Conservatives ask: Is Bush still one of us?Some of his State of the Union proposals are raising eyebrows.
The Christian Science Monitor, 2/6/06
WASHINGTON – From the moment George W. Bush began campaigning for the Oval Office in 1999, White House watchers have wondered what kind of president he would be: The Ronald Reagan of his generation? Like his father, the first President Bush? Perhaps even, in some ways, similar to Bill Clinton?
This year's State of the Union address, which was panned by a chorus of conservative commentators, has intensified the debate about Bush's political philosophy.
The Wall Street Journal editorial page accused President Bush of playing "miniball," code for a Clintonian love of "small political ideas." Robert Novak reported private concern among congressional conservatives that Mr. Bush was moving toward bigger government. George Will called Bush's most memorable line - that America is addicted to oil - "wonderfully useless."
"He's conservative by temperament; many of his policy positions, such as cutting taxes, are on the right side of the political spectrum," says John Green, a political scientist at the University of Akron in Ohio. "But he doesn't have a consistent set of conservative principles. That's what a lot of the complaint has been about, especially after the State of the Union."
MoreWe don't mind the lying, the torture, the eavesdropping, the environmental neglect, the propoganda, the Katrina debacle, the botched foreign policy, the increased poverty rates, the foreign debt, the corruption, etc., but how dare Bush say we're addicted to oil!