Posted on 10/26/2004 2:28:59 PM PDT by satchmodog9
Bush Cuts President Duties for Campaign
1 hour, 33 minutes ago
By JENNIFER LOVEN, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Since August, President Bush (news - web sites) has welcomed just one foreign leader to the White House the interim prime minister of Iraq (news - web sites). No other meetings with foreign dignitaries are on the horizon until Bush goes to Chile in late November for a gathering of Asia-Pacific leaders.
AP Photo
Latest Headlines: · La. Senate Outcome Not Likely Before Dec. AP - 3 minutes ago
· Changes May Lead Voters to Wrong Polls AP - 17 minutes ago
· Pre-Election Suits Feed Election Doubts AP - 20 minutes ago
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Election Coverage
It was quite a different story this time last fall. The president played host, in the Oval Office and at the Camp David presidential retreat, to leaders from seven nations while aides put out word of several more mini-summits to come.
Presidential duties have been pared to a minimum as Bush concentrates on his campaign to win re-election for another four years.
"The president is clearly focusing on the election and little else," said Georgetown University presidential scholar Stephen Wayne.
The few weeks leading up to Election Day are not necessarily a representative snapshot of Bush's entire year. Certainly, with only days to go before Nov. 2, no one expects a president seeking re-election to maintain the same official pace of a non-election year. Moreover, Democratic challenger John Kerry (news - web sites) isn't exactly winning a best-senator award as he tries to unseat Bush. The Massachusetts senator has participated in just 17 of 211 votes since January.
But with fall typically a busy time at the White House, Bush has set aside many of at least the public functions of his job.
The last couple of months have been largely devoid of policy endeavors, though he has talked about second-term proposals ranging from Social Security (news - web sites) to tax simplification. He also has lifted some sanctions on Libya, embraced changes in the intelligence community and signed two tax-cut bills.
During the same period last year, Bush was busy pushing for $87 billion in additional spending for Iraq and Afghanistan (news - web sites), seeking another U.N. resolution on Iraq, pressing for legislative action to prevent the kind of massive blackouts that had hit the East Coast over the summer, and pulling down barriers to government funding of religious charities, among other announcements.
With Bush's campaigning at fever pitch, he is on the road almost full-time. The president has spent just four full days in Washington since August two of them Sundays.
There have been just over a dozen public, official presidential events since August, including a few bill-signing ceremonies, the anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, a celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month and the opening of the new American Indian museum in Washington.
Bush made four trips to Florida and one to Pennsylvania to offer support to hurricane and flood victims. But those efforts were also widely seen as plays for support in key election states. And the few speeches he has delivered recently that were not in front of campaign-assembled crowds before the National Association of Home Builders and National Guard Association of the United States, for instance were heavily laced with campaign talk and criticism of Kerry.
Last fall, Bush held almost double the number of official events, including a visit with wounded soldiers, a prime-time address to the nation on Iraq, several meetings with members of Congress, a Rose Garden speech on Cuba policy and an anti-domestic violence event in the East Room.
The White House insists that Bush's travels have not put his presidency on hold. With technological upgrades on Air Force One and a traveling coterie of senior aides, all the apparatus of the presidency goes wherever Bush does, meaning nothing important slips through the cracks, White House press secretary Scott McClellan said.
Bush gets his usual daily security briefings, either in person or by videoconference, and continues to attend regular National Security Council meetings. He stays in regular touch with allies by phone. Instead of calling members of Congress to the Oval Office, he visits with them as he jets into their districts.
He has constant access to White House staff with the only difference that they may submit a policy briefing on paper rather than present issues in person. Such long-distance back-and-forth just last week resulted in a letter from the White House to Congress stating the administration's positions on intelligence legislation, McClellan said.
Princeton political science professor Fred Greenstein said that, since Bush's management credo is to delegate, his physical absence isn't crucial. And it isn't that different from the rest of Bush's term, which has been remarkable for looking like a re-election campaign well before it actually was one, Greenstein said.
Besides, Wayne said, much of the substantive work of any White House goes on behind the scenes. The public functions that are the main casualties of the campaign, then, are mostly about managing the president's image or building momentum for his proposals key aspects to governing, but not decisive, he said.
Jennifer Loven is a crack wh**re.
My very thought. In a sane society, it would be everyone's thought.
But then, in a sane society, these organs would have no readership, and actual news media would rule.
Dan
YAWN
Well, considering that we no longer have any allies why should she be surprised? :-)
As if Sen. Gone (Edwards) and Sen. Might-As-Well-Be (Heinz-Kerry) would stay in DC clipping coupons for the homeless during a campaign...what a load of bull.
Sometimes the bias is almost unbelievable. Where in the hell are the articles on Kerry & Edwards missing Senatorial duties. The MSM cannot be trusted to be objective.
Bush can't win with the media because if a foreign dignitary showed up they'd claim it was to help his campaign. Go Pres. Bush.
holy Cr** when is the kichen sink coming.. what a reach
the rats and the LSM have zero zip Nada..
'KERRY, EDWARDS SHIRK SENATORIAL RESPONSIBILITIES, DUTIES FOR MONTHS'
I second that !I went to the link to see if maybe there was an email for this
Beech ! I was going to ask her where her article with the title
"John Kerry AWOL from over 80% of Senate Votes".But NOOOOOoooo ..... no email link there. :^(
That and also that Dole set the standard of resigning when a Senator ran for President. Haven't seen anyone mention that either and I ain't holding my breath.
YUP!
This has the adress and phone number of AP on the right hand side of the page:
http://www.ap.org/pages/contact/contact.html
What will they come up with next?
I guess that the duties of the President go with him where he may go.
Thank you ! :^DMy note to Jennifer Loven:
Subject: Regarding "Bush Cuts President Duties for Campaign" .....
Please forward this to Jennifer Loven and her superior/editor. Thanks.
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20041026/ap_on_el_pr/lonely_white_house
Dear Jennifer Loven:
I am constantly amazed at the Liberal Bias in headlines and stories in the mainstream media that I find.
John Kerry has missed over 80% of the Senate votes in the past year, yet I have not seen ONE article that headlined that story.
Have you written an article with that, or have any of the other AP staff ? If so, can you produce the link for me to it ?
I didn't think so.
Also, George Bush has signed form 180 which has released all his military records. Yet John Kerry has NOT signed that, and the media has not seriously pursued that issue. Further, John Kerry has said that he has released his military records (a blatant LIE), and the media continues to give him a pass regarding his military service and failure to disclose the full record regarding his service. The media was more concerned with Bush's Texas Air National Guard records, which was fully covered already four years ago when George Bush ran for President in 2000.
The Bloggers and FreeRepublic.com continue to report better information than the AP does.
Sincerely,
That's beautiful.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.