George W. Bush

On President's Big Convention Night, Mentions Of "Bush" Are Awfully Hard To Find

Yesterday was President Bush's big night at the GOP convention, but you wouldn't have known it if you were, you know, there.

We just checked all the full texts of the speeches from last night's festivities that are on the GOP convention's official Web page. The word "Bush" appears exactly zero times. The word "president" doesn't appear anywhere in connection with Bush.

Oh, and one other funny thing: The GOP's page of speeches, which included the orations of a bunch of unknowns, didn't even bother including the speeches given by the president or Laura.

Election Central Sunday Roundup

Bush Now Unlikely To Be At GOP Convention
President Bush will probably not be attending the Republican convention anymore, a last-minute schedule change on account of the imminent landfall of Hurricane Gustav in the Gulf Coast. It's still possible that he could give a speech to the convention, though it would be via satellite rather than in person.

Dem Ticket In Ohio And Michigan
The Obamas and Bidens are continuing their Rust Belt bus tour today, visiting the swing states of Ohio and Michigan. First up is a discussion on the economy in Toledo, followed by a late-afternoon rally in Battle Creek.

GOP Ticket In Missouri Today
John McCain and Sarah Palin are campaigning today in O'Fallon, Missouri, a large suburb of St. Louis, for a rally scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. ET.

McCain Also Visiting Gulf Coast's Hurricane Preparations
John McCain is also set to visit Jackson, Mississippi, today in order to view the Gulf Coast's preparations for Hurricane Gustav. The hurricane is expected to hit the Gulf Coast during the Republican Convention.

Palin Booed After Praising Hillary At Campaign Event
Sarah Palin's name-dropping of Hillary Clinton, an obvious ploy to win disaffected women who supported Hillary in the primaries, didn't go over so well last night at an event in Pennsylvania. When Palin tried the line out, the right-wing crowd very loudly booed -- not the sort of visual likely to make it into a McCain ad.

Ferraro Praises Palin, Won't Say Who She's Voting For
In an interview with NPR yesterday, Geraldine Ferraro praised Sarah Palin's selection as John McCain's running mate, and defended Palin against the accusation that she's not qualified to hold high office. When asked who she was voting for, Ferraro played coy: "When I go into the booth I will make my decision."

Biden Pitches Obama To Working-Class Scranton In New Ad
The Obama campaign has released this TV ad for the Northeastern Pennsylvania media market, featuring Joe Biden talking about his working-class upbringing in Scranton. Biden then says how Obama is very much the same, having been raised in humble beginnings by his single mother and grandparents:


Minnesota Dems: We'll Give You Cash For Photo Of Coleman With Bush

The strategy being employed by many Republicans in tough races this year -- that is, to disassociate oneself from President Bush -- is naturally a lot tougher for Minnesota Sen. Norm Coleman, whose home city of St. Paul is hosting the Republican convention. And the state Dems there are setting out to make it even more difficult.

The DFL (as the Dems are called in Minnesota) has made a novel offer: A cash reward of over $500 to anybody who can snap a photo of Coleman standing next to Bush on Monday night of the convention.

In an e-mail to Election Central, DFL spokesman Eric Fought acknowledged that this could be a tall order: "It's a safe bet that when George Bush is anywhere near the Xcel Center, Norm Coleman will be far, far away."

White House: Leaders Should Listen To Public And International Opinion

White House Irony Watch...

The Bush Administration's statement today on its new sanctions against Zimbabwe call into question just how much of a sense of self-awareness they have. Quoting President Bush:

"No regime should ignore the will of its own people and calls from the international community without consequences."

We might point them in the direction of polling data at home -- not to mention international opinion -- showing that people want a timetable to withdraw from Iraq.

McCain Camp's New Attack: Obama Is The One Who's The Same As Bush

The McCain campaign is taking their effort to distance their candidate from the unpopular President Bush to a whole new level: McCain's advisers are now openly attacking Bush on Iraq -- and not only that, they're also saying that Barack Obama is the one who is like Bush on the war!

On a conference call just now with reporters, McCain foreign policy adviser Randy Scheunemann compared Barack Obama's insistence on a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq to Bush's insistence that we were winning even as things went badly for years.

