From the contributors
  • Bad for Democracy: How the Presidency Undermines the Power of the People
    Bad for Democracy: How the Presidency Undermines the Power of the People
    by Dana D. Nelson

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A good part of the reason I started blogging was because I went to a history conference at a UT branch up between Dallas and Fort Worth and found that, contrary to belief, many well known academic historians have found community history projects to be invaluable because of their focus and details. Photos rated high. Photos with details rate high. Interviews with participants in events rated high. Interviews with older people rated high if you cover their experience and perspective.
- Prairie Weather


The last place you will hear about the new American labor movement is in big American outlets.

Via lambert, via susie. See them, their blogrolls, Twitter hash tag #1u and just about any other outlet where citizens can get the word out. Such as:

AFSCME Daily Newswire

AFL-CIO NOW BLOG

Heartland Revolution

Service Employees International Union and its Fight for a Fair Economy site in Ohio.

Many state and local sites such as the Ohio Civil Service Employees Association and AFSCME Council 8.

The Pragmatic Progressive Forum

We Party Patriots

Cory McCray

Joe’s Union Review


The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW)

The CIW is a community-based organization of mainly Latino, Mayan Indian and Haitian immigrants working in low-wage jobs throughout the state of Florida. Via.


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« This Week in Tyranny | Main | How Congress Could Lead On Iraq »

Break Out the Shovels

The President has one thing in common with his predecessors: He claims to not care about his legacy. Most seem to say that at one point or another; in this case “[w]e are still arguing about the record of the first president…I’m sure they will take their time when it comes to judging my record.” It is one of the more benign lies he has told, maybe because it only reveals his comprehensive inability to understand history. There is no harm in that kind of ignorance, though it has grave implications when it comes from your leader. Of course, I would love to know what exactly he thinks we are still arguing about with Washington. Does anyone think he was a terrible President? His farewell address is universally regarded as a gift to the country, especially its call to avoid foreign entanglements. Leaving office after two terms and helping an orderly transfer of power to a successor was a move of great courage considering the former general could have strangled the republic in its crib if he had wanted. What are we arguing about again? And of course even if it were true he neglects to consider more recent Presidents like Harding and Hoover whom everyone pretty well agrees were terrible. Not too many arguments there. Contemporaneous opinion about Presidents tends to hold up, which makes someone like Truman a very rare exception. In other words, don’t expect your stock to change too much.

Of course, he clearly does care about his legacy. I’m no fan of his so maybe the following is unfair but here’s a quick review: No Child Left Behind (mixed results, likely to lapse); tax cuts (likely to lapse); surpluses into deficits; Hurricane Katrina (botched response, no follow through); 9/11 (failed to unite nation with sense of shared purpose and sacrifice; told us instead to keep shopping); the economy (bad and getting worse). The only potentially bright spot is Medicare Part D. In foreign relations he started the Afghanistan war well but has handled it poorly since; alienated allies; was a credulous boob with strongmen (Putin, Musharraf); aggrandized enemies (Iran and North Korea, though the latter has greatly improved); and astounded the world by actually making the Israeli-Palestinian conflict worse. And of course Iraq.

All the problems above are stubborn in some way. In the time left there simply isn’t a lot of room to change them fundamentally. He can nibble at them now and maybe change course a bit but by and large he won’t be able to turn those battleships around. Executive power is another matter. He has made extraordinary claims and the question now is, what will future Presidents do about it? He may fairly echo Ben Franklin when the next one asks him “what have you left me?”: “A unitary executive, if you can keep it.” Will the next one claim executive privilege to cover up any politically uncomfortable truth, or make extensive use of signing statements to justify not following the law, or inflate relatively modest tools like Status of Forces Agreements into robust ones like treaties? The candidates aren’t saying at the moment, but unless they explicitly disavow them (as John McCain has on signing statements) we should expect them to happily do so.

Much more interesting is the gray area between executive power and lawbreaking. This year the President’s top legislative priority started out as getting the Protect America Act made permanent. That seems to be off the table, so he scaled it back to just telecomm immunity. As others have noted the priority now is clearly to not let what he has been doing ever see the light of day, but even his allies acknowledge “his political capital is waning”. The lawsuits against the telecom companies will likely have explosive revelations about what the President ordered them to do. The great problem for him is that his activities are not the subject of the suits, but potential evidence against others. Once discovery begins it all comes out. At that point the damage is done - the political backlash will likely be immense and immediate. The verdict doesn’t matter, only the airing of secrets. The same is true for additional details on our torture regime, the retrial of Joseph Nacchio and the activities of the CIA that seem to require wider and wider insurance coverage. Revelations in these and other areas promise to continue to emerge long after he leaves office and he surely considers that a mortal threat to his legacy. He wants to put them beyond the reach of inquiry before he leaves, and that may consume more of his energy than anything else. If he could take every shovel full dug out for his library and dump it on these inconvenient secrets he surely would.

Reader Comments (10)

George Bush & Dick Cheney have left a train wreck behind them, Dan. They're happy and are looking forward to putting their feet up for the rest of their lives to watch the next president fix it too.

Maybe Americans should have them arrested and tried in the Hague during their retirement? I personally would love that!

March 20, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterKayInMaine

They might be in more danger of that than they realize.

March 20, 2008 | Registered CommenterDan

Maybe the biggest legacy will be the anger, extremism and law-breaking which drove Bush/Cheney to power -- and have remained the context in which they've operated for eight years. I don't think that's going away any time soon, do you? In fact, it will take a very strong and committed new president to simply change the context -- quite apart from fixing the individual messes they created.

March 21, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterPW

dan said: "They might be in more danger of that than they realize."

don't get my hopes up, dan. i don't see these criminals facing anything other than high-fee speaking engagements in their future.

if wishes were horses ...

March 23, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterkaren marie

I can easily envision a situation where they are out of office, have no political supporters, are widely and intensely disliked and have any number of investigations/revelations break against them. There might be enough respect for the Presidency to make people unwilling to see a former one fall too far, but there might also be enough revulsion for people to be content to leave them to their fate. I'm not saying it's likely, just plausible.

March 23, 2008 | Registered CommenterDan

And you didn't even mention the Presidential Records Act, the lost emails, the subpoenas unanswered, the unbackedup hard drives trashed.

Bush's real view of his place in history can be gauged from how much he has already buried - how much he was busy burying, fully knowing its enormity, before there was any clamor for its preservation.

Or more likely it was Cheney while the frat boy remained as blissfully ignorant about it as he was and remains about everything else.

March 24, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAlanDownunder

I don't think it likely that Bush/Cheney will end up in a court at the Hague. Heads of State don't get a free ride, but that sort of trial seems to be a sign of national defeat and failure of law.

It's the "or else" that comes after "clean up your own mess".

But I can almost imagine them begging to be impeached, rather than being dragged off to the Hague.


March 24, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterDave Bell

That's a great point Dave. Like I said, I think it could happen, not that it will. On the other hand, it looks like torture and war crimes happened. What is the appropriate response?

March 24, 2008 | Registered CommenterDan

You realize there are several websites devoted to Bush's legacy. This is one of them.
http://presidentbushlegacy.com/bushlegacy/main

March 24, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterboctaoe

I did not realize that - thanks for the link!

March 24, 2008 | Registered CommenterDan

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