhile, Mr. Bush remains down in the polls.

In an Associated Press-Ipsos poll conducted earlier this month, only 34 percent of those surveyed said they approve of the job he is doing. That's low for a president and about where Mr. Bush has been since fall 2006.

Yet the State of the Union always commands some public attention, maybe more so now because of the widespread economic concerns.

It is perhaps Mr. Bush's last good chance to frame the debate. In the East Wing of the White House, he is going through practice runs of his speech in the family theater.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by pakaal January 27, 2008 1:48 AM EST
"There''s a bunch of singles and doubles you can get done in the last year," said Grover Norquist, a conservative strategist with ties to the White House."

What is Bush playing a frickin'' baseball game? Sorry guys, the game''s been called on account of brain - as in lack of.
Reply to this comment
by pakaal January 27, 2008 1:46 AM EST
Well, he at least showed he''s as smart a cookie as ever by threatening to veto the FISA extension. For some reason I recall him saying that the legislation was an essential part of our war on terror. Telecommunications companies shutting down wiretaps because the FBI didn''t pay their bills notwithstanding, you''d think the guy who pushed the importance of wiretaps wouldn''t turn around and threaten to veto it in his last months in office. Yeah, Bush''s legacy is assured; eternal humiliation at being placed at the bottom of the "presidential respect" scale by history. That''ll teach him to pick a D!ck for a VP.
Reply to this comment
by sgtrds January 26, 2008 5:51 PM EST
sort of like in National Lampoons Christmas Vacation, where "Sparky" finds out Eddie can''''t give Christmas to his kids. so the Griswolds offer to do it and in the middle of all that borrowing, Eddie tells "Sparky" to get something real nice for himself from Eddie and his wife. Real nice when people use OUR money to give us something we never asked for and make us pay it all back with interest and stupid azz people just accept it.

Posted by b-easy63 at 12:46 AM : Jan 26, 2008

And yet there are people out in America who are crowing about how great it is that the government is going to give them a rebate. They''re not giving us anything. It''s all going on the Taxpayer credit card and we''ll have to repay it, as you say, with interest. I''d rather if they were going to do this that they put into extended unemployment benefits so at least it''d be going to those who really need it. Besides when my check gets here I''m signing it over to the Democratic Party to help vote these lying neocons out of office.
Reply to this comment
by tbweb January 26, 2008 3:52 PM EST
Whether one is for Pres. Bush or against Pres. Bush, his Presidency has been depressing!
Reply to this comment
by Con Mohrat January 26, 2008 12:29 PM EST
This administration isn''''t eve CLOSE to being bright enough to think about anybody or anything but themselves.
Posted by homespunlady at 08:28 AM : Jan 26, 2008
=========

One only has to look above. The title of this thread says it all. Nothing further to add. His state of the union speech will amount to "Let them eat cake."

Regarding the stimulus, I don''t see the hurry. It''s January. The checks will be in the mail in May.
Reply to this comment
by homespunlady January 26, 2008 11:28 AM EST
Hmm.. you didn''t think this "stimulus" bright idea was ORIGINAL now did you?

This administration isn''t eve CLOSE to being bright enough to think about anybody or anything but themselves.
Reply to this comment
by homespunlady January 26, 2008 11:26 AM EST
CBS Marketwatch has an interesting article about the 1929 "stimulus" package being similar to the one being tossed to the peasants today.

It included a reference to an original article of the day that is well worth reading:
http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,738193,00.html
Reply to this comment
by b-easy63 January 26, 2008 3:46 AM EST
I agree, on the surface running on tax cuts is very tempting indeed. However they never explain that by tax cuts they mean they''''ll throw the poor and middle-class a small fish so they can say they cut taxes on everyone, while at the same time by comparison they hand out a gourmet meal to their rich friends and themselves. Besides it''''s not like cutting taxes and running up a deficit means that they''''ll have to pay any money back themselves, No, they put it all on The American Taxpayer Credit Card and we''''re the ones who''''ll get the bill while their money is sitting in off-shore accounts. Bush''''s tax cuts were the second biggest scr*ewing the American people have ever gotten, second only to the rape of our treasury via his war for profit in the Middle-East.

Posted by SgtRDS at 03:50 PM : Jan 25, 2008


sort of like in National Lampoons Christmas Vacation, where "Sparky" finds out Eddie can''t give Christmas to his kids. so the Griswolds offer to do it and in the middle of all that borrowing, Eddie tells "Sparky" to get something real nice for himself from Eddie and his wife. Real nice when people use OUR money to give us something we never asked for and make us pay it all back with interest and stupid azz people just accept it.
Reply to this comment
by kansas1946 January 26, 2008 3:27 AM EST
The best thing about this "State Of The Union" speech is it is the last one Bush will give. So for that reason alone, no matter what he says, it will be a GREAT speech.
Reply to this comment
by Con Mohrat January 26, 2008 2:15 AM EST
In a previous State of the Union, we heard about, but did not see the Axis of Evil.

In the upcoming State of the Union, we will see the Axis of Morons: Bush-Rice-Cheney, putting on airs, but silently, groveling at the Senate to pass incentives and tax cuts.
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