Bush's speech marked the beginning of the home stretch of the first
back-to-back eight-year presidencies since 1824. So the hunger for "change"
on both sides of the ideological aisle shouldn't be much of a surprise.
But that desire for change is also a product of ideological confusion on the
left and the right. Clinton left office insisting that he'd restored
liberalism in America, but in reality he bequeathed a confused mishmash of
ill-formed ideas, slogans and hatreds. President Bush is winding down his
presidency much the same way, talking about limited government, personal
liberty and spending restraint, but he's left his party's troops scattered
across the battlefield, with no overarching strategy and an awful lot of
friendly fire.
Rush Limbaugh, for example, promises that if either John McCain or Mike
Huckabee gets the nomination, it will "destroy the Republican Party." The
Wall Street Journal's Peggy Noonan replies that, "This is absurd. George W.
Bush destroyed the Republican Party, by which I mean he sundered it, broke
its constituent pieces apart and set them against each other. He did this on
spending, the size of government, war, the ability to prosecute war,
immigration and other issues."
I'm sympathetic to both positions. Limbaugh is right that Huckabee and
McCain might lead the party further from its limited-government roots.
Noonan is right that Bush let the horse out of the barn long ago. But both
complaints overlook a simple fact: We were warned. Bush and Clinton promised
to be different kinds of leaders. And they delivered.
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