latimes.com: Bush the son uses policy campaign to distance himself from the father
By RONALD BROWNSTEIN Los Angeles Times
June 12, 2000
Web posted at: 1:39 p.m. EDT (1739 GMT)
From some angles, George W. Bush can look eerily like his father, former
President Bush. At times, when the Texas governor is mangling a sentence, he
can sound like his dad too. But one of the most striking things about the son's
presidential campaign is how different it is from the old man's. It's a
difference that points toward a very different presidency if G.W. Bush
becomes only the second son to follow his father in attaining the White
House.
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When the elder Bush ran in 1988, his policy ambitions were modest in the
extreme. He offered himself as a steward, not an innovator. Even the high
points in his platform were relatively low hills: expanding Head Start, cutting
the capital gains tax, providing more tax incentives for domestic oil
exploration and protecting endangered wetlands. His most memorable
campaign declaration--his acceptance-speech pledge of "no new taxes"--was a
promise not to do something. With more candor than tact, one of Bush's top
congressional supporters memorably summarized this agenda just before the
election by telling a reporter: "Sometimes, the dull periods are fairly good for the country."
The younger Bush has pursued precisely the opposite approach. More
reminiscent of Bill Clinton in 1992, this Bush has disgorged a torrent of
policy proposals on virtually every aspect of domestic and foreign affairs.
Some of these ideas have been modest, but plans such as Bush's call for a
sweeping across-the-board cut in income tax rates, a massive national missile
defense effort and fundamental restructuring of Social Security and Medicare
represent the sort of bold departures from which his father recoiled.
"There's no question that Bush Jr. is somewhere closer to Ronald Reagan
in terms of painting in bold colors vs. pale pastels," says James P. Pinkerton,
a top domestic policy advisor in the elder Bush's campaign and White House.
"The father's natural instincts, especially on domestic policy, were all pale."
Different political incentives explain part of the difference between father
and son. One reason the elder Bush offered so few dramatic changes 12 years
ago was that he was mostly making a case for continuity--for maintaining the
direction of the outgoing Reagan administration. To the extent he presented a
different direction, it was mostly a subtle promise to sand down the hard
edges of Reaganism--an instinct embodied in Bush's call for a "kinder and
gentler America."
The younger Bush faces a more complex political challenge: building a
constituency for change at a time when most Americans say they are satisfied
with the country's conditions. His answer to that riddle has been to accuse
Clinton and Vice President Al Gore of squandering the opportunity these
good times offer to tackle fundamental long-term problems. To make that
case, Bush has been compelled to offer ambitious reform plans of his own.
Bush the younger has a second incentive for policy boldness that his
father didn't. Lacking his father's long resume, the Texas governor from the
outset has faced doubts about whether he has the smarts and experience to fill
the big chair. He is unlikely to erase all those doubts by delivering speeches,
but, at least in terms of media coverage, his policy offensive has submerged
the overly simplistic initial tendency to portray him as a lightweight.
Still, at the heart of the difference between father and son is something
larger than short-term political calculations: The agenda gap also reflects a
different conception of the presidency. The minimalist campaign goals of
Bush the father presaged a minimalist presidency--one guided more by a
patrician instinct to "do no harm" than a burning desire to accomplish
anything in particular.
Much as he respects his father, the younger Bush has made clear that he
understands how much that approach contributed to the elder's resounding
repudiation in 1992. Indeed, in formulating his governing style, the younger
Bush appears to have learned much more from his father's failures than his
successes. The lesson he seems to have absorbed most of all is that politicians
who do not control the policy agenda inevitably find themselves responding
to their opponents--at their peril.
"The concept of service is a very strong concept that was passed on from
my dad's father to him; you served," Bush said in an interview several years
ago. "I feel that as well. But on the other hand, I think you've got to have a
reason to go into the political process. You've got to have a vision."
By presenting a more elaborate vision than his father did in 1988, Bush
has put himself in a stronger position to shape the campaign dialogue. But
he's also exposed himself to more risks. For starters, he's given Gore more
specifics to shoot at. "Some of the positions he's taken will haunt him very
badly," insists one senior Gore advisor. In particular, the Gore camp thinks
Bush's large tax-cut proposal and Social Security reform plan will cause
nightmares for the Republican's campaign by November.
And by offering such an ambitious agenda, Bush has also invited not only
Gore but the press to question how it all adds up within a balanced budget.
How, for instance, he would fit his plans for missile defense into the
relatively modest increases in Pentagon spending he's proposed; whether he
could really fund a new prescription drug benefit for low-income seniors
solely out of other savings in Medicare; whether his sweeping tax cut would
collide with the long-run cost of establishing individual investment accounts
in Social Security--not to mention the flotilla of smaller domestic programs he
wants to launch.
There's a second generation of risk in Bush's agenda--a governing risk.
Several key items on his wish list--particularly Social Security reform and the
tax cut--have relatively little appeal as currently structured to Democrats;
that will make them hard to pass in the kind of narrowly divided Congress the
next president is likely to face. By aiming so high in the campaign, Bush
raises his risk of falling short in office if he wins.
Yet Bush clearly seems to view the greater risk as failing to drive the
agenda--either as candidate or president. "Bush's view is that it's not like [the Democrats] are not going to shoot at us if we don't put out these ideas," says one advisor. "So let's shape the playing field."
That's an instinct Bush's father never possessed; it's one reason the son is
giving Al Gore all he can handle.
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