George Walker Bush ( ; born July 6, 1946) was the
43rd
President of the United
States from 2001 to 2009 and the 46th
Governor of Texas from 1995 to
2000.
Bush is the eldest son of
George
H. W. Bush (the 41st President) and
Barbara Bush, making him one of only two
American presidents to be the
son of a
preceding president.
After graduating from Yale University
in 1968, and Harvard Business School
in 1975, Bush worked in his
family's oil businesses. He
married
Laura Welch in 1977 and
unsuccessfully ran for the
United States House of
Representatives shortly thereafter. He later co-owned the
Texas Rangers baseball team before defeating
Ann Richards in the
1994 Texas gubernatorial
election. In a
close and
controversial election, Bush was elected President in 2000 as
the
Republican
candidate, receiving a majority of the
electoral votes while
losing the
popular vote to
then-
Vice
President Al Gore.
Eight months into Bush's first term as president, the
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks
occurred. In response, Bush
announced
a global
War on Terrorism, ordered
an
invasion of
Afghanistan that same year and an
invasion of Iraq in 2003. In addition
to national security issues, Bush promoted policies on the economy,
health care, education, and social security reform. He signed into
law broad
tax cuts, the
No Child Left Behind Act and
Medicare prescription drug
benefits for seniors. His tenure saw a national debate on
immigration and
Social Security.
Bush successfully ran for re-election against
Democratic Senator John
Kerry in
2004, garnering
50.7% of the popular vote to his opponent's 48.3%. After his
re-election, Bush received increasingly heated
criticism from
conservatives. In 2005, the Bush Administration
dealt with widespread criticism over its handling of
Hurricane Katrina. In December 2007, the
United States entered the longest post-
World War II recession. That prompted the Bush
Administration to take more direct control of the economy, enacting
multiple economic programs intended to preserve the country's
financial structure. Though Bush was a popular president for much
of his first term, his popularity declined sharply during his
second term.
After leaving office, Bush returned to Texas. He is currently a
public speaker and is writing a book about his presidency.
Childhood to mid-life
Born in
New Haven,
Connecticut
, Bush was the first child of George H. W. Bush
and
Barbara Bush (née Pierce).
He was
raised in Midland
and Houston, Texas
, with his four siblings, Jeb, Neil, Marvin and Dorothy. Another younger sister,
Robin, died from
leukemia at the age of three in 1953. Bush's
grandfather,
Prescott Bush, was a
U.S. Senator from Connecticut
. Bush's father,
George H. W. Bush,
served as
U.S. Vice President from 1981 to 1989 and
U.S. President from 1989 to 1993.
Education
As a
child, Bush attended public schools in Midland, Texas
until the family moved to Houston
after he
completed seventh grade. He then went to The Kinkaid School, a prep school in Houston
, for two
years.
Bush
finished his high school years at Phillips Academy
, a boarding school (then all-male) in Andover,
Massachusetts
, where he played baseball
and during his senior year was the head cheerleader.
Bush
attended Yale
University
from 1964 to
1968, graduating with a Bachelor of
Arts degree in history. During
this time, he was a member of
Delta
Kappa Epsilon, being elected the fraternity's president during
his senior year.
Bush also became a member of the Skull and
Bones
society as a senior. Bush was a keen
rugby union player, and was on Yale's
1st XV. He characterized himself as an average student.
Beginning
in the fall of 1973, Bush attended the Harvard
Business School
, where he earned an MBA. He is the only
U.S. President to have earned an
MBA.
Texas Air National Guard

Lt.
Bush while in the Texas Air National Guard.
In May 1968, Bush was commissioned into the
Texas Air National Guard.
After two
years of active-duty service while training, he was assigned to
Houston, flying Convair F-102s out of Ellington Air Force Base
. Critics, including former
Democratic National Committee
Chairman
Terry McAuliffe and
Russ Baker, have alleged that Bush was
favorably treated due to his father's political standing, citing
his selection as a pilot despite his low pilot aptitude test scores
and his irregular attendance.
In June 2005, the United
States Department of Defense
released all the records of Bush's Texas Air
National Guard service, which remain in its official
archives.
In late
1972 and early 1973, he drilled with the Alabama Air National Guard,
having moved to Montgomery, Alabama
to work on the unsuccessful U.S. Senate
campaign of Republican
Winton M.
Blount. In October 1973, Bush was
discharged from the Texas Air National Guard and transferred to
inactive duty in the
Air Force Reserve. He was
honorably discharged from the Air Force Reserve on November 21,
1974, at the end of his six-year service obligation.
Marriage and family

George and Laura Bush with their
daughters Jenna and Barbara, 1990.
In 1977, he was introduced by friends at a backyard barbecue to
Laura Welch, a schoolteacher and
librarian. Bush proposed to her after a three-month courtship and
they were married on November 5 of that year.
The couple settled in
Midland,
Texas
. Bush left his family's
Episcopal
Church to join his wife's
United Methodist Church.
In 1981,
Laura Bush gave birth to twin daughters, Jenna and Barbara; they graduated from high school
in 2000 and from the University of Texas at Austin
and Yale University
, respectively, in 2004.
Prior to his marriage, Bush had multiple episodes of alcohol abuse.
In one
instance, on September 4, 1976, he was arrested near his family's
summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine
for driving under the influence of
alcohol. He pleaded guilty, was fined $150 and had his Maine
driver's license suspended until
1978. Bush's alleged
usage of drugs is
less clear; when asked questions about past alleged
illicit drug use, Bush has consistently refused to
answer. He defended his refusal to answer in a publicized
casual conversation with a friend saying that he
feared setting a bad example for the younger generation.
Bush says his wife has had a stabilizing effect on his life, and
attributes influence to her in his 1986 decision to give up
alcohol. While Governor of Texas, Bush said of his wife, "I saw an
elegant, beautiful woman who turned out not only to be elegant and
beautiful, but very smart and willing to put up with my rough
edges, and I must confess has smoothed them off over time."
Early career
In 1978, Bush ran for the
House of
Representatives from
Texas's 19th congressional
district. His opponent,
Kent Hance,
portrayed him as being out of touch with rural Texans; Bush lost
the election by 6,000 votes (6%) of the 103,000 votes cast. He
returned to the oil industry and began a series of small,
independent oil exploration companies. He created
Arbusto Energy, and later changed the name to
Bush Exploration. In 1984, his company merged with the larger
Spectrum 7, and Bush became chairman. The
company was hurt by a decline in oil prices, and as a result, it
folded into
Harken Energy. Bush served
on the board of directors for Harken. Questions of possible
insider
trading involving Harken arose, but the
Securities and Exchange
Commission's (SEC) investigation concluded that the information
Bush had at the time of his stock sale was not sufficient to
constitute insider trading.
Bush
moved his family to Washington, D.C.
in 1988 to work on his father's campaign for the
U.S. presidency. He worked as a campaign adviser and served
as liaison to the media; he assisted his father by campaigning
across the country. Returning to Texas after the successful
campaign, he purchased a share in the
Texas Rangers baseball franchise in
April 1989, where he served as managing general partner for five
years. He actively led the team's projects and regularly attended
its games, often choosing to sit in the open stands with fans. The
sale of Bush's shares in the Rangers in 1998 brought him over
$15 million from his
initial
$800,000
investment.
In December 1991, Bush was one of seven people named by his father
to run his father's 1992 Presidential re-election campaign as
"campaign advisor". The prior month, Bush had been asked by his
father to tell White House chief of staff
John H. Sununu
that he should resign.
Governor of Texas
As Bush's
brother, Jeb, sought the governorship of
Florida
, Bush declared his candidacy for the 1994 Texas
gubernatorial
election. His campaign focused on four themes:
welfare reform,
tort
reform, crime reduction, and education improvement. Bush's
campaign advisers were
Karen Hughes,
Joe Allbaugh, and
Karl Rove.
