Bush's Third Term?
You're Living It
By David Swanson - September 1, 2009
It sounds like the plot for the
latest summer horror movie. Imagine, for a moment, that George W.
Bush had been allowed a third term as president, had run and had won
or stolen it, and that we were all now living (and dying) through
it. With the Democrats in control of Congress but Bush still in the
Oval Office, the media would certainly be talking endlessly about a
mandate for bipartisanship and the importance of taking into account
the concerns of Republicans. Can't you just picture it?
There's Dubya now, still rewriting
laws via signing statements. Still creating and destroying laws with
executive orders. And still violating laws at his whim. Imagine Bush
continuing his policy of extraordinary rendition, sending prisoners
off to other countries with grim interrogation reputations to be
held and tortured. I can even picture him formalizing his policy of
preventive detention, sprucing it up with some "due process" even as
he permanently removes habeas corpus from our culture.
I picture this demonic president
still swearing he doesn't torture, still insisting that he wants to
close Guantanamo, but
assuring
his subordinates that the commander-in-chief has the power to
torture "if needed," and maintaining a prison at Bagram Air Base in
Afghanistan that makes Guantanamo look like summer camp. I can
imagine him continuing to keep secret his warrantless spying
programs while protecting the corporations and government officials
involved.
If Bush were in his third term, we
would already have seen him propose, yet again, the largest military
budget in the history of the world. We might well have seen him
pretend he was including war funding in the standard budget, and
then claim that one final supplemental war budget was still needed,
immediately after which he would surely announce that yet another
war supplemental bill would be needed down the road. And of course,
he would have held onto his Secretary of Defense from his second
term, Robert Gates, to run the Pentagon, keep our ongoing wars
rolling along, and oversee the better part of our public budget.
Bush would undoubtedly be following
through on the agreement he signed with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki for all U.S. troops to leave Iraq by the end of 2011
(except where he chose not to follow through). His generals would,
in the meantime, be leaking word that the United States never
intended to actually leave. He'd surely be maintaining current
levels of troops in Iraq, while sending thousands more troops to
Afghanistan and talking about a new "surge" there. He'd probably
also be escalating the campaign he launched late in his second term
to use drone aircraft to illegally and repeatedly strike into
Pakistan's tribal borderlands with Afghanistan.
If
Bush were still "the decider" he'd be employing mercenaries like
Blackwater and propagandists like the Rendon Group and he might even
be expanding the number of private security contractors in
Afghanistan. In fact, the whole executive branch would be packed
with disreputable corporate executive types. You'd have somebody
like John ("May I torture this one some more, please?") Rizzo still
serving, at least for a while, as general counsel at the CIA. The
White House and Justice Department would be crawling with corporate
cronies, people like John Brennan, Greg Craig, James Jones, and Eric
Holder. Most of the top prosecutors hired at the Department of
Justice for political purposes would still be on the job. And
political prisoners, like former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman and
former top Democratic donor Paul Minor would still be abandoned to
their fate.
In addition, the bank bailouts Bush
and his economic team initiated in his second term would still be
rolling along -- with a similar crowd of people running the show.
Ben Bernanke, for instance, would certainly have been reappointed to
run the Fed. And Bush's third term would have
guaranteed
that there would be none of the monkeying around with the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) that the Democrats proposed or
promised in their losing presidential campaign. At this point in
Bush's third term, no significant new effort would have begun to
restore Katrina-decimated New Orleans either.
If the Democrats in Congress
attempted to pass any set of needed reforms like, to take an
example, new healthcare legislation, Bush, the third termer, would
have held secret meetings in the White House with insurance and drug
company executives to devise a means to turn such proposals to their
advantage. And he would have refused to release the visitor logs so
that the American public would have no way of knowing just whom he'd
been talking to.
During Bush's second term, some of
the lowest ranking torturers from Abu Ghraib were prosecuted as bad
apples, while those officials responsible for the policies that led
to Abu Ghraib remained untouched. If the public continued to push
for justice for torturers during the early months of Bush's third
term, he would certainly have gone with another bad apple approach,
perhaps targeting only low-ranking CIA interrogators and CIA
contractors for prosecution. Bush would undoubtedly have decreed
that any higher-ups would not be touched, that we should now be
looking forward, not backward. And he would thereby have cemented in
place the power of presidents to grant immunity for crimes they
themselves authorized.
If Bush were in his third term,
some of his first and second term secrets might, by now, have been
forced out into the open by lawsuits, but what Americans actually
read wouldn't be significantly worse than what we'd already known.
What documents saw the light of day would surely have had large
portions of their pages redacted, and the vast bulk of documentation
that might prove threatening would remain hidden from the public
eye. Bush's lawyers would be fighting in court, with ever grander
claims of executive power, to keep his wrongdoing out of sight.
Now, here's the funny part. This
dark fantasy of a third Bush term is also an accurate portrait of
Obama's first term to date. In following Bush, Obama was given the
opportunity either to restore the rule of law and the balance of
powers or to firmly establish in place what were otherwise aberrant
abuses of power. Thus far, President Obama has, in all the areas
mentioned above, chosen the latter course. Everything described,
from the continuation of crimes to the efforts to hide them away,
from the corruption of corporate power to the assertion of the
executive power to legislate, is Obama's presidency in its first
seven months.
Which doesn't mean there aren't
differences in the two moments. For one thing, Democrats have now
joined Republicans in approving expanded presidential powers and
even -- in the case of wars, military strikes, lawless detention and
rendition, warrantless spying, and the obstruction of justice --
presidential crimes. In addition, in the new Democratic era of
goodwill, peace and justice movements have been strikingly defunded
and, in some cases, even shut down. Many progressive groups now, in
fact, take their signals from the president and his team, rather
than bringing the public's demands to his doorstep.
If we really were in Bush's third
term, people would be far more active and outraged. There would
already be a major push to really end the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan/Pakistan. Undoubtedly, the Democrats still wouldn't
impeach Bush, especially since they'd be able to vote him out before
his fourth term, and surely four more years of him wouldn't make all
that much difference.
David Swanson is the author of the
new book
Daybreak: Undoing the Imperial
Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union
(Seven Stories Press, 2009). He holds a master's degree in
philosophy from the University of Virginia and served as press
secretary for Kucinich for President in 2004. Swanson is just
beginning a book tour of 48 cities and hopes to see you on the road.
Check out his tour schedule by clicking
here.