A blockage in the system
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Mr Bush will probably have to swallow all this and more
in the shape of, for instance, blocked trade deals.
This is not just because
he knows that the Democrats' programme is modest and popular, but also
because he now needs the Democrats' co-operation if he is to amass any sort
of domestic-policy legacy in the 746 days he will have left when Ms Pelosi takes
up the gavel.
One cherished, and praiseworthy, goal of the president's is to
achieve a just and economically literate solution to the problem of illegal
immigration in America. The current system makes criminals of some 12m people
who only want to work hard and on whose efforts large parts of the economy now
depend.
Mr Bush would also like to find a way to ensure that the tax cuts he
enacted in his first years in office do not expire entirely, as they are
currently scheduled to do, in 2011. And, most necessary of all, Mr Bush wants to
make some progress towards tackling America's gathering health-care crisis. His
attempts to rein in costs that are soaring as the population ages and medical
technology gets ever more expensive have so far been badly botched.
None of this can be achieved without the Democrats. So
Iraq is, potentially, a triple problem for Mr Bush as his presidency moves into
its final quarter. First, it is the largest and hardest issue he has to deal
with, consuming most of his attention and bringing down most of the criticism
heaped upon him. Second, presidents saddled with hostile congresses often try to
salvage their reputations abroad; but the ramifications around the world of
America's slow defeat in Iraq make it hard for Mr Bush to do that.
Third,
Iraq threatens to undercut Mr Bush's domestic agenda too. Within the next few
days Mr Bush, who once called himself “the decider”, will have to make the
toughest decision of his presidency. He has promised to unveil a new plan for
Iraq. It will be his response not just to last month's Iraq Study Group report,
which advocated the withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq by early next year,
but also to the evident truth that the current plan is not working.
The
Democrats, almost to a man, favour speedy withdrawal, and won last November's
congressional
election in part on that basis. Many Republicans, most of the
Washington foreign-policy establishment and allegedly the president's own father
feel the same way. Mr Bush, though, seems all but certain to opt for the policy
of “surge”—a sharp, though temporary, increase in troop levels. This will place
him on a
collision course with the Democrats—who oppose the idea on
principle and who, sometime next month,
will be asked to vote on yet another
supplemental budget for Iraq—this one of anything from $100 billion to $170
billion. And if Iraq policy descends, as it very well may, into a bitter wrangle
between the executive and the legislature, the chances of bipartisan progress on
domestic policy will look all the slimmer.
It all sounds very bleak for Mr
Bush; yet there are still ways in which he could redeem some of his reputation.
America remains the world's most powerful country; and Mr Bush could use some of
that power to tackle some of the world's most pressing problems, such as climate
change and terrorism. With new leaders in Germany, Japan, Canada and Italy, and
Tony Blair and Jacques Chirac both on their way out, America's president is
about to become the most experienced leader among the G7 countries. But bogged
down in Iraq, and shorn of congressional support, Mr Bush will have to find new
reserves of statesmanship to make use of these advantages.
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