The president’s father has been in the news quite a bit lately, due in large part to the fact that many of his old aides (Baker, Gates, et al) seem to be running to Washington to give the current president a desperately needed hand.
But the rescues notwithstanding, Bush 41 seems to be taking a far more high-profile role than he’s enjoyed in several years. It was Bush pere, for example, who appeared on Fox News last week to blame bloggers for the fact that the current political climate has “gotten so adversarial that it’s ugly.”
And it was the former president in the United Arab Emirates today, defending his son against an apparently hostile audience.
“We do not respect your son. We do not respect what he’s doing all over the world,” a woman in the audience bluntly told Bush after his speech.
Bush, 82, appeared stunned as others in the audience whooped and whistled in approval….. “This son is not going to back away,” Bush said, his voice quivering. “He’s not going to change his view because some poll says this or some poll says that, or some heartfelt comments from the lady who feels deeply in her heart about something. You can’t be president of the United States and conduct yourself if you’re going to cut and run. This is going to work out in Iraq. I understand the anxiety. It’s not easy.”
Are these public appearances some kind of public relations stunt? Did Rove find some poll showing that Americans would have more confidence in Bush 43 if they believe Bush 41 has more influence?
Maybe. We’ve certainly reached a point in which Americans are looking back at 41 — and thinking he doesn’t look nearly so bad anymore.
CNN conducted a poll late last week, asking which Bush was the better president. It wasn’t even close.
Only one in four Americans believe President Bush is a better president than his father, George H. W. Bush, a new CNN poll has found.
Six in 10 said the elder Bush, who served one term from 1989-1993, did a better job in office, according to a poll conducted by Opinion Research Corporation. Twelve percent said both were equally good or bad, and 2 percent offered no opinion.
For what it’s worth, for those of you feeling a certain Bush 41 nostalgia, don’t. Yes, Bush 43 is a stunningly bad president, certainly among history’s worst. And by those standards, sure, his father was a real gem. But Tom Frank had a good piece in TNR a couple of years ago explaining that if anyone’s image shouldn’t be rehabilitated, it’s H.W. Bush. If 41 was better than 43, it’s only because he knew better than to go take Baghdad.
But this is hardly grounds for adulation. If the Bush gang needs an elder statesman to bolster the president’s standing, sending his father out onto the public stage probably isn’t going to cut it. Indeed, it seems to be more embarrassing than reassuring.