For the president’s critics, the State of the Union was a boring disappointment, filled with half-truths and missed opportunities. He defended an indefensible policy in Iraq; he made ridiculous budget claims, he ignored Katrina reconstruction, and he unveiled awful (and largely rehashed) health care and energy policies. There wasn’t much to like.
But as it turns out, Bush’s allies were even less impressed. Here’s an item that was sent to Focus on the Family’s membership yesterday afternoon.
Kristi Hamrick, a spokeswoman for American Values, said the president aimed at the wrong target.
“Frankly, his speech was really a reaction to his critics and to the Democratic House and Senate leadership,” she said. “They are the ones who want to talk about global warming. They are the ones who want to say that Iraq is in a shambles. He lost a golden opportunity to set the stage — to describe the issues that were most important to the American people.”
Hamrick said Bush, who has two years left in the White House, was trying to be pragmatic but shouldn’t have leaned so far toward the liberals.
Yes, the GOP base thought the State of the Union was geared towards the left.
In fact, Family Research Council President Tony Perkins unveiled a YouTube video blasting Bush for his misguided priorities.
“This call to strengthen our union is inseparable from the need to strengthen the American family and the culture in which we raise our children,” Perkins said. “I applaud the president’s leadership as he refused to surrender his role as commander in chief to the new majority, and take the fight to a determined enemy. However, that same clear and concise determination to defend the culture of America here was missing. I believe the president failed in challenging the new majority to join him in addressing core family and cultural issues…. The president failed to draw a line in the sand on behalf of life.”
Perkins’ FRC also unveiled a chart with words they wanted to hear, but were omitted from the address, including “marriage,” “values,” “abstinence,” “cloning,” and “stem cells.” (Perkins added that his criticism didn’t satisfy his staff, who said he was being “way too kind.”)
And that’s just the theocratic wing of the GOP base. The economic conservatives were just as upset.
The Wall Street Journal reported:
“I think the president left a lot of conservatives shaking their heads” by avoiding the issues atop their agenda, said Bill Lauderback, executive vice president at the American Conservative Union.
Yesterday morning, the weekly meeting of conservatives that is convened by antitax activist Grover Norquist, a White House ally, was marked by “tense exchanges” with administration press secretary Tony Snow over border enforcement and Mr. Bush’s immigration proposals, according to conservative activists.
Conservatives are becoming more openly critical, adding to the president’s woes and emboldening Democrats for battles ahead. Increasingly, they are looking beyond Mr. Bush for a new standard-bearer, though no one in Republicans’ emerging 2008 presidential field has yet captured conservatives.
The conservative crack-up continues.