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Bush’s object lesson in gracious departure

28 January 2009
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Amid the continuing Obamania, let us salute the poise with which George W. Bush and his team left office, says Erica Grieder. He showed the world what orderly transition means

Obama was kinder than the crowd at first. He obeyed the tradition of thanking his predecessor for his service and for his co-operation during the transition. Then he moved into a fairly comprehensive repudiation of the Bush programmes and policies. As President, said Mr Obama, he would restore trust in government and he was planning to embrace science and data. Mr Bush could do nothing but sit there and squirm, alone in a crowd of two million people ecstatic to see the back of him. After the inauguration, Mr Bush’s supporters complained of sharp elbows and cheap shots. If their feelings were hurt by the speech, they must have been really stung by the first week of the Obama administration.

Even in Bush’s adopted Texas, his opponents weren’t showing him much respect as he left. At a ‘Texans for Obama’ watch party in Austin, as the Bush helicopter lifted, teetered and left, an Iraq veteran boomed at the telly, ‘Don’t let the door hit your ass on the way out!’ he said. It was a popular expression that week.

Meanwhile, up in Crawford, there was a festive feeling at the Peace House, which is just across the railroad tracks from the handful of Bush souvenir stores that are still in business. The activists had unrolled a ‘MISSION ACCOMPLISHED’ banner, and were planning a small protest for that evening, when George W. Bush was scheduled to drive through town en route to the Prairie Chapel Ranch. True, the man was no longer president, but there were still fish to fry.

Peace activists observed that Bush had looked a bit worried at the Obama inauguration. They hoped that he was worried about the contingency of being prosecuted for war crimes, but allowed that the Bush years had their silver lining: ‘At least, if nothing else, this woke us up,’ said one woman. The Peace House had recently acquired a sculpture of Bush’s head attached to the body of a snake, but decided not to display it: this was a day for celebration, not recriminations.

As for Bush, he is no doubt happy to be back in Texas. A warmer welcome was available in Midland, where thousands of friendly faces welcomed him home. It was quite like his 2001 send-off, also in Midland, when thousands of west Texans sent their slightly ambivalent governor off to Washington. ‘I know the White House does not belong to its occupant,’ he said in 2001, in his send-off speech in Midland, Texas. ‘It is ours to look after for a while.’ That, at least, was one promise he kept.

Erica Grieder is the Texas correspondent for the Economist.

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Comments Post comment

Ray

January 29th, 2009 11:00am Report this comment

They always say that a person's true moral character will always shine through.

This article reminded me of the faultless grace and kindness with which Margaret Thatcher always treated her personal staff; as captured in an observation that Sir Cliff Richard once made about how, when a waitress accidentally dropped the plates at a banquet he had been invited to, Lady T's first concern was not for the dinner that was now all over the floor, but rather for the poor tearful girl herself whom the Iron Lady hugged, consoled and instructed not to worry unduly about the embarrassing faux pas now being mopped up from around them.

Contrast that with the legendary rantings and mobile phone-hurling intemperance with which a certain subsequent occupant of Downing Street is reported to entreat his staff. Contrast it further with the thought that Stalin or Mao would probably have had the hapless waitress carted off to a labour camp... or worse.

Sure, Bush made some catastrophic decisions as president that needlessly cost the lives of thousands. However, I trust that future historians will take a more objective view of the guy's essential humanity.

Jenkins

January 29th, 2009 6:39pm Report this comment

A graceful exit does not redeem seven years of hubris and disaster-presidency. Citizens' frustration with Bush is legitimate, and their passionate participation throughout this transition is more heartening for democracy than being "orderly." Ten weeks of long overdue poise does not merit a free pass. It's a shame he could not have led every month as if it had been his last.

Not Even Likely

January 29th, 2009 8:41pm Report this comment

Strange man, he was thoughtlessly arrogant when he was loved and incredibly gracious when he was despised. There's probably a syndrome name for that.

Mark Solomon

January 31st, 2009 12:30am Report this comment

A fine man comprehensively stitched up by the media, his political enemies and unfortunately some of his friends and cabinet ministers (Rumsfeld above all). He took the tough decisions and led. History should be far kinder to him than Bill Clinton, whose 8 years and the peace dividend were largely wasted, and whose financial policies caused the current problems.

Bush was a good man with a good sense of humour and fine sense of duty and history. His nature and personal comportment is far superior to both his predecessor and successor. Happy retirement Mr President.

Ted

January 31st, 2009 12:46pm Report this comment

At least Bush didn't subscribe to the man made global warming myth. Strange that Obama will "embrace science and data" whilst talking of agreeing the Kyoto nonsense.

G Bo

February 1st, 2009 7:42pm Report this comment

A well written article that serves as a good counter-balance to some of the anti-Bush hysteria peddleed in the last few years. One legitimate criticism that could be offered of Bush's presidency was his tendency to paint everything in black and white terms, but there was a real irony in the way his opponents ended doing exactly the same with their own 'world's no1 terrorist' jibes. This article shows Bush as a human being despite his flaws, just as one day people will recognise that Obama, for all his talent, is a flawed human being like the rest of us.

lauriemacdonell-sanchez

February 2nd, 2009 7:59pm Report this comment

Mark Solomon's refreshing, apt comments make mine unnecessary. The only thing I would add is that in crassly parading their hideous double standard by fawning over and lionizing the new President without a hint of critical analysis, while shamelessly glossing over or outright suppressing the rank wrongdoing, past & present, of his hand-picked cabinet & staff, for once the media are doing an excellent job--of hanging themselves!

Yaakov Watkins

February 3rd, 2009 6:42am Report this comment

As a Republican, I can't wait until the Democrats actually do something other than talk.

As an American, I shudder at the thought that Clinton's husband has received millions from the Arabs, (whose side is she on?), and that the Treasury secretary and Health and Welfare secretary are tax frauds. And all of this in just two weeks of being in office.

For all of the criticism of Cheney's wealth, the mainstream media did not report that Cheney, is now worth about the same as Clinton and that Cheney gave 90% of his income to charity in 2007. Nor was it widely noted that Cheney took a $5 million cut in pay to be VP.

I also take exception to the notion that Bush was a bad president. If Gore had been president, what would he have done about 9/11? What would he have done about Saddam? Probably nothing. And the world would be worse off than it is now.

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