‘Where’s the barnstorming?’

It’s usually pretty easy to tell when the president really cares about an issue. Bush, when he feels like it’s worth his effort, will devote a lot of time to something important to him, he’ll hold sycophant-only public events to talk up his policy, he’ll even come up with little smears and taunts for those who dare to disagree.

With this in mind, Dan Froomkin raised a really good point this afternoon: “Has Bush Given Up on Immigration?”

The much-anticipated immigration compromise cobbled together last week by the White House and a bipartisan group of senators isn’t going anywhere without a lot of aggressive campaigning by the president.

But where is President Bush? Not exactly out on the hustings.

Where’s the full-court press? Where’s the barnstorming? Where are the famous White House theatrics?

The current legislation has almost nothing but enemies. Even tacit supporters acknowledge the bill’s many “imperfections.” The White House may have helped put this deal together, but if Bush wants it to pass, he’s going to have to work for it.

But by all indications, he doesn’t want to.

This isn’t just symptomatic of the president’s inherent avoidance of hard work. When it comes to his Iraq policy, Bush will give enthusiastic speeches, host townhall gatherings, appear in the media, and use his Bully Pulpit. In 2005, he gave Social Security privatization the same treatment.

But when it comes to immigration, White House and congressional officials struck a major deal, Bush appeared before the cameras for exactly two minutes, said he was “anxious” to sign a bill … and then left town.

Either the president doesn’t really care about immigration, or there’s something stopping him from dipping into his usual bag of tricks.

Froomkin thinks it’s the latter.

Here’s the problem, however: Bush’s usual political style — appealing to partisanship and stoking fear — isn’t going to work on this issue. This time, those are the tools of choice of his opponents. What Bush needs to do is appeal to people’s reason and conscience — and then back up his arguments with detailed and informed explanations of why the various tradeoffs reflected in the final agreement were necessary.

Bush often calls himself the educator-in-chief. But what he calls education has too often consisted of repeating simplistic sound bytes over and over. When he’s faced with a tough question, he typically doesn’t take it in, mull it, and explain his thinking — he just goes into his mental database of previously-used talking points and picks one out, whether it’s responsive or not.

But this bill needs an educator-in-chief. Or else it’s dead on arrival.

I think that’s right, on both counts.

But here’s one more angle to consider: immigration reform is the one major, sweeping policy area in which the White House and congressional Democratic leaders are almost on the same page. If this legislation falls apart — as is likely without Bush’s “leadership” — Bush will have lost his only shot at scoring a major legislative victory in the 110th Congress.

Yeah, I think they may have figured out that the best way to kill a proposal is to send W out touting it.

Seriously, he’s a terrible salesman for anything, because you can tell he doesn’t actually know anything, and that he’s terrified to actually engage his opponents in an honest way.

  • Dubya ain’t pushing this because his “base” of 28% dead-enders are screamingly totally set against it.

  • We don’t need immigration reform. This is a bunch of xenophobic bullshit. Mexicans have been coming over the border forever. So what? Has there been a sudden, massive increase in this happening? Did the 9-11 hijackers jump a fence into Texas? No. They came here legally on airplanes and most of them were citizens. The people who want to literally build a wall around this country are a bunch of fucking idiots. Terrorists with any sophistication are going to fly here, not hop a fence. Duh.

    All these candidates who pretend to worship the legacy of Ronald Reagan should just copy what he did on immigration. Blanket Amnesty. There you go.

    ” I want to remind people, fearful people build walls. Confident people tear them down.” -George W. Bush September 6, 2001

  • W doesn’t care. Nobody likes him any more so he’s not going to play. He doesnt like the rules (constitution) so he’s going to throw sand in the works and do his best to SHOW THEM (Us, US, U.S.). His intent is to take his ball and go home.
    Watch for a nuclear explosion in Iran when he thinks his term is too short for an Impeachment and Conviction.

    He’ll SHOW US!

    And meanwhile Congress fiddly-fucks around with non-binding resolutions and votes of no confidence.

  • Right On, Bedrosian.

    Give the Border Patrol what their professionals want: manpower and training. Enforce the laws we have and slow down the influx to manageable proportions.

    “Guest workers” is right-speak for ‘Union Busters’.

  • This is Bush’s version of the1993 health care plan….

    NOBODY likes this compromise.
    Not kumbaya enough for the liberals
    Not cruel enough for the conservatives.

    To top it off, the current system was virtually crafted by the Republican base. Why fix what ain’t broke?
    Lip service is all that’s called for… so that’s what Dubya is giving.

  • There is a phrase we in the federal government use to describe managers like Bush – Retired in Place.

    He is too busy dreaming of the day he can get the hell out of D.C. and back to the ranch to clear brush, and no longer has to pretend to care about anything that lies outside of his very, very, very narrow world.

  • Depression setting in perhaps? He must have some “worst president ever” self-reflective moments when Bush realizes that the harder he tries to do something , the worse he makes it.

  • I haven’t read the bill, so I am relying on the news and the Internet, but I don’t think anyone ever intended to pass immigration reform. They have done the same thing with health care for years: come up with a plan that everyone hates so it dies in committee and they all can say they tried. I think there are a lot of folks in Bush’s corner who like things the way they are. This bill was never about the low income mexicans anyway, it is about bringing in high skilled high tech workers who will work for half of what an American will. It is another attempt to depress wages, and this time it is about the highly educated skilled workers, not farm workers and construction worklers.

  • Educator-in-chief or catapult of propaganda are the same thing. Bush doesn’t do nuance.

  • IMO the Repugs wanted to look like they were doing something and if it flies and is good, take credit for it before the elections. If it goes bad, at least it is a done deal that the candidates don’t have to take a stand on it and Bush gets the blame. They divorce themselves from Bush and they are good to go. Or even better, the Dems get the blame!

  • It’s perfect—for Bu$h. By stepping back from the fray, he can let the Congress take an all-out pounding from both sides—Left and Right—to further erode their credibility. think of it as a “Rose Garden End Run.” He may look terrible in the polls, but if he can manage to make those guys on the Hill look worse….

  • Good. Guest-worker programs are quintessentially un-American. Any legislation that includes guest-workers should be rejected, no matter what other positive provisions it may contain.

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