So much of what President Bush said in his State of the Union address ought
to have been said and done when Republicans held a congressional majority.
That especially applies to his call for a "special advisory council on the
war on terror, made up of leaders in Congress from both political parties."
If such a group had been assembled shortly after 9/11, the partisanship over
Iraq and the continuing war on terror might have been less bitter and the
spirit of unity forged after that awful day might have lasted longer.
At the start of the run-up to the 2008 campaign, the president is unlikely
to get an advisory council. Would Democrats serve on such a body if the
result makes the president look good and improves Republican chances of
retaining the White House in the next election? Who will pick the Democratic
members? Will Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid? If
so, why should they not engage in some mischief by naming anti-war people
like Rep. Dennis Kucinich or Rep. John Murtha? Reid might even name an
anti-war Republican, such as Sen. Chuck Hagel. It seems a little late for
advice, Democrats could justifiably say, when the president has gone his own
way without much input from anyone outside his effectively closed
administration.
The most powerful moments of the speech were about the "generational
struggle that will continue long after you and I have turned our duties over
to others. That is why it is important to work together so our nation can
see this great effort through."
Whatever mistakes in judgment this president has made, he is right and
consistent in his diagnosis of the war against those who would kill us and
destroy our country and way of life. Can any of his critics present evidence
to the contrary? Would even the most liberal among them claim the terrorist
leaders and their fanatical followers do not mean what they say, since they
have repeatedly demonstrated it before and after 9/11? Do any of them
seriously believe that if the United States were to prematurely withdraw
from Iraq, al-Qaida and Iran would not take advantage of the resulting power
vacuum and establish a terrorist state from which even more horrible attacks
could be launched against the United States and American interests
worldwide?
On energy, this is a speech that we have heard in various forms since the
Carter administration. Yes, we need more fuel-efficient cars. President Bush
wants to reduce gasoline usage by 20 percent in 10 years. He also called for
"stepping up domestic oil production in environmentally sensitive ways and
doubling the current capacity of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve." This
Democratic Congress isn't about to approve drilling in Alaska and in the
Gulf of Mexico when a Republican majority was unable to approve similar
proposals.
Making health care more widely available, along with saving Social Security,
Medicare and Medicaid sounds good, but anything with the words "tax breaks"
for businesses is unlikely to pass this Congress.
The president should forge an alliance with conservative Democrats who were
elected last fall precisely because they are not liberals. Such a strategy
might circumvent the liberal House and Senate Democratic leadership, which
would find it difficult to penalize them because without them there would
likely be no Speaker Pelosi.
The president was his usual gracious self, noting the historical moment with
the first female speaker and how Pelosi's father, the late Congressman
Thomas D'Alesandro Jr., watched Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman deliver
State of the Union speeches from the same rostrum. But don't look for
congenial reciprocity from Democrats. Their eyes are on the White House and
a number of them are running for president.
The state of the union may be strong, but between the parties and in some
cases within the parties, there is a great deal of disunion. The president's
address might have called for concord, but, because of his low poll numbers,
he is unlikely to get it, unless he can demonstrate real progress in Iraq.
Given the domestic political realities, however, he has less than six months
to do that. And al-Qaida is betting and plotting against him. |