After easily winning the
Republican primary, Bush
faced popular
Democratic incumbent Governor
Ann
Richards. In the course of the campaign, Bush pledged to sign a
bill allowing Texans to obtain
permits to carry concealed weapons.
Richards had vetoed the bill, but Bush signed it after he became
governor. According to
The
Atlantic Monthly, the race "featured a rumor that she was
a
lesbian, along with a rare instance of
such a tactic's making it into the public record — when a regional
chairman of the Bush campaign allowed himself, perhaps
inadvertently, to be quoted criticizing Richards for appointing
avowed
homosexual activists' to state
jobs".
The Atlantic, and others, connected the lesbian
rumor to Karl Rove, but Rove denied being involved. Bush won the
general election with 53.5% against Richards' 45.9%. ;
Bush used a budget surplus to push through Texas' largest tax-cut
(
$2 billion). He extended
government funding for organizations providing education of the
dangers of alcohol and drug use and abuse, and helping to reduce
domestic violence. Critics
contended that during his tenure, Texas ranked near the bottom in
environmental evaluations, but supporters pointed to his efforts to
raise the salaries of teachers and improved educational test
scores.
In 1998, Bush won re-election with a record 69% of the vote. He
became the first governor in Texas history to be elected to two
consecutive four-year terms. For most of Texas history, governors
served two-year terms; a
constitutional amendment extended
those terms to four years starting in 1975. In his second term,
Bush promoted faith-based organizations and enjoyed high approval
ratings. He proclaimed June 10, 2000 to be
Jesus Day in Texas, a day on which he "urge[d] all
Texans to answer the call to serve those in need".
Throughout Bush's first term, national attention focused on him as
a potential future presidential candidate. Following his
re-election, speculation soared. Within a year, he decided to seek
the Republican nomination for the presidency.
Presidential campaigns
2000 Presidential candidacy

Bush in Concord, New Hampshire signing
to be a candidate for president
Primary
In June 1999, while Governor of Texas, Bush announced his candidacy
for President of the United States. With no
incumbent running, Bush entered a large field of
candidates for the Republican Party presidential nomination
consisting of
John McCain,
Alan Keyes,
Steve
Forbes,
Gary Bauer,
Orrin Hatch,
Elizabeth
Dole,
Dan Quayle,
Pat Buchanan,
Lamar
Alexander,
John Kasich, and
Robert C. Smith.
Bush portrayed himself as a
compassionate conservative. He
campaigned on a platform that included increasing the size of the
United States Armed
Forces, cutting taxes, improving education, and aiding
minorities. By early 2000, the race had centered on Bush and
McCain.
Bush won the
Iowa caucuses, but,
although he was heavily favored to win the
New Hampshire primary, he trailed
McCain by 19% and lost that primary. However, the Bush campaign
regained momentum and, according to political observers,
effectively became the front runner after the
South
Carolina primary, which according to
The Boston Globe made history for its
negativity;
The New York
Times described it as a
smear
campaign.
General election
On July 25, 2000, Bush surprised some observers by asking
Dick Cheney, a former
White House Chief of Staff,
U.S. Representative, and
Secretary of
Defense, to be his
running mate.
Cheney was then serving as head of Bush's Vice-Presidential search
committee. Soon after, Cheney was officially nominated by the
Republican Party at the
2000 Republican National
Convention.
Bush continued to campaign across the country and touted his record
as Governor of Texas. Bush's campaign criticized his Democratic
opponent, incumbent Vice President
Al Gore,
over
gun control and taxation.
When the
election returns came in on November 7, Bush won 29 states,
including Florida
. The closeness of the Florida outcome led to
a
recount.
Two
initial counts went to Bush, but the outcome was tied up in courts
for a month until reaching the U.S.
Supreme
Court
. On December 9, in the
Bush v. Gore
case, the Court reversed a Florida Supreme Court
ruling ordering a third count, and stopped an
ordered statewide hand recount based on the argument that the use
of different standards among Florida's counties violated the
Equal Protection Clause of
the Fourteenth
Amendment. The machine recount showed that Bush had won
the Florida vote by a margin of 537 votes out of six million cast.
Bush received 271
electoral votes to Gore's
266. However, he lost the popular vote by 543,895 votes, surpassing
the previous
1876 election
record.
2004 Presidential candidacy

George W.
Bush speaks at a campaign rally in 2004
In 2004 Bush commanded broad support in the Republican Party and
did not encounter a primary challenge. He appointed
Kenneth Mehlman as campaign manager, with a
political strategy devised by
Karl Rove.
Bush and
the Republican platform included a strong commitment to the wars in
Iraq
and Afghanistan
, support for the USA
PATRIOT Act, a renewed shift in policy for constitutional
amendments banning abortion and same-sex marriage, reforming Social Security to create
private investment accounts, creation of an ownership society, and opposing mandatory
carbon emissions
controls. Bush also called for the implementation of a
guest worker program for
immigrants, which was criticized by conservatives.
The Bush
campaign advertised across the U.S. against Democratic candidates,
including Bush's emerging opponent, Massachusetts
Senator John
Kerry. Kerry and other Democrats attacked Bush on the
Iraq War, and accused him of failing to
stimulate the economy and job growth. The Bush campaign portrayed
Kerry as a staunch
liberal who would raise
taxes and increase the size of government. The Bush campaign
continuously criticized Kerry's seemingly contradictory statements
on the war in Iraq, and claimed Kerry lacked the decisiveness and
vision necessary for success in the
war
on terrorism.
In the election, Bush carried 31 of 50 states, receiving a total of
286
electoral
votes. He won an
absolute
majority of the popular vote (50.7% to his opponent's 48.3%).
The previous President to win an absolute majority of the popular
vote had been Bush's father in the 1988 election. Additionally, it
was the first time since
Herbert
Hoover's
election in 1928
that a Republican president was elected alongside re-elected
Republican majorities in both Houses of Congress. Bush's 2.5%
margin of victory was the narrowest for a victorious incumbent
President since
Woodrow Wilson's 3.1%
margin of victory against
Charles
Evans Hughes in the
election of
1916.
Presidency
Bush was sworn in as president on January 20, 2001. Though he
originally outlined an ambitious domestic agenda, his priorities
were significantly altered following the
September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001.
Wars were waged in Afghanistan and later Iraq while significant
debates regarding immigration, healthcare, Social Security,
economic policy, and treatment of terrorist detainees took place
within the United States. Over an eight year period, Bush's
once-high approval ratings steadily declined throughout his
Presidency while his disapproval numbers increased significantly
over the same time frame. During 2007, the United States entered
into the longest post World War II recession and the administration
responded by enacting multiple stimulus packages.
Domestic policy
Economic policy
Facing opposition in Congress, Bush held town hall-style public
meetings across the U.S. in 2001 to increase public support for his
plan for a
$1.35 trillion
tax cut program—one of the largest tax cuts
in U.S. history. Bush argued that unspent government funds should
be returned to taxpayers, saying "the surplus is not the
government’s money. The surplus is the people’s money." With
reports of the threat of recession from
Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan, Bush argued that such
a tax cut would stimulate the economy and create jobs. Others,
including the Treasury Secretary at the time
Paul O'Neill, were opposed to
some of the tax cuts on the basis that they would contribute to
budget deficits and undermine
Social Security. By 2003,
the economy showed signs of improvement, though job growth remained
stagnant.
Under the Bush Administration, real
GDP grew at an average annual rate of
2.5%, considerably below the average for business cycles from 1949
to 2000. Bush entered office with the
Dow Jones Industrial Average at
10,587, and the average peaked in October 2007 at over 14,000. When
Bush left office, the average was at 7,949, one of the lowest
levels of his presidency.
