March 11, 2009

The Campaign To Boost Bush's Legacy

Politico: Former Bush White House Aides Are Still Work To Give Good PR To The Former President

  • Former president George W. Bush has stayed out of the public eye since leaving office, letting his aides defend his legacy for him.

    Former president George W. Bush has stayed out of the public eye since leaving office, letting his aides defend his legacy for him.  (White House/Eric Draper)

  • Section The Bush Legacy

    As President Bush leaves office, the nation takes a look at his record.

  • Photo Essay Farewell To Bush

    Former President George Bush left Washington by helicopter after the inauguration.

(The Politico)  This story was written by Mike Allen.


The defense never rests. When President Barack Obama released his own policy this week on former President George W. Bush’s practice of attaching controversial signing statements to legislation, a reporter quickly got a tip from a Bush loyalist: the cell phone number for a White House lawyer in the past administration.

“The spin is bogus,” said William Burck, a former deputy White House counsel, in pushing back against early news accounts framing Obama’s action as a slap at his predecessor. In fact, Burck insisted, the new policy is no different from Bush’s.

Even though Bush is keeping quiet in Texas before heading out on a lucrative speaking tour, an informal network of former aides is keeping his views in the political bloodstream, defending his legacy in TV appearances and backgrounding reporters about his record.

Former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer calls the Bush pundits “a loose confederation of people united in our belief in what President Bush did, and we’re freer now to talk about some things than we used to be - good and bad.”

The Bush defense forces include Fleischer; former press secretary Dana Perino; Bush political czar Karl Rove, who has contracts with Fox News, The Wall Street Journal and Newsweek; economics guru Tony Fratto; the prolific Peter Wehner, former director of the White House Office of Strategic Initiatives; and the graceful speechwriter Michael Gerson, who writes an opinion column for The Washington Post.

The former aides are armed with many of the same arguments that they tried out on reporters when they strolled the hallways of the West Wing.

When CNN’s Larry King recently asked what Fleischer considered to be a hostile question about tax cuts, the president’s first press secretary pulled out an ancient talking point and reminded viewers that the nation “had a record-breaking 55 straight months of job creation and economic job growth” on Bush’s watch.

“We’re invited to comment on the events of the day and along the way, we remind people that there was, indeed, good news under President Bush,” Fleischer said.

Participants say the effort is not coordinated or organized but, rather, a natural result of the hunger by bookers and reporters to get the views of aides who approached the status of celebrity through their service in a two-term presidency. The Bush alumni said they make their points subtly - both because the former president does not want to feed an Obama vs. Bush story line and because they know they will never win that battle.

“Communications-wise, this tidal wave is going to have to wash on over everybody,” said Perino, Bush’s last press secretary. “We do what we can, and we believe that history will get it right in the end.”

A few days before Obama announced he was abolishing Bush-era limits on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, Bush supporters who frequently appear on TV received an e-mail from an adviser saying: “I wanted to send you the following two documents on President Bush’s record on stem cell research: 1. a Bush White House fact sheet on President Bush’s record of advancing stem cell research in ethical, responsible ways and 2. a November 2007 Washington Post column by Charles Krauthammer, ‘Stem Cell Vindication.’” Recipients said the information was helpful and that they were struck by the fact that it wasn’t talking points - just a savvy reminder of points the press was likely to overlook.

So the Bush message persists in the punditry ether. On National Review Online, Yuval Levin, who worked on health issues as an associate director of Bush’s Domestic Policy Council, defended his boss’s approach to the stem cell decision: “Unfortunately, the political debate has yet to recover the kind of balanced understanding ofthe moral quandary that President Bush offered the country eight years ago.”

Jim Connaughton, the former chairman of Bush’s White House Council on Environmental Quality, popped up on Fox the other day talking about the president’s record on energy and the environment.

And Fratto, once a top spokesman for Bush’s Treasury Department and White House, talks to reporters about economic issues just about every day.

“A lot of us still hear from you guys, looking for reaction, especially when we’re attacked, like on the budget,” Fratto said. “There’s no coordinated effort to push back on these things, but if there’s a charge, we’ll set the record straight.”

Bush-era officials walk a fine line, and they know it. The outgoing administration, in the view of even the most partisan members of the Obama team, was hugely helpful and professional during the transition - a tone that clearly started in the Oval Office. Former presidents, by tradition, try to leave the stage to their successors, and Bush - who has been largely incognito except for a visit to a Dallas hardware store, has been no different.

Former White House aides from both parties also feel a bond with the new kids in town - particularly given the economic apocalypse that they face. Fratto says he often reminds reporters to give his successors at Treasury a break, since they have so much on their plate, “some of it of their own making, a lot of it that they had to pick up as they came in.”