"I think the American people have had enough of inflexibility and stubbornness in national security policy," Scheunemann said. When asked later by the Huffington Post's Sam Stein whether the campaign was disparaging President Bush, Scheunemann dug in: "We cannot afford to replace one administration that refused for too long to acknowledge failure in Iraq with a candidate that refuses to acknowledge success in Iraq."

Forget "McSame." The candidate who would really continue Bush's policies is "BushBama."

Poll: Large Majority Concerned That McCain Will Continue Bush Policies

Have the initiatives undertaken by the McCain campaign to achieve separation from George W. Bush -- such as his frequent discussion of his POW past and his focus on energy and environmental policies -- achieved their desired goal?

Not according to a new poll from Gallup, which finds that a big majority of Americans is either very or somewhat concerned that McCain would pursue policies too similar to those of President Bush:

Sixty eight percent are concerned about this, the poll finds. Even more tellingly, the survey also finds that 67% of independents are worried about this, too. That's some very fertile ground for the Democratic message to take root in.

Separately, Think Progress has some examples that demonstrate that Americans have good reason to fear this.

Election Central Morning Roundup

Obama Campaign Targeting 14 Red States
In their efforts to expand the playing field, Obama deputy campaign manager Steve Hildebrand told the Politico that the campaign will be putting resources into 14 states that George W. Bush won in 2004, and will even be targeting states they're unlikely to win, like Wyoming. "If we can register more Democrats, if we can increase the Democratic performance and turnout, maybe we can pick up a congressional seat."

Obama To Give Press Conference Today, McCain In Nevada
Barack Obama will be holding a 3:15 p.m. ET press conference today in his home base of Chicago, following a closed-door policy meeting with business leaders supporting his candidacy. John McCain will be in the swing state of Nevada, with an event in Las Vegas focusing on energy policy.

Hillary Meeting With House Dems Today To Urge Unity
Hillary Clinton is making a Democratic unity tour part of her return to Capitol Hill. Clinton is set to meet today with the House Democratic Caucus, where she will thank her former backers and ask them to work hard on Barack Obama's behalf.

Obama: Dobson "Making Stuff Up"
Barack Obama has responded to James Dobson's condemnation, after Dobson accused Obama of distorting the Bible and having a "fruitcake interpretation" of the law for arguing that religious doctrine should not directly dictate public policy. "I think you'll see that he was just making stuff up, maybe for his own purposes," Obama said.

Utah Congressman Loses Reelection In Primary
Rep. Chris Cannon, a Utah Republican known for his outrageous gaffes over the years, was defeated in his primary last night by a landslide margin. With 100% of precincts reporting, Cannon lost to state political operative Jason Chaffetz by a 60%-40% margin.

San Fran Group Seeks To Name Sewage Plant After Bush
Now this is funny. A group calling itself the Presidential Memorial Commission of San Francisco is planning to put an initiative on the ballot to rename the city's sewage treatment plant after President Bush. The group, which was formed at a bar, is calling their proposal "an appropriate honor for a truly unique president."

McCain Doing Fundraiser With Bush Today -- With Minimal TV Coverage

John McCain is now getting closer to President Bush as he seeks to fix his campaign's cash-flow problems -- but in a sign that he recognizes the problem of Bush's unpopularity, he's not getting too close in public.

McCain and Bush will co-host a big-money fundraiser in Phoenix today, the first time they've been seen together in three months. The catch: TV footage of the two of them together will be kept to a minimum.

Bush-McCain Fundraiser Scaled Back Due To Lack Of Takers

A planned mega-fundraiser for the GOP, featuring President Bush and John McCain, has now been scaled back in the face of a daunting problem: Too few people actually wanted to buy tickets.

According to the Phoenix Business Journal, fundraiser set for this Tuesday in the city's convention center failed to sell enough tickets, leading to fears that the anti-Bush protesters might end up outnumbering actual attendees.

The new plan is for the Bush-McCain fundraising effort, which will benefit both the McCain campaign and the RNC, to be held in private residences in the Phoenix area away from media coverage.

Obama To Respond Forcefully To Bush's Attacks Today

Obama foreign policy adviser Susan Rice vowed on MSNBC this morning that Obama will respond forcefully today to President Bush's claim yesterday that Democrats' willingness to negotiate with hostile foreign powers constitutes "appeasement."