Unemployment
originally rose from 4.2% in January 2001 to 6.3% in June 2003, but
subsequently dropped to 4.5% as of July 2007. Adjusted for
inflation,
median household
income dropped by $1,175 between 2000 and 2007, while Professor
Ken Homa of Georgetown University has noted that "after-tax median
household income increased by 2%" The poverty rate increased from
11.3% in 2000 to 12.3% in 2006 after peaking at 12.7% in 2004. By
October 2008, due to increases in domestic and foreign spending,
the national debt had
risen to $11.3 trillion, an increase of over 100% from the start of
the year 2000 when the debt was $5.6 trillion. By the end of Bush's
presidency, unemployment climbed to 7.2%. The perception of
President Bush's effect on the economy is significantly affected by
partisanship.
In December 2007, the United States entered the longest
post-
World War II recession, which
included a
housing market
correction, a
subprime
mortgage crisis,
soaring oil
prices, and a declining dollar value. In February, 63,000 jobs
were lost, a five-year record. To aid with the situation, Bush
signed a $170 billion economic stimulus package which was intended
to improve the economic situation by sending tax rebate checks to
many Americans and providing tax breaks for struggling businesses.
The Bush administration pushed for significantly increased
regulation of
Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac in 2003, and after two years, the
regulations passed the House but died in the Senate. Many
Republican senators, as well as influential members of the Bush
Administration, feared that the agency created by these regulations
would merely be mimicking the private sector’s risky practices. In
September 2008,
the crisis became much
more serious beginning
with the government
takeover of
Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac followed by the collapse of
Lehman Brothers and a federal bailout of
American International
Group for $85 billion.
Many economists and world governments determined that the situation
became the worst financial crisis since the
Great Depression. Additional regulation
over the housing market would have been beneficial, according to
former
Federal Reserve
Chairman
Alan Greenspan. President
Bush, meanwhile, proposed a
financial rescue
plan to buy back a large portion of the U.S. mortgage market.
Vince Reinhardt, a former Federal Reserve economist now at the
American Enterprise Institute, said "it would have helped for the
Bush administration to empower the folks at Treasury and the
Federal Reserve and the comptroller of the currency and the
FDIC to look
at these issues more closely", and additionally, that it would have
helped "for Congress to have held hearings".
In November 2008, over 500,000 jobs were lost, which marked the
largest loss of jobs in the United States in 34 years. The Bureau
of Labor Statistics reported that in the last four months of 2008,
1.9 million jobs were lost. By the end of 2008, the U.S. had lost a
total of 2.6 million jobs.
Education and health
President Bush undertook a number of educational priorities.
He
increased funding for the National Science Foundation and
National
Institutes of Health
in his first years of office, and created education
programs to strengthen the grounding in science and mathematics for
American high school students. Funding for the NIH was cut
in 2006, the first such cut in 36 years, due to rising
inflation.
One of the administration's early major initiatives was the
No Child Left Behind Act,
which aimed to measure and close the gap between rich and poor
student performance, provide options to parents with students in
low-performing schools, and target more federal funding to
low-income
schools. This landmark education
initiative was signed into law by President Bush in early 2002.
Many contend that the initiative has been successful, as cited by
the fact that students in the U.S. have performed significantly
better on state reading and math tests since Bush signed "No Child
Left Behind" into law. Critics argue that it is underfunded and
that NCLBA's focus on "high stakes testing" and quantitative
outcomes is counterproductive.
After being re-elected, Bush signed into law a Medicare drug
benefit program that, according to
Jan Crawford Greenburg, resulted in
"the greatest expansion in America's
welfare state in forty years;" the bill's
costs approached $7 trillion. In 2007, Bush opposed and vetoed
State
Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) legislation, which
was added by the Democrats onto a war funding bill and passed by
Congress. The SCHIP legislation would have significantly expanded
federally funded health care benefits and plans to children of some
low-income families from about six million to ten million
children. It was to be funded by an increase in the cigarette tax.
Bush viewed the legislation as a move toward the liberal platform
of socialized health care, and claimed that the program could
benefit families making as much as
$83,000 per year who did not need the
help.
Social services and Social Security
Following Republican efforts to pass the
Medicare
Act of 2003, Bush signed the bill, which included major changes
to the
Medicare program by
providing beneficiaries with some assistance in paying for
prescription drugs, while relying on private insurance for the
delivery of benefits. The retired persons lobby group
AARP worked with the Bush Administration on the program
and gave their endorsement. Bush said the law, estimated to cost
$400 billion over the first ten
years, would give the elderly "better choices and more control over
their health care".
Bush began his second term by outlining a major initiative to
reform Social Security, which was facing record deficit projections
beginning in 2005. Bush made it the centerpiece of his domestic
agenda despite opposition from some in the U.S. Congress. In his
2005 State of the Union
Address, Bush discussed the potential impending bankruptcy of
the program and outlined his new program, which included partial
privatization of the system, personal Social Security accounts, and
options to permit Americans to divert a portion of their Social
Security tax (
FICA) into secured
investments. Despite emphasizing safeguards and remaining open to
other plans, Democrats opposed the proposal to partially privatize
the system.
Bush embarked on a 60-day national tour, campaigning vigorously for
his initiative in media events, known as the "Conversations on
Social Security", in an attempt to gain support from the general
public. Despite the energetic campaign, public support for the
proposal declined and the House Republican leadership decided not
to put Social Security reform on the priority list for the
remainder of their 2005 legislative agenda. The proposal's
legislative prospects were further diminished by the political
fallout from the
Hurricane Katrina
in the fall of 2005. After the Democrats gained control of both
houses of the Congress as a result of the 2006 midterm elections,
the prospects of any further congressional action on the Bush
proposal were dead for the remainder of his term in office.
Environmental and energy policies
Upon arriving in office in 2001, Bush stated his opposition to the
Kyoto Protocol, an amendment to the
United Nations Convention on Climate
Change which seeks to impose mandatory targets for reducing
greenhouse gas emissions, citing that the treaty exempted 80% of
the world's population and would have cost tens of billions of
dollars per year. He also cited that the Senate had voted 95–0 in
1997 on a resolution expressing its disapproval of the
protocol.
In 2002, Bush announced the
Clear Skies Act of 2003, aimed at
amending the
Clean Air Act to reduce
air pollution through the use of
emissions trading programs. It was argued,
however, that this legislation would have weakened the original
legislation by allowing higher levels of pollutants than were
permitted at that time. The initiative was introduced to Congress,
but failed to make it out of committee.
Bush has said that he believes that
global warming is real and has noted that it
is a serious problem, but he asserted there is a "debate over
whether it's man-made or naturally caused". The Bush
Administration's stance on global warming has remained
controversial in the scientific and environmental communities. Many
accusations have been made against the administration for allegedly
misinforming the public and not having done enough to reduce
carbon
emissions and deter
global
warming.
In 2006, Bush declared the
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands
a national monument, creating the largest marine reserve to date.
The
Papahānaumokuākea Marine National
Monument
comprises 84 million acres (340,000 km²)
and is home to 7,000 species of fish, birds, and other marine
animals, many of which are specific to only those islands.
The move was hailed by conservationists for "its foresight and
leadership in protecting this incredible area".
In his
2007 State of the
Union Address, Bush renewed his pledge to work toward
diminished reliance on foreign oil by reducing
fossil fuel consumption and increasing
alternative fuel production. Amid high gas
prices in 2008, Bush lifted a ban on
offshore drilling. The move was largely
symbolic, however, as there is still a federal law banning offshore
drilling. Bush said, "This means that the only thing standing
between the American people and these vast oil reserves is action
from the U.S. Congress." Bush had said in June 2008, "In the long
run, the solution is to reduce demand for oil by promoting
alternative energy technologies. My administration has worked with
Congress to invest in gas-saving technologies like advanced
batteries and
hydrogen fuel
cells... In the short run, the American economy will continue
to rely largely on oil. And that means we need to increase supply,
especially here at home. So my administration has repeatedly called
on Congress to expand domestic oil production."
