‘We must remember the high standards that come with high office’

Atrios mentioned this yesterday, but I think it bears repeating. The overly legalistic approach to Karl Rove’s leak is wholly at odds with the high standards articulated by George W. Bush shortly after his inauguration. Looking back, the comments sound like those of a Bush critic in 2005, not the president himself in 2001.

After the oath was administered, Bush told the staff — and 100 or so family members on hand — “You all are here because you have my full confidence.”

“Today, everything is so promising and new,” the new president said. “I’m hoping the day will never come when any of us take this place for granted.”

Bush warned that he expected his White House staff to meet the highest ethical standards, avoiding not only violations of law, but even the appearance of impropriety.

“We must remember the high standards that come with high office,” he said. “This begins careful adherence with the rules. I expect every member of this administration to stay well within the boundaries [that] define legal and ethical conduct.

“No one in the White House should be afraid to confront the people they work for over ethical concerns, and no one should hesitate to confront me as well.”

Bush told his staff that he sees civility as a central part of the required behavior of White House staff. “There is no excuse for arrogance and never a reason for disrespect toward others,” he said. “I expect each of you … to be an example of humility and decency and fairness.”

The president’s words that day came literally the day after he took the oath of office. Reading this now is almost comical in light of what we’ve seen since. It’d be funny if it weren’t so sad.

Some will note that Bush, now floundering, is falling into the trap that has burdened so many of his predecessors: second-term overreach and complacency. But, remember, Bush is struggling because of his corruption and mismanagement from his first term, not his second.

In the Plame Game scandal, for example, Rove & Co. outed Plame, decided she was “fair game,” and lashed out at Joseph Wilson because “he’s a Democrat” just two years after the president warned his staff about staying “well within the boundaries [that] define legal and ethical conduct” and insisting he wanted his White House “to be an example of humility and decency and fairness.”

The words read like a punch line to a joke now, don’t they?

I wish we could send them all off to prison and revoke all get out of jail cards they hold.

  • The violation of Bush’s stated standards for legal and ethical conduct started long before the outing of Valerie Plame.

    It started NO LATER THAN his appointment of many convicted and pardoned criminals from the Reagan-Bush and Bush-Quayle administrations, and even from the Nixon administration. It started with his appointment of industry lobbyists to be in charge of “regulating” those very industries in deceptive and corrupt ways. It started with Bush/Cheney/Rice ignoring the August 6, 2001 PDB and instead going on vacation for the entire month of August. It started with Cheney/Wolfowitz/Feith in the Office of Special Plans. It started with Bush backing out of the Kyoto Accord and the Nuclear Disarmament Treaty, and his refusal to join the International Criminal Court. It started with the firing of Shinsecki and banning the State Department from post-Iraq War planning. It started with his lies to sell the 2001 tax cuts after he promised to use the surplus to keep Social Security in “a lock box.” It started with Cheney’s secret White House Task Force on Energy that kept the public and environmentalists out but invited industry polluters in to write their own rules. It started with Bush’s ties to Ken Lay and Enron, and Enron’s raping of consumers, employees and shareholders, while Bush and the FERC looked the other way.

    It started with … Oh, never mind. It doesn’t matter anyway. WE know that they are hypocrites. THEY know that they are hypocrites. THEY know WE know that they are hypocrites. The Inside-the-Beltway-Punditocracy knows that Bush and they themselves are hypocites. So what? BFD — Big.Fucking.Deal.

    This is the political version of the old philosophical query” “If a tree falls in the forest, but there is no one there to see it fall, does it really make a noise?” Translated to today’s political environment, the questions would be: “If a Bush official violates his duties to the American people, but there is not an honest media and politicians to hold him accountable, has an outrage really occurred?” It’s like a Jeopardy category, “The Answer is in the Question.”

    P.S. Sorry guys, I fear that I’m at my breaking point. After almost five years of this seemingly Teflon-coated administration and the across-the-board carnage they they have wrought in terms of real, lasting suffering by countless millions around the world, in ways that we know and in more ways that time only will reveal to their full horrific extent, that my hope for me, for my country, and for mankind, is near an end. How does one NOT rant at the injustices crying out for a remedy? How does one NOT curse the media and those in power who refuse to carry out their fiduciary responsibilities to the public? How does one NOT rant when partisan politics is the only thing that matters, even trumping national security? How does one NOT rant when one has been unemployed for over a year, has no health insurance with monthly meidcations costing over $400, has had two siblings die in the last year at the age of 45 each, has lost most of his possessions in a fire, and is over age 50 and soon must move in with a sister because his savings are gone? Tell me, how? Sorry for ranting, but today seems particularly difficult for some damn reason. Fuck it. Sorry … 🙁

  • Bush told his staff that he sees civility as a central part of the required behavior of White House staff. “There is no excuse for arrogance and never a reason for disrespect toward others,”

    Did this particular line make anybody else think of Bolton? Why hasn’t any Dem Senator used this quote during discussion regarding the Bolton nomination. If I were a Senator I’d refer to this quote as a preface to *every* comment I made regarding Bolton. Repeat, repeat. repeat.

  • Having said the above, I’ll go off-topic.

    Analytical Liberal, there is no need to apologize to us. In a very 21st Century way, we are your community. We feel for you and, I,for one, am optimistic that you will regain your feet. The cursing aside, your comments show a keen incisive mind; I firmly believe you will find gainful employment. My condolences for the loss of your siblings.

    Faint heart never won fair lady. Don’t give up hope. Courage.

  • What Edo said.

    Back to the topic, it’s like Bush said (as did an infamous pope): God has granted us the Presidency, let us now enjoy it.

  • Condolences, AL, but you are right on and not alone. I have a hard time finding anybody in my liberal circle of friends who gets as outraged as I do about this administration. In the immortal words of Bruce Cockburn, “if I had a rocket launcher…”

    Regarding Bush’s Day 2 speech, how did he not spontaneously combust?

  • Analytical Liberal,

    I join those who have already expressed sympathy. I wish I could quote with confidence Gen. Wm. Westmorland’s “There is light at the end of the tunnel”, but he was wrong (as Tet proved) and I have no basis for such confidence now. Parts of the tunnel have already fallen on you. Here’s hoping you’ll soon find some way to pull youself out into the light. Meanwhile, I’m very grateful for the light you’ve been shining around here.

  • Analytical Liberal,

    You’ve become one of my favs on this site as you seem to have the ability to really nail things and I wish that I was able to articulate things half as well as you do.

    I don’t know about the light at the end of the tunnel but I’m glad that at least you have some family to fall back on. Just remember that it’s our collective voice that is making the difference, if we weren’t being heard Scott McClellan wouldn’t be spending so much time avoiding the truth.

  • Thanks, everyone. As Edo said, I do feel a part of this community here at the Carpetbagger Report, and appreciate the unique voices that I have seen develop here over the past year or so. I’m glad to be here, and I will get my mojo going again, as I’ve had to do too many times before. In the meantime, I’ll keep plugging away ….

  • Either Bush was a complete liar from day 2 or he’s the poster boy for absolute power corrupting absolutely. Either way he’s a failed man.

    A.L. -you’re in good company. Keep fueling our collective fire.

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