Bush hoping to win more battles in 2006 (AP) Updated: 2005-12-27 08:41
US President Bush, bruised by months of setbacks, enters the new year
hoping to win congressional battles over tax cuts and immigration, get
rebellious Republicans back in step and nurture a new democracy in Iraq �� the
make-or-break issue of his legacy.
Expect the president to bring in 2006 the same way he ended the old:
Trumpeting good economic news and talking, reassuringly, about Iraq where
excitement over a historic ballot has been tempered by growing disenchantment
with the war and a death toll of U.S. troops that tops 2,160.
The war in Iraq and sluggish diplomatic efforts to deter the nuclear
ambitions of Iran and North Korea will continue to dominate foreign policy for
the president, who plans a trip early in the new year to India.
At home, Bush will be after the Senate to confirm Samuel Alito to the Supreme
Court in January. He also wants immigration reform, including a guest worker
program.
US President Bush and first lady, Laura, carry
their dogs, Barney and Miss Beazley, respectively, before departing from
Waco, Texas on Marine One on their way to their ranch in Crawford for the
remainder of the holiday, Monday, Dec. 26, 2005. The first couple is
scheduled to return to Washington after the New Year's holiday.
[AP] | Absent from his to-do list is a plan to
overhaul the tax code. White House advisers say there may be some efforts to
simplify it, but a sweeping restructuring would need more discussion. Also off
the list is revamping Social Security, the one-time centerpiece of Bush's
domestic agenda that failed to gain traction even though he crisscrossed the
country to win support for it.
White House advisers were candid that next fall's congressional elections
will cramp Bush's legislative efforts.
"When the president puts out a legislative and executive agenda, we'll make
sure we reflect the fact that it's difficult for Congress to get anything done
in an election year," said Dan Bartlett, counselor to the president.
Bartlett said that doesn't mean the president won't introduce fresh
initiatives, which typically are tucked in the State of the Union address,
tentatively scheduled this year for Jan. 31. But midterm elections often mark
the last lap of a president's domestic agenda as lawmakers turn their attention
to re-election campaigns, and presidents in their sixth year move toward the end
of their Oval Office stay. Already, 2008 presidential hopefuls are positioning
themselves on Iraq.
"I think he's going to fall back on what he didn't want to do, what he swore
he wouldn't do, but almost all second-term presidents do, which is being in a
kind of caretaker status," said Norm Ornstein, a resident scholar with the
American Enterprise Institute.
Right after he was re-elected with just a 3.5 million-vote margin in the
popular vote, Bush proudly claimed a mandate to pursue an aggressive agenda. "I
earned capital in the campaign �� political capital �� and now I intend to spend
it. It is my style," he said.
Among successes the White House claims in 2005: A bankruptcy law that made it
harder for Americans to wipe out their debts, legislation to discourage
multimillion-dollar class-action lawsuits and confirmation of John Roberts as
chief justice of the United States. Bush also won a free trade pact with six
Latin American countries. There was a highway bill, at last, to modernize the
transportation network. He also got major energy legislation �� the first such
national plan in more than a decade �� although the act does little in the
near-term to ease gas prices, which topped $3 a gallon after the hurricane.
The list of setbacks is longer.
Bartlett said Bush's biggest disappointments of the year were the withdrawal
of Harriet Miers, his second pick for the Supreme Court, and the impotent
federal response to Hurricane Katrina, which tainted his leadership profile and
exposed the nation's vulnerability in disaster scenarios.
"The accusations of racism and things like that is something that touched a
chord with him," Bartlett said. "It wasn't one of the finest moments for our
government."
Meanwhile, the Iraq debate took on new potency at home.
Despite expected troops reductions this spring, the war will continue to cost
the U.S. billions. Congressional defense appropriators expect the next war
package that Bush requests will be between $80 billion and $100 billion. That's
on top of $50 billion Congress just approved to support actions in Afghanistan
and Iraq through Memorial Day.
As the year ended, the administration lost its bid to open oil drilling in an
Alaska wildlife refuge. Congress extended the Patriot Act for just a month. The
European Union was vowing to probe allegations the U.S. has been holding
suspected terrorists in secret CIA prisons in Eastern Europe. And the White
House was forced to accept Sen. John McCain's demand for tighter restrictions on
the treatment of foreign detainees,
"It's been the least successful year of his presidency," said Georgetown
University political scientist Stephen Wayne, suggesting that to turn things
around, Bush should reach out to Democrats.
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