‘He thinks that would be an admission he’s screwed up’

It’s tempting to think that the president is capable of learning from his mistakes. One wants to believe that Bush has seen his political fortunes deteriorate and is aware of some of the missteps that have led to his decline.

But even now, after about five years in office, Bush hasn’t changed a bit.

Even as his poll numbers tank, however, Bush is described by aides as still determined to stay the course. He resists advice from Republicans who fear disaster in next year’s congressional elections, and rejects criticism from a media establishment he disdains.

“The President has always been willing to make changes,” the senior aide said, “but not because someone in this town tells him to — NEVER!”

For the moment, Bush has dismissed discreetly offered advice from friends and loyalists to fire Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and bring back longtime confidant Karen Hughes from the State Department to shore up his personal White House staff.

“He thinks that would be an admission he’s screwed up, and he can’t bring himself to do that,” a former senior staffer lamented.

No, of course not. That would take some courage and conviction. For a man with an overabundance of self-confidence, Bush sure seems preoccupied with avoiding the appearance of having made a mistake. If that means keeping incompetent individuals in key government posts, so be it. If it means remaining oblivious to the political landscape, it’s a price they’re willing to pay.

A card-carrying member of the Washington GOP establishment with close ties to the White House recently encountered several senior presidential aides at a dinner and came away shaking his head at their “no problems here” mentality.

“There is just no introspection there at all,” he said in exasperation. “It is everybody else’s fault — the press, gutless Republicans on the Hill. They’re still in denial.”

The New York Daily News’ Thomas DeFrank, who enjoys stellar WH connections, added that paranoia seems to be setting in a bit in the West Wing.

Two sources said Bush has not only lost some confidence in his top aides, as the Daily News has previously reported, but is furious with a stream of leaks about the mood within the West Wing.

“He’s asking [friends] for opinions on who he can trust and who he can’t,” one knowledgeable source said.

Didn’t Nixon follow a similar path? A senior Bush aide told the Daily News that “it’s up to the President to turn things around now.” That’s not an encouraging sign.

When W was the guv of Texass, he had a painting in his office of a cowboy on horseback at full gallop heading for the top of a hill. For some reason that aways reminded me of Custer heading into the Little Big Horn.

  • How exactly would bringing back Karen “Pondscum” Hughes help anything? Did those peeps forget she was part of whig? She is, in my opinion, the female Karl Rove, in the dumbass version. Just evil and idiotic with a veneer of compassion that is paper thin.

  • “He thinks that would be an admission he’s screwed up, and he can’t bring himself to do that,” a former senior staffer lamented.

    So W knows Rumsfeld is a joke, but he keeps him in charge of the Pentagon to save face? During a war? In what universe is this acceptable?

  • Today’s news reminds us of why W has not yet cut and run from Iraq, and will not tolerate suggestions that we cut and run from Iraq, even though he will eventually do just that (cut and run and leave a huge mess).

    Saddam has not yet been convicted and executed.

    When you scrap away all the excuses and explanations put forth by VP Cheney for this war, you eventually get down to the last remaining truth; Saddam Hussain tried to have GHWBush assasinated in Kuwait. Cheney even repeated this point in his latest speach condeming the opponents of Bush’s war policy.

    Until Saddam is dead, we will stay in Iraq…
    Until Saddam is dead, we will continue to loose 10 to 20 American Marines and Soldiers a week (or whatever the rate is)…
    Until Saddam is dead, we will continue to spend Billions of dollars week after week…

    What we won’t do is put enough troops on the ground to seal the borders, secure the weapons stashes, clear out the terrorists and hold the ground, disarm the populace (it’s American policy that every Iraq male deserves to own an AK-47, Wayne LaPierre eat your heart out), secure oil production, electricity production, clean water or education.

    It’s an interesting tidbit of the Pre-war planning that gets little noted that Rumsfeld planned to be in Iraq only 120 days. How is it that this did not come to pass?
    The looting,
    The inability to find WMD (remember that we kept searching for it much longer then four months, tying up Arabic translators who could have been working intelligence just when the insurgency was starting)
    The inability to find Saddam…

    And thus the best laid plans (Ptbb!) of the Pentagon are once again derailed by reality.

  • “How exactly would bringing back Karen “Pondscum” Hughes help anything?”

    Doubtless this is only the hopeful suggestion of some less than influencial WH staffer who wants to have the Rove filter on reality (and other people’s opinions) removed removed from the flow of information going to W.

  • No one pinpoints what I think is the biggest
    reason for Bush’s slide in the polls, aside
    from the debacle of Iraq – most Americans
    believe this country is headed in the
    wrong direction. That means they don’t
    like Bush’s POLICIES, like ignoring
    global warming, health care, oil as the
    centerpiece of the energy strategy, tax
    policies that favor the rich, the deficit,
    the failure to shore up Social Security
    and Medicare, cutting benefits for the
    needy, and so on and so on.

    Most of the press and the media treat
    Bush’s decline as a technical one, requiring
    some housecleaning and new faces. Even
    the NYT, which did, to its credit, name Bush
    as the number one problem in the administration,
    failed to mention his unpopular policies.

    Bush does not represent the America that
    Americans believe in – he is the antithesis
    of that. I don’t know why the Democrats
    refuse to seize this fact and run with it.
    The DLC seems as petrified of the class
    warfare label as they are of the soft on
    terrorism (and hence Iraq) attack, and so
    they fail to capitalize on the two major
    issues bringing this president down in
    the eyes of the public.

    I think I’ve strayed a bit from the topic,
    but it’s all intertwined.

  • “the President has always been willing to make changes”…..

    Yeah right. If anyone really believes that I have beautiful beachfront property on Mars to sell them……

    Introspection and real (not political) admissions of mistakes require a certain level of honesty and courage, neither which this president has in any measurable degree. This “man” has never really had to deal with the consequences of his actions and has been conditioned to believe nothing he does has bad/wrong consequences and therefore he has nothing to apologize for.

  • Bush jeopardizing the future of the country rather than make some staff changes? Jeez…here’s a money quote from a book referenced by Morbo a few months back:
    “The core of evil is ego-centricity, whereby others are sacrificed rather than the ego of the individual.” M. Scott Peck, “People Of The Lie”

  • hark, I’m going to stray a bit off topic along with you. I found this letter in this morning’s Seattle Post-Intelligencer. I think it’s great.

    Have you become a disgruntled conservative, unhappy with the direction our Republican president and Congress are taking us?

    Huge budget deficits, greatly increased government spending and employees, incompetent cronies, bridges to nowhere and other pork, incomprehensible high-cost prescription drug legislation, gutting our safety net, including pensions, health insurance and illness-produced bankruptcies, high gas prices, self-appointed global police in Iraq with mounting casualties, torturing prisoners, threats to our civil liberties, unregulated immigration.

    You might consider becoming a liberal. Return to balanced budgets, fair taxes, smaller, more competent government, an excellent economy, a viable safety net, promoting efficient use of sustainable energy, protecting our environment, supporting new scientific breakthroughs and new technologies, global respect through maintaining our alliances.

    Become a proud liberal.

    Dave Thomas
    Bellevue (WA)

    Ought to be plagiarized (or copied) and sent everywhere.

  • It’s worse than that… he things he’s doing God’s work and that Republican wins in 2002 and 2004 were messages from God for him to continue what he was doing.

  • “For a man with an overabundance of self-confidence, Bush sure seems preoccupied with avoiding the appearance of having made a mistake.”

    He doesn’t have self-confidence, he’s a walking bag of insecurities….a big bully pounding his chest, with no substance underneath…a confident, secure person is able to admit mistakes…..

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