http://www.salon.com/politics/feature/2001/06/28/bush/index.html



The incredible shrinking presidency
Bush's ever-diminishing stature and nonexistent vision for America is
cheapening the White House.
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By Arianna Huffington
June 28, 2001 | As the dog days of summer approach, it's becoming clear that
President Bush's to-do list is even shorter than his attention span: "Tax
rates down? Check. Energy prices up? Check. T-ball given its rightful place
in the national spotlight? Check. Checks in the mail? Check."

But it isn't just Bush's anemic agenda that has sputtered and keeled over,
it's the very model of leadership that has dominated our democracy since the
nation's founding. Bush's ever-diminishing stature is diminishing the
presidency itself. In fact, it's the death knell for the "Great Man" theory
of leadership, the military model of a single father figure to guide us,
protect us and set the national agenda.

With Dubya's dubious victory in November and his managerial innovations, like
the CEO-in-chief approach and the Cheney prime ministership, it is now
abundantly clear that you can be president and not be a leader -- that you
can have power but no authority.

Ironically, during the campaign, Bush seemed obsessed with trying to define
leadership. In one memorable stab, he even justified his much-vilified
appearance at Bob Jones University as an act of leadership: "That's what a
leader does. A leader doesn't shirk. A leader leads. A leader stands up and
sets an agenda." However Lilliputian it may be.

When recently asked to define his administration's central mission, the
president's instant answer was "tax relief." With that brief response, he
flouted three of the most fundamental attributes of leadership: the ability
to identify a compelling vision of a greater future, a gift for inspiring
people to transcend their own interests and the courage to not merely reflect
current opinion but to challenge and shape it.

To be fair, the old model of leadership had already been badly wounded by
eight years of Clintonian spinning, triangulating and minute-by-minute
polling. But it met its Waterloo with W.'s ascension. There was our
sophomoric president earlier this week, for example, turning an Oval Office
photo op with Ariel Sharon into an embarrassing display of presidential
petulance. In the "Am not!" "Are too!" verbal jousting, Bush kept insisting,
despite Sharon's unambiguous disagreement, that "progress" is being made in
the Mideast. He used the term 13 times in 11 minutes. Someone with more
maturity -- say your average kindergartner -- would have taken Sharon's hint
and dropped the subject after, oh, the fifth repetition. But not Bush, who
insisted on lecturing the Israeli prime minister: "Progress is in inches, not
in miles. But nevertheless, an inch is better than nothing." No word on
whether he added: "I'm rubber, you're glue."

Just as puerile were Bush's pronouncements following his return from Europe
earlier this month when he almost pulled a muscle patting himself on the back
for exceeding expectations: "I didn't think about Ronald Reagan when I was
there," he said, "but now that you bring it up ... With all due modesty, I
think Ronald Reagan would have been proud of how I conducted myself. I went
to Europe a humble leader of a great country, and stood my ground. I wasn't
going to yield. I listened, but I made my point." Which apparently was:
"America kicks butt, wooooo!"

Or consider the searing intellectual depth of the advice Bush says he offered
Russian President Vladimir Putin during their recent summit: "It's negative
to think about blowing each other up. That's not a positive thought ...
That's a thought when people were enemies with each other." Are these the
pronouncements of a man maturing into the leader of the free world or a guy
who's been watching way too much Barney?

Consistently incoherent and, as he reminded us in his commencement address at
Yale, proudly uneducated, Bush appears oddly unfamiliar with the system he
now purports to lead and stunningly unaware of the world beyond our borders
-- except, perhaps, for Vincente Fox's rumpus room. Nor is Bush's breathy,
anxious verbal style -- beginning his speeches in a manner that suggests he
knows he's already lost the argument -- doing him any service in the
presidential stakes.

The American genius has always been in bringing out the extraordinary in
ordinary people. Picture Jimmy Stewart's Jefferson Smith going to Washington
or Gary Cooper's Longfellow Deeds going to town. But with Bush, we have a
thunderingly ordinary guy thrust into an extraordinary office, and bringing
to it an absolute vacuity that makes you wonder about not only the contents
of his mind but the hollowness of his imagination.

It goes way beyond his abuse of the English language, although this is
nothing less than remarkable: "Is our children learning?" "Will the highways
on the Internet become more few?" "We cannot let terrorists or rogue nations
hold this nation hostile."

And while it's often a challenge to figure out just what the heck our
president is trying to tell us, one message is clear: He is determined to
squander the unique opportunity the presidency provides -- the opportunity to
call us to a cause greater than a $300 rebate.

With most of the major issues of the day, the president's North Star appears
to be protecting the business interests that bankrolled his presidential
campaign and are gearing up to bankroll his reelection bid. They tell Dick
Cheney what to think and he tells W. The lights are on in the White House ...
but nobody's home.

Those who can buy presidents clearly do not need leaders. But the rest of the
nation desperately does and should begin asking the question: Now that the
old model of political leadership is officially dead, what's going to take
its place?


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