In his
2008 State of the
Union Address, Bush announced that the U.S. would commit
$2 billion over the next three years
towards a new international fund to promote clean energy
technologies and fight climate change, saying, "along with
contributions from other countries, this fund will increase and
accelerate the deployment of all forms of cleaner, more efficient
technologies in developing nations like India and China, and help
leverage substantial private-sector capital by making clean energy
projects more financially attractive". He has also announced plans
to reaffirm the United States' commitment to work with major
economies, and, through the
United
Nations, to complete an international agreement that will slow,
stop, and eventually reverse the growth of
greenhouse gases; he stated, "this agreement
will be effective only if it includes commitments by every major
economy and gives none a free ride."
Stem cell research and first use of veto power
Federal
funding for medical research involving the creation or destruction
of human embryos through the Department of Health and
Human Services and the National Institutes of Health
has been forbidden by law since the passage in 1995
of the Dickey Amendment by Congress and
the signature of President Bill
Clinton. Bush has said that he supports adult
stem cell research and has supported federal
legislation that finances adult stem cell research. However, Bush
did not support
embryonic
stem cell research. On August 9, 2001, Bush signed an executive
order lifting the ban on federal funding for the 71 existing
"lines" of stem cells, but the ability of these existing lines to
provide an adequate medium for testing has been questioned. Testing
can only be done on twelve of the original lines, and all of the
approved lines have been cultured in contact with mouse cells,
which creates safety issues that complicate development and
approval of therapies from these lines. On July 19, 2006, Bush used
his
veto power for the first time in his
presidency to veto the
Stem Cell Research
Enhancement Act. The bill would have repealed the
Dickey Amendment, thereby permitting
federal money to be used for research where stem cells are derived
from the destruction of an embryo.
Immigration
In 2006, Bush urged to Congress allow more than twelve million
illegal immigrants to work in
the United States with the creation of a "temporary guest-worker
program". Bush did not support
amnesty for
illegal immigrants, but argued that the lack of legal status denies
the protections of U.S. laws to millions of people who face dangers
of poverty and exploitation, and penalizes employers despite a
demand for immigrant labor.
The President also urged Congress to provide additional funds for
border security and committed to deploying 6,000
National Guard troops to
the
Mexico –
United States border. In May-June 2007, Bush strongly supported
the
Comprehensive
Immigration Reform Act of 2007 which was written by a
bipartisan group of Senators with the active participation of the
Bush administration. The bill envisioned a legalization program for
undocumented immigrants, with an eventual path to citizenship;
establishing a guest worker program; a series of border and work
site enforcement measures; a reform of the green card application
process and the introduction of a point-based "merit" system for
green cards; elimination of "chain migration" and of the
Diversity Immigrant Visa; and other
measures. Bush contended that the proposed bill did not amount to
amnesty.
A heated public debate followed, which resulted in a substantial
rift within the Republican Party, the majority of conservatives
opposed it because of its legalization or amnesty provisions. The
bill was eventually defeated in the Senate on June 28, 2007, when a
cloture motion failed on a 46-53 vote.
President Bush expressed disappointment upon the defeat of one of
his signature domestic initiatives. The Bush administration later
proposed a series of immigration enforcement measures that do not
require a change in law.
Hurricane Katrina
Hurricane Katrina, which was one
of the worst natural disasters in U.S. history, struck early in
Bush’s second term.
Katrina formed in late August during the
2005 Atlantic hurricane season and devastated much of the
north-central Gulf Coast of the United
States, particularly New
Orleans
.
Bush
declared a state of emergency in Louisiana
on August 27, and in Mississippi
and Alabama
the following day; he authorized the Department of Homeland
Security
(DHS) and Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) to manage the disaster, but his announcement
failed to spur these agencies to action. The eye of the
hurricane made landfall on August 29, and New Orleans began to
flood due to levee breaches; later that day, Bush declared that a
major disaster existed in Louisiana, officially authorizing FEMA to
start using federal funds to assist in the recovery effort. On
August 30, DHS Secretary
Michael
Chertoff declared it "an incident of national significance",
triggering the first use of the newly created
National Response Plan. Three days
later, on September 2, National Guard troops first entered the city
of New Orleans. The same day, Bush toured parts of Louisiana,
Mississippi, and Alabama and declared that the success of the
recovery effort up to that point was "not enough".
As the disaster in New Orleans intensified, critics claimed that
the president was misrepresenting his administration's role in what
they saw as a flawed response. Leaders attacked the president for
having appointed apparently incompetent leaders to positions of
power at FEMA, notably
Michael D.
Brown; it was also argued that the
federal response was limited as a result of the
Iraq War and President Bush himself did not act
upon warnings of floods. Bush responded to mounting criticism by
accepting full responsibility for the federal government's failures
in its handling of the emergency. It has been argued that with
Katrina, President Bush passed a political tipping point from which
he would not recover.
Midterm dismissal of U.S. attorneys
During
Bush's second term, a controversy arose over the Justice
Department's
midterm dismissal of seven United States Attorneys. The
White House maintained that the U.S. attorneys were fired for poor
performance. Attorney General
Alberto
Gonzales would later resign over the issue, along with other
senior members of the Justice Department. The
House Judiciary
Committee issued
subpoenas for advisers
Harriet Miers and
Josh Bolten to testify regarding this matter,
but Bush directed Miers and Bolten to not comply with those
subpoenas, invoking his right of
executive privilege. Bush has maintained
that all of his advisers are protected under a broad executive
privilege protection to receive candid advice. The Justice
Department has determined that the President's order was
legal.
Although Congressional investigations have focused on whether the
Justice Department and the
White House were using the
U.S. Attorney positions for political advantage, no official
findings have been released. On March 10, 2008, the Congress filed
a federal lawsuit to enforce their issued subpoenas. On July 31,
2008, a
United States
district court judge ruled that President Bush's top advisers
are not immune from Congressional subpoenas.
In August 2009, Karl Rove and Harriet Miers testified before the
House Judiciary Committee. A Justice Department inquiry into the
firing of U.S. attorneys concluded that political considerations
played a part in as many as four of the dismissals.
Foreign policy

Countries visited by President George
W.
Bush during his terms in office.
During his campaign for election as President, Bush's
foreign policy platform
included support for a stronger economic and political relationship
with
Latin America, especially Mexico,
and a reduction of involvement in "
nation-building" and other small-scale
military engagements. The administration pursued a
national missile defense. In
response to the
September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks, President Bush launched the
War on Terrorism, in which the United
States military and an international coalition
invaded
Afghanistan. In 2003, President Bush launched the
invasion of Iraq, which President Bush viewed as
being part of the War on Terrorism.
Those invasions led to the toppling of the
Taliban regime in Afghanistan and the removal of
Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq as
well as the
deaths of many
Iraqis, with surveys indicating between
four hundred thousand to over
one million dead, excluding the tens of thousands of civilians
in Afghanistan.
Bush began his second term with an emphasis on improving strained
relations with European nations. He appointed long-time adviser
Karen Hughes to oversee a global public
relations campaign.
Bush lauded the pro-democracy struggles in
Georgia
and Ukraine
.
In March 2006, a visit to india led to renewed ties between the two
countries, reversing decades of U.S. policy. The visit focused
particularly in areas of
nuclear
energy and counter-terrorism cooperation. This is in stark
contrast to the stance taken by his predecessor, Clinton, whose
approach and response to India after the 1998 nuclear tests was
that of sanctions and hectoring. The relationship between India and
the United States was one that dramatically improved during Bush's
tenure.
Midway through Bush's second term, it was questioned whether Bush
was retreating from his freedom and democracy agenda, highlighted
in policy changes toward some oil-rich former Soviet republics in
central Asia.
September 11, 2001
The
September 11 terrorist
attacks were a major turning point in Bush's presidency. That
evening, he addressed the nation from the
Oval Office, promising a strong response to the
attacks but emphasizing the need for the nation to come together
and comfort the families of the victims.
