And the break is quite emphatic I must say:
The beginning of my own sense of separation from the Bush administration came in January 2005, when the president declared that it is now the policy of the United States to eradicate tyranny in the world, and that the survival of American liberty is dependent on the liberty of every other nation. This was at once so utopian and so aggressive that it shocked me. For others the beginning of distance might have been Katrina and the incompetence it revealed, or the depth of the mishandling and misjudgments of Iraq.
What I came in time to believe is that the great shortcoming of this White House, the great thing it is missing, is simple wisdom. Just wisdom–a sense that they did not invent history, that this moment is not all there is, that man has lived a long time and there are things that are true of him, that maturity is not the same thing as cowardice, that personal loyalty is not a good enough reason to put anyone in charge of anything, that the way it works in politics is a friend becomes a loyalist becomes a hack, and actually at this point in history we don’t need hacks.
Noonan goes on to scold Bush for making the same mistake his father did, only on a grander scale:
One of the things I have come to think the past few years is that the Bushes, father and son, though different in many ways, are great wasters of political inheritance. They throw it away as if they’d earned it and could do with it what they liked. Bush senior inherited a vibrant country and a party at peace with itself. He won the leadership of a party that had finally, at great cost, by 1980, fought itself through to unity and come together on shared principles. Mr. Bush won in 1988 by saying he would govern as Reagan had. Yet he did not understand he’d been elected to Reagan’s third term. He thought he’d been elected because they liked him. And so he raised taxes, sundered a hard-won coalition, and found himself shocked to lose his party the presidency, and for eight long and consequential years. He had many virtues, but he wasted his inheritance.
Bush the younger came forward, presented himself as a conservative, garnered all the frustrated hopes of his party, turned them into victory, and not nine months later was handed a historical trauma that left his country rallied around him, lifting him, and his party bonded to him. He was disciplined and often daring, but in time he sundered the party that rallied to him, and broke his coalition into pieces. He threw away his inheritance. I do not understand such squandering.
George Bush has done serious damage to the Republican Party. One wonders how they will repair it.
H/T: Brendan Loy


June 2nd, 2007 at 1:05 pm
Ms. Noonan seems to have struck upon what I have been trying to figure out with this Presidency. It has been in a constant rate of separation from conservative values from even before 2005, but less dramatically.
I had put it to the rarified air in the Capital and the influence of socialists like Ted Kennedy. Things like the prescription drug program and “no child left behind” were shocks to my conservative psyche. The Iraq war was necessary to take away a base for Al Qaida after the Afghanistan war, but the democratization of Iraq is a different proposition. After doing a lot of study on Islam, I am convinced that we are on a fool’s errand. The problem now is how to disengage with honor. Luckily, the Sunni insurgents have had it with all the killing and have started to throw Al Qaida out. This is also happening in Lebanon with Hamas, although Lebanon still embraces Hizbullah.
The final straw is this “illegal immigrant” bill that is an abomination. It has the same backers that McCain-Feingold had and is a direct assault on our country. It is a good thing, for him, that “W” is not running again because I couldn’t vote for a backer of this bill for President. This includes McCain, who had negatives before this bill. It seems that Mayor Giuliani is also in trouble on this bill.
All in all, President George W. Bush seems to be determined to destroy the positives of his Presidency.
Best regards,
W Howard Baker
Bardstown, KY