-Caveat Lector-

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=373371
Embattled Bush now faces trouble on many fronts

By Rupert Cornwell in Washington

28 January 2003

George W Bush is in trouble. This is not wishful thinking by Europeans who
cannot abide a man they see as a trigger-happy, unilateralist half-wit. It is
an assessment of the 43rd President's standing at home, on the day he
delivers what is surely one of the most important State of the Union
messages in modern times.

Ten weeks ago, Mr Bush's prestige was at its height – higher in many
respects even than in the aftermath of 11 September. His personal
campaigning had made the difference in securing Republican control of
Congress at November's mid-term elections. Cowed by fear of his
popularity, Democrats in the Senate and the House helped grant him a
virtual carte blanche in dealing with Iraq.

Today cracks have appeared in the façade. Not gaping cracks to be sure,
but ones that if not swiftly repaired could yet bring down the Bush
edifice. They are visible in tumbling consumer confidence, the Trent Lott
affair which tarred the Republicans' image on race, the growing unease at
the prospect of war in the Gulf – and in the polls.

Few ruling politicians would admit to allowing polls to influence their
pursuit of the national good. But this White House – the most efficient and
secretive in recent memory – pays as much attention to them as its
predecessors. The indications are not good.

Mr Bush's approval ratings have slipped to the mid-50s – respectable
enough for a President in normal times halfway through his term. But they
have dipped 10 per cent since the mid-terms, bringing his popularity back
to levels before the 2001 terrorist attacks.

A majority of Americans disapprove of his handling of the US economy, the
bread and butter issue that over the longer term will eclipse even Iraq as a
priority for voters. More than 1.5 million jobs have been lost on this Bush's
watch.

On Iraq, American public opinion is increasingly resembling that of the
despised wimps in "old Europe". Seven out of 10 believe that United
Nations inspectors should be given months or more to complete their
work. The country, according to one finding yesterday, is split down the
middle when asked whether it trusts the President or the UN to make the
right decisions on Iraq. Though 60 per cent broadly support military action
against Iraq, Newsweek found, that backing plummets if the US were to act
alone, or with the backing of just "one or two" allies, for example Britain.

This is the mood Mr Bush must turn around in his address to the Senate,
House and other dignitaries. Hans Blix's report to the Council yesterday
that Baghdad was not co-operating on the substance of the demands of
resolution 1441 may help him. But he has to make the case that Saddam
Hussein poses a real and immediate threat, and spell out America's
responsibilities post-Saddam: not least the cost of reconstruction, much of
which will be borne by Washington, probably for years.

There will be no declaration of war tonight, the White House assures, nor
a specific date for Iraqi compliance. But nor is there likely to be the
detailed proof of banned Iraqi weapons programmes that opinion, at home
as well as abroad, demand.

Iraq is not the only battleground. Mr Bush must defend his $670bn (£410bn)
economic stimulus package, centred on the abolition of taxes on
dividends. No amount of White House spin can hide the fact the package is
heavily tilted towards the rich. If small-government, tax-hating
Conservatives love the proposals, the country is unconvinced.

Sensing Mr Bush's vulnerability, Tom Daschle and Nancy Pelosi, the
Democratic minority leaders in Senate and House respectively, yesterday
made a new pitch for their party's quick-acting $130bn package, explicitly
targeted at the less well off.

Mr Bush's problem is that he is trying to achieve two goals which are
irreconcilable: to unite a sceptical country behind him in launching an
unprovoked war, and pursue nakedly partisan domestic policies – not just
over the economy. Mr Bush wants to further privatise health care, one day
even social security. He seems oblivious to the collapse of US public
finances – from a federal surplus of $250bn two years ago to a similar
deficit this year.

"You've got to tend the garden," Colin Powell said recently, referring to
America's dealings with its allies. He was quoting a dictum of George Shultz,
Ronald Reagan's secretary of state. Mr Bush has not done that. He is
paying the price in the charges of arrogance and the personal dislike he
inspires abroad.

But he has also failed to tend the garden at home. The Democrats feel
they've been taken for a ride. Having given the President their backing
over Iraq, runs their version, they saw Mr Bush throw it back in their faces
– using the national security issue to beat his opponents, implying that any
Democrat who questioned his policy was unpatriotic.

Of course, polls should not be taken as gospel. If Mr Bush does choose
war, even alone or virtually alone, and without specific UN Security
Council approval, the country will rally behind him. The polls that matter
are the ones after war. Only if things go wrong will public opinion turn.
Even then an upturn in the economy could change every calculation.

If Saddam Hussein is quickly and comprehensively defeated, and US
casualties are few, Mr Bush will bask in a victor's acclaim. But that is scant
comfort. It happened 12 years ago when his father assembled a far wider
coalition to drive Iraq from Kuwait. Barely a year later Bush Senior had lost
the presidency.

28 January 2003 14:55


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