On September 14, he
visited Ground
Zero
, meeting with Mayor Rudy
Giuliani and firefighters, police officers, and
volunteers. Bush addressed the gathering via a megaphone
while standing on a heap of rubble, to much applause:In a September
20, 2001 speech, Bush condemned
Osama
bin Laden and
Al-Qaeda, and issued an
ultimatum to the
Taliban regime in Afghanistan, where bin Laden was
operating, to "hand over the terrorists, or... share in their
fate".
War on Terrorism
After September 11, Bush announced a global
War on Terrorism. The Afghan Taliban regime
was not forthcoming with Osama bin Laden, so Bush ordered the
invasion of
Afghanistan to overthrow the Taliban regime.
In his January 29,
2002 State of the Union address,
he asserted that an "axis of evil"
consisting of North
Korea
, Iran
, and
Iraq
was "arming to threaten the peace of the world" and
"pose[d] a grave and growing danger". The Bush
Administration proceeded to assert a right and intention to engage
in
preemptive war, also called
preventive war, in response to
perceived threats. This would form a basis for what became known as
the
Bush Doctrine. The broader "War on
Terror", allegations of an "axis of evil", and, in particular, the
doctrine of preemptive war, began to weaken the unprecedented
levels of international and domestic support for Bush and United
States action against al Qaeda following the September 11
attacks.
Some
national leaders alleged abuse by U.S. troops and called for the
U.S. to shut down the Guantanamo Bay detention camp
and other such facilities. Dissent from, and
criticism of, Bush's leadership in the War on Terror increased as
the war in Iraq expanded. In 2006, a
National Intelligence
Estimate expressed the combined opinion of the United States'
own intelligence agencies, concluding that the Iraq War had become
the "
cause célèbre for
jihadists" and that the jihad movement was
growing.
Afghanistan
On
October 7, 2001, U.S. and Australian forces initiated bombing
campaigns that led to the arrival on November 13 of Northern Alliance troops in
Kabul
. The main goals of the war were to defeat
the
Taliban, drive
al
Qaeda out of Afghanistan, and capture key al Qaeda leaders. In
December 2001, the Pentagon reported that the Taliban had been
defeated but cautioned that the war would go on to continue
weakening Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders. Later that month the
UN had installed the
Afghan
Interim Authority chaired by
Hamid
Karzai.
Efforts
to kill or capture al Qaeda leader Osama
bin Laden failed as he escaped a battle in December 2001 in the
mountainous region of Tora
Bora
, which the Bush Administration later acknowledged
to have resulted from a failure to commit enough U.S. ground
troops. Bin Laden and al Qaeda's number two leader,
Ayman al-Zawahiri, as well as the leader
of the Taliban,
Mohammed Omar, remain
at large.
Despite
the initial success in driving the Taliban from power in Kabul
, by early
2003 the Taliban was regrouping, amassing new funds and
recruits. In 2006, the
Taliban
insurgency appeared larger, fiercer and better organized than
expected, with large-scale allied offensives such as
Operation Mountain Thrust
attaining limited success. As a result, President Bush commissioned
3,500 additional troops to the country in March 2007.
Iraq
Beginning with his January 29, 2002 State of the Union address,
Bush began publicly focusing attention on Iraq, which he labeled as
part of an "
axis of evil" allied with
terrorists and posing "a grave and growing danger" to U.S.
interests through possession of
weapons of mass destruction. In
the latter half of 2002, CIA
reports contained assertions
of
Saddam Hussein's intent of
reconstituting nuclear weapons programs, not properly accounting
for Iraqi
biological and
chemical weapons, and that some Iraqi
missiles had a range greater than allowed by the UN sanctions.
Claims that the Bush Administration manipulated or exaggerated the
threat and evidence of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction
capabilities would eventually become a major point of criticism for
the president.
In late 2002 and early 2003, Bush urged the United Nations to
enforce Iraqi
disarmament mandates,
precipitating a
diplomatic
crisis. In November 2002, Hans Blix and
Mohamed ElBaradei led UN weapons
inspectors in Iraq, but were forced to depart the country four days
prior to the U.S. invasion, despite their requests for more time to
complete their tasks. The U.S. initially sought a
UN Security Council resolution
authorizing the use of military force but dropped the bid for UN
approval due to vigorous opposition from several countries.
The war effort was joined by more than 20 other nations (most
notably the United Kingdom), designated the "
coalition of the willing". The
invasion of Iraq commenced on March 20, 2003 and the Iraqi military
was quickly defeated.
The capital, Baghdad
, fell on April 9, 2003. On May 1, Bush
declared the end of major combat operations in Iraq. The initial
success of U.S. operations increased his popularity, but the U.S.
and allied forces faced a growing insurgency led by sectarian
groups; Bush's "
Mission
Accomplished" speech was later criticized as premature. From
2004 through 2007, the situation in Iraq deteriorated further, with
some observers arguing that the country was engaged in a full scale
civil war. Bush's policies met with
criticism, including demands domestically to set a timetable to
withdraw troops from Iraq. The 2006 report of the bipartisan
Iraq Study Group, led by
James Baker, concluded that the situation in
Iraq was "grave and deteriorating". While Bush admitted that there
were strategic mistakes made in regards to the stability of Iraq,
he maintained he would not change the overall Iraq strategy.
In January 2005, free, democratic elections were held in Iraq for
the first time in 50 years. According to Iraqi National Security
Advisor
Mowaffak al-Rubaie, "This
is the greatest day in the history of this country." Bush praised
the event as well, saying that the Iraqis "have taken rightful
control of their country's destiny". This led to the election of
Jalal Talabani as
President and
Nouri al-Maliki as
Prime Minister of Iraq. A referendum to
approve a constitution in Iraq was held in October 2005, supported
by the majority
Shiites and many
Kurds.
On January 10, 2007 Bush addressed the nation from the
Oval Office regarding the situation in Iraq. In
his
speech he announced a
surge
of 21,500 more troops for Iraq, as well as a job program for
Iraqis, more reconstruction proposals, and
$1.2 billion for these programs. On May 1,
2007, Bush used his
veto for only the second
time in his presidency, rejecting a congressional bill setting a
deadline for the withdrawal of U.S. troops. Five years after the
invasion, Bush called the debate over the conflict "understandable"
but insisted that a continued U.S. presence there is crucial.
In March 2008 Bush praised the Iraqi government's "bold decision"
to launch the
Battle of Basra
against the
Mahdi Army, calling it "a
defining moment in the history of a free Iraq". He said he will
carefully weigh recommendations from his commanders General
David Petraeus and Ambassador
Ryan Crocker about how to proceed after
the military buildup ends in the summer of 2008. He also praised
the Iraqis' legislative achievements, including a pension law, a
revised de-Baathification law, a new budget, an amnesty law and a
provincial powers measure that, he said, sets the stage for the
Iraqi governorate
elections, 2008.
On July 31, 2008, Bush announced that with the end of July,
American troop deaths had reached their lowest
number—thirteen—since the war began in 2003. Due to increased
stability in Iraq, Bush announced the withdrawal of additional
American forces, which reflected an emerging consensus between the
White House and the Pentagon that the war has "turned a corner". He
also described what he saw as the success of the 2007 troop
surge.
Surveillance
Following
the events of September 11, Bush issued an executive order
authorizing the President's Surveillance
Program which included allowing the NSA
to monitor communications between suspected
terrorists outside the U.S and parties within the U.S. without
obtaining a warrant as required by the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act, (as of 2009, the other provisions of program
remained highly classified). Once the Department
of Justice
Office of Legal
Counsel questioned its original legal opinion that FISA did not
apply in a time of war, the program was subsequently re-authorized
by the President on the basis that the warrant requirements of FISA
were implicitly superseded by the subsequent passage of the
Authorization for Use of Military Force Against
Terrorists. The program proved to be
controversial, as
critics of the administration, as well as organizations such as the
American Bar Association,
claimed it was illegal. In August 2006, a U.S. district court judge
ruled that the
NSA
electronic surveillance program was unconstitutional, but on
July 6, 2007 that ruling was
vacated by the
United
States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit on the grounds
that the plaintiffs lacked
standing.