“That doesn’t always make the stories,” he said.

Perino said her fellow alumni have no interest in “fanning the flames of Obama vs. Bush.” But sometimes the frustration does show.

“For many years, we were accused of being too close to the Russians, right?” Perino said. “Too close to Putin - too friendly with them. And then on this recent trip, our new secretary of state wants to press the reset button and improve the relationship with Russia. And I think: Why isn’t there any critical thinking going on?”


By Mike Allen
Copyright 2009 POLITICO



We cover politics with enterprise, style, and impact.

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by greenmeet March 14, 2009 5:18 PM EDT
On March 17, 2009 Bush plans the first in a lecture tour, for which, in his own words, he will make "ridiculous money". Or maybe not. Lawyers Against War (LAW) and a grassroots coalition of Calgary activists, wants Bush barred from entry to Canada, or for his arrest and prosecution for war crimes. Eminent jurists, like Dr. Michael Haas have identified liability for 269 War Crimes. http://www.greenwood.com/books/printFlyer.aspx?sku=C36499 At present in Calgary, Bush's 'legacy' is War Criminal Number One. Please see more on the Calgary protests at: http://www.peoplevbush.ca
Reply to this comment
by johnhkennedy March 12, 2009 11:17 AM EDT
The Bush Spinmeisters must be stopped. The Bush/Cheney abuse of power caused most of our troubles.

We must have a Special Prosecutor appointed.

Your congressman should should be calling for the appointment of a Special Prosecutor for the Bush appointees that violated Federal Laws, Treaties and the Geneva Convention on Torture.

Torture is a Federal crime with penalties of 20 years to life and the death penalty if the prisoner dies as a result of torture. It is a very serious crime. They took people off the streets and held them without charges for years.

Sign the Petition http://AngryVoters.org


Individuals: Sign The Petition To Prosecute those in the Bush Administration that violated Federal Laws.

Have your organization pass this url to members with a recommendation to sign.

Groups: Endorse the Joint Letter To Attorney General Holder asking him to appoint a Special Prosecutor for Bush, Cheney and appointees who approved TORTURE and violated other Federal Laws

http://AngryVoters.org

.
Reply to this comment
by iam4honesty March 12, 2009 10:56 AM EDT
Apparently some people have yet to learn you can't polish a turd.
Posted by balthus21


HEY!!

CBS must be a little behind with their censoring. you said 'turd' and it got published!

Turd... turd... turd... Bush is a turd, Cheney is a turd.
Reply to this comment
by sndkzyaa March 11, 2009 10:49 PM EDT
the game plan for the Busheaters is called "historical revision,"
Posted by bajajohn1 at 1:30 PM : Mar 11, 2009

It's worked so well for the Clintonites over the past 8 years, so naturally the Bushies will do the same.

They're just doing the same thing. Hey, isn't that how Bush got in so much trouble in the first place...
Reply to this comment
by sndkzyaa March 11, 2009 10:38 PM EDT
How about just harvesting fetuses which have just going being thrown away anyway, which is ACTUALLY what's happening
Posted by slownewsday2009 at 1:16 PM : Mar 11, 2009

So what you're saying is, the babies are dead anyway, why not butcher them and use the parts of their bodies for research that depends on a steady supply of dead babies?
Reply to this comment
by balthus21 March 11, 2009 10:29 PM EDT
Apparently some people have yet to learn you can't polish a turd.
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 March 11, 2009 8:39 PM EDT
"Let me start off by saying that in 2000 I said, 'Vote for me. I'm an agent of change.' In 2004, I said, 'I'm not interested in change --I want to continue as president.' Every candidate has got to say 'change.' That's what the American people expect." --George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., March 5, 2008



Shrub! you should understand that 8 years of destruction of the American system of justice and diplomacy should never have happened. Hari Kari was the honorable way out.
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 March 11, 2009 8:17 PM EDT
this should have been a war crimes forum, His legacy should be his signature on the south wall at leavenworth.
Reply to this comment
by Kuei1248 March 11, 2009 8:14 PM EDT
"the nation ?had a record-breaking 55 straight months of job creation and economic job growth? "

Yes. Creating an economy on killing innocent Iraqi women and children is quite benneficial to job growth. But, what happens when there are no enemies left to kill? That's right, you start to attack your own people. War is the only product the US has to sell now.
Reply to this comment
by starleo146 March 11, 2009 7:43 PM EDT
The Campaign To Boost Bush's Legacy

I would be glad to give him a boot oh excuse me it is a boost he is looking for.
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