On January 17, 2007, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales informed
U.S. Senate leaders that the program would not be reauthorized by
the President, but would be subjected to judicial oversight.
Interrogation Policies
Bush authorized the
CIA
to use
waterboarding as one of several
enhanced interrogation
techniques. Between 2002 and 2003 the CIA considered certain
enhanced interrogation techniques, such as waterboarding, to be
legal based on a secret Justice Department legal opinion claiming
terror detainees were not protected by the
Geneva Conventions' ban on torture. The
CIA had exercised the technique on certain key terrorist suspects
under authority given to it in the
Bybee
Memo from the Attorney General, though that memo was later
withdrawn. While not permitted by the
U.S. Army Field Manuals which assert
"that harsh interrogation tactics elicit unreliable information",
the Bush administration believed these enhanced interrogations
"provided critical information" to preserve American lives.
Critics, such as former CIA officer Bob Baer, have stated that
information was suspect, "you can get anyone to confess to anything
if the torture's bad enough."
On
October 17, 2006, Bush signed into law the Military Commissions Act of
2006, a law enacted in the wake of the Supreme
Court's
decision on Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, , which allows the U.S.
government to prosecute
unlawful
enemy combatants by military commission rather than a standard
trial. The law also denies them access to
habeas corpus and bars the
torture of detainees, but allows the president to
determine what constitutes torture.
On March 8, 2008, Bush
vetoed H.R. 2082, a bill
that would have expanded Congressional oversight over the
intelligence community and banned the use of waterboarding as well
as other forms of interrogation not permitted under the
United States Army Field
Manual on Human Intelligence Collector Operations, saying that
"the bill Congress sent me would take away one of the most valuable
tools in the war on terror". In April 2009, the ACLU sued and won
release of the secret memos that had authorized the Bush
administration's interrogation tactics. One memo detailed specific
interrogation tactics including a footnote that described
waterboarding as torture as well as that the form of waterboarding
used by the CIA was far more intense than authorized by the Justice
Department.
North Korea
Bush
publicly condemned Kim Jong-il of
North
Korea
, naming North Korea one of three states in an
"axis of evil", and saying that "the
United States of America will not permit the world's most dangerous
regimes to threaten us with the world's most destructive
weapons". Within months, "both countries had walked away
from their respective commitments under the
U.S.-DPRK Agreed Framework of October 1994".
North Korea's October
9, 2006 detonation
of a nuclear device further complicated Bush's
foreign policy, which centered for both terms of his presidency on
"[preventing] the terrorists and regimes who seek chemical,
biological or nuclear weapons from threatening the United States
and the world". Bush condemned North Korea's claims,
reaffirmed his commitment to "a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula", and
stated that "transfer of nuclear weapons or material by North Korea
to states or non-state entities would be considered a grave threat
to the United States", for which North Korea would be held
accountable. On May 7, 2007, North Korea agreed to shut down its
nuclear reactors immediately pending the release of frozen funds
held in a foreign bank account. This was a result of a series of
three-way talks initiated by the United States and including China.
On September 2, 2007, North Korea agreed to disclose and dismantle
all of its nuclear programs by the end of 2007. By May 2009, North
Korea had restarted its nuclear program and threatened to attack
South Korea.
Syria
President
Bush expanded economic sanctions on Syria
.
In early
2007, the Treasury Department
, acting on a June 2005 executive order, froze
American bank accounts of Syria's Higher Institute of Applied
Science and Technology, Electronics Institute, and National
Standards and Calibration Laboratory. Bush's order prohibits
Americans from doing business with these institutions suspected of
helping spread
weapons of
mass destruction and being supportive of terrorism. Under
separate executive orders signed by Bush in 2004 and later 2007,
the Treasury Department froze the assets of two Lebanese and two
Syrians, accusing them of activities to "undermine the legitimate
political process in Lebanon" in November 2007.
Those designated
included: Assaad Halim Hardan, a member of Lebanon
's parliament and current leader of the Syrian
Socialist National Party; Wi'am Wahhab, a former member of
Lebanon's government (Minister of the Environment) under Prime
Minister Omar Karami (2004-2005); Hafiz Makhluf, a colonel and
senior official in the Syrian General Intelligence Directorate and
a cousin of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad; and Muhammad Nasif Khayrbik, identified as a close
adviser to Assad.
Assassination attempt
On May
10, 2005, Vladimir Arutyunian, a
native Georgian who was born to a family of ethnic Armenians, threw
a live hand grenade toward a podium
where Bush was speaking at Freedom Square in Tbilisi
, Georgia
. Georgian President
Mikhail Saakashvili was seated nearby.
It landed in the crowd about from the podium after hitting a girl,
but it did not detonate. Arutyunian was arrested in July 2005,
confessed, was convicted and was given a life sentence in January
2006.
Other issues
President Bush withdrew U.S. support for several international
agreements, including the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
(ABM) with Russia.
Bush emphasized a careful approach to the
conflict between Israel
and the
Palestinians; he denounced Palestine Liberation
Organization leader Yasser Arafat
for his support of violence, but sponsored dialogues between Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian
National Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas. Bush supported Sharon's unilateral disengagement
plan, and lauded the democratic elections held in Palestine after
Arafat's death.
Bush also
expressed U.S. support for the defense of Taiwan
following
the stand-off in April 2001 with the People's Republic of China
over the Hainan Island
incident, when an EP-3E Aries II
surveillance aircraft collided
with a People's
Liberation Army Air Force jet,
leading to the detention of U.S. personnel. In 2003–2004, Bush
authorized U.S. military intervention in Haiti
and
Liberia
to protect U.S. interests. Bush condemned the
attacks by militia forces on the
people of Darfur
and
denounced the killings in Sudan
as
genocide. Bush said that an
international
peacekeeping presence was
critical in Darfur, but opposed referring the situation to the
International Criminal
Court.
In his
State of the Union
Address in January 2003, Bush outlined a five-year strategy for
global emergency
AIDS relief, the
President's Emergency
Plan for AIDS Relief. Bush announced
$15 billion for this effort. This program is
believed by some to be a positive aspect of Bush's legacy across
the political spectrum.
On June 10, 2007, he met with Albanian Prime Minister
Sali Berisha and became the first president to
visit Albania.
Bush has voiced his support for the independence of
Kosovo
.
In 2002, Bush opened the
2002
Winter Olympics. Departing from previous practice, he stood
among a group of U.S. athletes rather than from a ceremonial stand
or box, saying: "On behalf of a proud, determined, and grateful
nation, I declare open the Games of Salt Lake City, celebrating the
Olympic Winter Games." In 2008, in the course of a good-will trip
to Asia, he attended the
2008
Summer Olympics in Beijing.
Judicial appointments
Supreme Court
Following
the announcement of Supreme Court
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's retirement on July
1, 2005, Bush nominated John
G. Roberts to succeed
her. On September 5, following the death of
Chief Justice William Rehnquist, this nomination was
withdrawn and Bush instead nominated Roberts for Chief Justice to
succeed Rehnquist. Roberts was confirmed by the Senate as the 17th
Chief Justice on September 29, 2005.
On October 3, 2005, Bush nominated White House Counsel
Harriet Miers for O'Connor's position; after
facing significant opposition, her name was withdrawn on October
27. Four days later, on October 31, Bush nominated federal
appellate judge
Samuel Alito for the
position and he was confirmed as the 110th Supreme Court Justice on
January 31, 2006.
Other courts
In addition to his two Supreme Court appointments, Bush appointed
61 judges to the
United
States Courts of Appeals and 261 judges to the
United States district courts.
Each of these numbers, along with his total of 324 judicial
appointments, is third in American history, behind both Ronald
Reagan and Bill Clinton. Bush experienced a number of
judicial
appointment controversies, as 39 people nominated to 27
federal appellate
judgeships were blocked by the
Senate Democrats either in
the
Senate Judiciary
Committee or on the Senate floor using a
filibuster.
Public image and perception
Domestic
[[File:George W Bush approval ratings.svg|thumb|right|
Gallup/
USA
Today Bush public
opinion
polling from February 2001 to January 2009. Blue denotes
approve, red disapprove and green unsure. Large increases in
approval
followed the September 11 attacks, the beginning of the
2003 Iraq conflict and the capture of
Saddam Hussein]]
Image
Bush's upbringing in
West Texas, his
accent, his vacations on his Texas ranch, and his penchant for
country metaphors contribute to his folksy, American
cowboy image. "I think people look at him and think
John Wayne", says Piers Morgan, editor of
the British
Daily Mirror. It
has been suggested that Bush's accent was an active choice, as a
way of distinguishing himself from Northeastern intellectuals and
anchoring himself to his Texas roots. Both supporters and
detractors have pointed to his country persona as reasons for their
support or criticism.
Bush's intellectual capacity has been
satirized by the media, comedians, and other
politicians. Detractors tended to cite linguistic errors made by
Bush during his public speeches, which are colloquially termed as
Bushisms. Editorials in
Harper's Magazine,
Rolling Stone,
The Washington Post,
Common Dreams NewsCenter, and
The Nation have referred to Bush
as "the worst president ever".
In contrast to his
father, who was
perceived as having
troubles with an
overarching unifying theme, Bush embraced larger visions and
was seen as a man of larger ideas and associated huge risks.
Approval
Bush's popularity was highly variable during his two terms. He
began his presidency with
approval ratings
near 50%. After the
September
11, 2001 attacks, Bush gained an approval rating of 90%,
maintaining 80–90% approval for four months after the attacks. It
remained over 50% during most of his first term.
In 2000 and again in 2004,
Time magazine named George W. Bush as
its
Person of the Year, a
title awarded to someone whom the editors believe "has done the
most to influence the events of the year". In May 2004, Gallup
reported that 89% of the Republican electorate approved of Bush.
The support waned, however, due mostly to a minority of
Republicans' frustration with him on issues of spending, illegal
immigration, and Middle Eastern affairs.
Within the
United States
armed forces, according to an unscientific survey, the
president was strongly supported in the 2004 presidential
elections. While 73% of military personnel said that they would
vote for Bush, 18% preferred his Democratic rival,
John Kerry.
According to Peter Feaver, a Duke
University
political
scientist who has studied the political leanings of the U.S.
military, members of the armed services supported Bush because they
found him more likely than Kerry to complete the War in
Iraq.
Bush's approval rating went below the 50% mark in AP-Ipsos polling
in December 2004. Thereafter, his approval ratings and approval of
his handling of domestic and foreign policy issues steadily
dropped.
Bush received heavy criticism for his
handling of the Iraq War, his response to Hurricane
Katrina and to the Abu Ghraib prisoner
abuse, NSA
warrantless surveillance, Plame
affair and Guantanamo Bay detention camp
controversies.
Polls conducted in 2006 showed an average of 37% approval ratings
for Bush, the lowest for any second-term president at that point of
term since
Harry S. Truman in March 1951, when Truman's approval
rating was 28%, which contributed to what Bush called the
"thumping" of the
Republican Party in the
2006 mid-term
elections. Throughout 2007, Bush's approval rating hovered in
the mid-thirties, although in an October 17, 2007
Reuters poll, Bush received a lower approval rating
of 24%, the lowest point of his presidency.

President Bush thanks American
military personnel, September 2007
April 2008, Bush's disapproval ratings were the highest ever
recorded in the 70-year history of the
Gallup poll for any president, with 69% of those
polled disapproving of the job Bush was doing as president and 28%
approving. In September 2008, in polls performed by various
agencies, Bush's approval rating ranged from 19%—the lowest ever—to
34%. and his disapproval rating stood at 69%. Bush left the White
House as one of the most unpopular American presidents, second in
unpopularity only to
Richard
Nixon.
In response to his poll numbers and "worst president" accusations,
Bush said, "I frankly don't give a damn about the polls... to
assume that historians can figure out the effect of the Bush
administration before the Bush administration has ended is... in my
mind... not an accurate reflection upon how history works."
In 2006,
744 professional historians surveyed by New York-based Siena College
regarded Bush's presidency as follows: Great: 2%;
Near Great: 5%; Average: 11%; Below Average: 24%; Failure:
58%. Thomas Kelly, professor emeritus of American studies at
Siena College, said that "In this case, current public opinion
polls actually seem to cut the President more slack than the
experts do." Similar outcomes were retrieved by two informal
surveys done by the
History News
Network in 2004 and 2008.
A March 13, 2008, poll by the Pew Research Center for the People
and the Press reported that 53% of Americans—a slim
majority—believe that "the U.S. will ultimately succeed in
achieving its goals" in Iraq. That figure was up from 42% in
September 2007 and the highest since 2006.
Calls for Bush's
impeachment were made,
though most polls showed a plurality of Americans did not support
the president's impeachment. The reasoning behind impeachment
usually centered on the
NSA warrantless
surveillance controversy, the Bush administration's
justification for the war in Iraq, and alleged violations of the
Geneva Conventions.
Representative
Dennis Kucinich, a Democrat from
Ohio
, introduced 35 articles of impeachment on the floor
of the House of Representatives against President Bush on June 9,
2008, but Speaker
Nancy Pelosi declared that impeachment
was "off the table".
Foreign perceptions
President Bush has been criticized internationally and targeted by
the global anti-war and anti-globalization campaigns, particularly
for his administration's foreign policy. Views of him within the
international community are
more negative than previous American Presidents, with France
largely opposed to what he advocated.
Bush was described as having especially close personal
relationships with
Tony Blair and
Vicente Fox, although formal relations
were sometimes strained. Other leaders, such as Afghan president
Hamid Karzai, Ugandan president
Yoweri Museveni, Spanish prime
minister
José
Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, and Venezuelan president
Hugo Chávez, have openly criticized the
president. Later in Bush's presidency, tensions arose between
himself and
Vladimir Putin, which has
led to a cooling of their relationship.
In 2006, a majority of respondents in 18 of 21 countries surveyed
around the world were found to hold an unfavorable opinion of Bush.
Respondents indicated that they judged his administration as
negative for world security. In 2007, the
Pew Global Attitudes Project
reported that during the Bush presidency, attitudes towards the
United States and the American people became less favorable around
the world.
A March
2007 survey of Arab opinion conducted by Zogby International and
the University of Maryland
found that Bush was the most disliked leader in the
Arab world.
The
Pew Research Center's 2007
Global Attitudes poll found that out of 47 countries, a majority of
respondents expressed "a lot of confidence" or "some confidence" in
Bush in only nine countries: Israel
, India,
Ethiopia
, Ghana
, Ivory Coast
, Kenya
, Mali
, Nigeria
and Uganda.
During a
June 2007 visit to the mostly Islamic Eastern European nation of Albania
, Bush was greeted enthusiastically. Albania
has a population of 3.6 million, has troops in both Iraq and
Afghanistan, and the country's government is highly supportive of
American foreign policy.
A huge image of the President now hangs in
the middle of the capital city of Tirana
flanked by
Albanian and American flags. The Bush administration's support for the
independence of Albanian-majority Kosovo
, while
endearing him to the Albanians, has
troubled U.S. relations with Serbia
, leading
to the February 2008 torching of the U.S. embassy in Belgrade
.
Post-presidency

George and Laura Bush wave to a crowd
of 1000 at Andrews Air Force Base before their final departure to
Texas, January 20, 2009
Following
the inauguration of Barack
Obama, Bush and his family boarded a presidential helicopter
typically used as Marine One to travel to
Andrews Air
Force Base
. Bush, with his wife, then boarded an Air
Force Boeing VC-25 for a flight to a
homecoming celebration in Midland, Texas
. Because he was no longer President, this
flight was designated Special Air Mission 28000, instead of
Air Force One.
After a welcome rally
in Midland, the Bushes returned to their ranch in Crawford,
Texas
, by helicopter. They bought a home in
the Preston Hollow
neighborhood of Dallas
, Texas
, where
they planned to settle down.
Since leaving office, Bush has kept a relatively low profile.
However,
he has made appearances at various events throughout the
Dallas/Forth Worth area, most notably when he conducted the opening
coin toss at the Dallas Cowboys first
game in the team's new Cowboys Stadium
in Arlington
. An April 6, 2009, visit to a
Texas Rangers game, where he gave a
speech thanking the people of Dallas for helping them settle in
(and specifically, the people of Arlington, where the game was
held), was met with a standing ovation.
His first
speaking engagement occurred on March 17, 2009 in Calgary
, Alberta
. He spoke at a private event entitled "A
conversation with George W. Bush" at the
Telus
Convention Centre and stated that he would not criticize President
Obama and hoped he succeeds, specifically stating, "[President
Obama] deserves my silence." During his speech, Bush announced that
he had begun writing a book, which is expected to be published
under the title
Decision Points in 2010. The book will
focus on "12 difficult personal and political decisions" Bush faced
during his presidency.
Bush made
a video-taped appearance on the June 11, 2009, episode of
The Colbert Report
during the show's trip to Baghdad
, Iraq
. Bush
praised the troops for earning a "special place in American
History" and for their courage and endurance. He joked that it
would come in handy, saying, "I've sat through
Stephen's stuff before," in reference to
Colbert's
performance at the 2006
White House
Correspondents' Association dinner as well as
The Colbert
Report's history of criticizing Bush's administration.
On August 29, 2009, Bush, with his wife
Laura, attended the funeral of Senator
Ted Kennedy. Bush made his debut as a
motivational speaker on October 26 at the "Get Motivated" seminar
in Dallas.
In the
aftermath of the Fort Hood shooting
, Fox News revealed that the former President and
his wife had paid an undisclosed visit to the survivors and
victims' families the day following the shooting, having contacted
the base commander requesting that the visit be private and not
involve press coverage. The Bushes own a property less than
30 minutes from Fort Hood and spent one to two hours at the
base.
See also
References
-
http://www.americanpresidents.org/presidents/president.asp?PresidentNumber=6
- ;
- Bush, then the Governor of Texas, was the commencement
speaker at St. John's Academy in 1995:
- Bush, George W., A Charge to Keep, (1999) ISBN
0-688-17441-8
- Cain, Nick & Growden, Greg "Chapter 21: Ten Peculiar Facts
about Rugby" in Rugby Union for Dummies (2nd Edition),
p297 (pub: John Wiley and Sons, Chichester, England) ISBN 978-0-470-03537-5
- ;
- Lardner, George Jr. and Lois Romano. " At Height of Vietnam, Bush Picks Guard"
Washington Post, 28 July 1999.
- ;
- >
- Gore would have received 267 electoral votes, but a DC elector
abstained.
- After initial comments made in March, there was no statement on
the latter issue until June.
- "Bush had a smaller electoral-vote margin than any re-elected
president since 1916 (Woodrow Wilson), and every president
re-elected since Wilson" An Election Breakwater? In 2002 and 2004,
only 98% of incumbents were re-elected. Appalled, incumbents are
working to eliminate that awful 2%. Frebruary 27 2006 Newsweek
- Greenburg, Jan Crawford. Supreme Conflict: The Inside Story of
the Struggle for Control of the United States Supreme Court, 2007,
Penguin Books, p. 273
- Debt nation, post two, Small Business Services
CPA Group, Inc.
- So much else happened while people eyed
election, The Associated Press, November 9, 2008
- Aversa, Jeannine, Employers
Slash 63,000 Jobs in February, Most in 5 Years, Feeding
Recession Fears", Associated Press, March 7, 2008. Retrieved July
11, 2008.
- See Lehman Brothers for details and
citations.
- See American International Group
for details and citations.
- ;
- Greenburg, Jan Crawford, Supreme Conflict: The Inside Story of
the Struggle for Control of the United States Supreme Court, 2007,
Penguin Books, p. 274
- ;
- ; Romm calls Bush's "don't rush to judgment" and "we need to
ask more questions" stance a classic delay tactic. Part 2.
- ;
- ;
- "I don't think anybody anticipated the breach of the levees."
George W. Bush to Diane Sawyer, Good Morning
America, September 1, 2005.
- Mukasey won't pursue contempt probe of Bush
aides, Reuters (March 1, 2008).
- Federal judge rules Bush's aides can be subpoenaed,
USA Today, July 31, 2008
- AP, August 11, 2009
- Update on Iraqi Casualty Data by Opinion Research
Business, January 2008
- "More than 1,000,000 Iraqis murdered". September 2007.
Opinion Research Business. PDF report: [1]
- "Poll: Civilian Death Toll in Iraq May Top 1
Million" (2007). Retrieved January 22, 2009.
-
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2006-03-02-nuclear-pact_x.htm,
- http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1109/29825.html
- Lopez, George, "Perils of Bush's Pre-emptive War Doctrine",
Indianapolis Star, October 3, 2003.
- Prevent Our Enemies from Threatening Us, Our Allies, and
Our Friends with Weapons of Mass Destruction
- NIE: Al Qaeda 'Damaged' Becoming More Scattered
CNN, September 26, 2006.
- Spy Agencies Say Iraq War Hurting U.S. Terror
Fight Washington Post, September 24, 2006.
- Judis, John B. and Ackerman, Spencer, “The Selling of the Iraq
War”, The New Republic, June 2003.
- Hersh, Seymour M., "The Stovepipe", The New Yorker,
October 27, 2003.
- Bush on anniversary: War in Iraq must go on,
CNN, March 19,
2008.
- Baghdad on lockdown as rockets, bombs fly,
CNN, March 28, 2008.
- Bush: Baghdad's move against Shiite militias a
'bold decision', CNN, March 27, 2008.
- U.S. Department of Justice White Paper on NSA Legal
Authorities.
- ;
- http://www.thomas.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c110:H.R.2082.ENR:
- "U.S. Treasury moves to clamp down on Syrian
entities accused of spreading weapons". Registration required.
January 4, 2007. Retrieved June 23, 2009.
- U.S. announces sanctions to combat Syrian influence
on Lebanon, The Jerusalem Post, November 5, 2007. Retrieved
June 23, 2009.
- ;
- ;
- American Research Group, Inc polling numbers for September
22, 2008
- Experts: Bush Presidency Is A Failure; Little
Chance To Improve Ranking (PDF). Siena Research Institute. May
1, 2006. Retrieved June 6, 2008
- McElvaine, Robert S. "Historians vs. George W. Bush". May 17, 2004.
Retrieved June 6, 2008.
- McElvaine, Robert S. "HNN Poll: 61%
of Historians Rate the Bush Presidency Worst". April 1, 2008.
Retrieved June 6, 2008
- Keeping the U.S. at Bay, Mexican Presidential
Candidate Looks to Move Past Fox's Failures Marcela Sanchez
(March 3, 2006).
- Mexico's President Snubs Bush, Vicente Fox Cancels
Visit To Bush Ranch To Protest Execution (August 15,
2002).
- Row over Bush security as Blair defends visit
Ewen MacAskill, Hugh Muir, and Julian Borger in Washington, The
Guardian (November 11, 2003).
- http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30074152/
External links