"What you're going to hear is a very vigorous response to what was an outrageous, unprecedented, and divisive attack from President Bush yesterday," Rice said.

Of course, Bush never specifically mentioned Obama in his comments. But the Obama team has good reason to forcefully respond, anyway. It puts Obama on the same stage as the Republicans and the President himself, placing him in a back-and-forth over foreign policy with the man that he and John McCain both want to replace -- thus making Hillary and the Democratic Primary recede ever more quickly in the political world's rear-view mirror.

I'm told that Obama's remarks about Bush may come during today's town-hall meeting in Watertown, South Dakota, at noon eastern.

Obama Camp Hits Back At Bush's Claim That Dems Favor "Appeasement"

Offering yet another reminder of why his approval rating hovers in the 20s, President Bush yet again hauled out a political tactic that has been failing for the GOP for literally years now, likening the willingness of "some" -- apparently meaning Obama and other Dems -- to negotiate with hostile foreign powers to "appeasement."

Intriguingly, Bush called this willingness to negotiate -- which is supported by majorities of the American people -- something that had been "discredited by history," a claim that requires one to completely forget that the last seven years ever happened.

"It is sad that President Bush would use a speech to the Knesset on the 6Oth anniversary of Israel's independence to launch a false political attack," retorted Obama, via spokesperson Bill Burton. "It is time to turn the page on eight years of policies that have strengthened Iran and failed to secure America or our ally Israel."

Bush made the remarks today while in Israel. The exchange provides an early glimpse of the argument that Obama and McCain are likely to have over foreign policy in the run-up to the general election.

Obama's full response after the jump.

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We Have A Winner! Bush Gets Highest Gallup Disapproval Rating Ever

President Bush has reached a new milestone: He now has the highest disapproval ratings ever of any president in the 70-year history of the Gallup poll.

The newest ratings: Approve 28%, Disapprove 69%. The previous high disapproval was held by Harry Truman during the depths of the Korean War in 1952, at 67%.

CNN Poll: Bush Approval Has Dropped 40 Points Since Iraq Invasion

A new CNN poll shows that for the five-year anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, President Bush's approval rating is the lowest they've ever polled: 31% Approve, 67% Disapprove.

Looking back in history to the start of the Iraq War, Bush's approval stood at 71% in CNN's polling — meaning he's dropped 40 points as the war has dragged on interminably.

House Dems Dig In On War Funding: Obey Says No Withdrawal Dates, No Money

Recently we learned that Dem Senate leaders are contemplating getting rid of their call for withdrawal timelines in order to pass a December bill funding the next leg of the Iraq War.

This has prompted many people to start looking to House Dems to take a stand and draw a line against more funding. House Dems have been making noise about standing firm. But now the White House and GOP campaign to portray Dems as unwilling to fund the troops has kicked into gear, no doubt spooking some Dems, particularly those of the Blue Dog variety.

So what will House Dems do? What's their next step?

Well, today House Dem leader David Obey, who's insisting on withdrawal timelines, was asked this question at a presser. His answer: We won't fund the war without withdrawal dates. Take a look:

Transcript:

QUESTION: Mr. Obey, the rhetoric from the president is just going to get worse as the holidays approach. Are you going to continue to maintain the stance that you have of providing these conditions on war funds if he's to get the money?

OBEY: Of course.

I mean, we have provided the money. I will repeat that 50 times. We have provided the money. The money is not the issue. The issue is that the president is simply refusing to accept the conditions under which the money is provided.

This document says that that's the proper role of Congress. If you look at Article I, Section 8 and Article I, Section 9, they define the authority of the Congress to determine what policy is supposed to be financed and in foreign affairs, and we're simply -- we're simply following that document to the letter.

Pretty tough talk. The question now is whether House Dems will hold the line in the face of the propaganda barrage from the White House and GOPers, who have already started to paint the Dems as unwilling to fund the troops, even though it's the Republicans who are blocking the funding by refusing to support any funding bill that doesn't permit for war to continue forever.

Obey says House Dems will hold the line, and as chair of the Appropriations Committee, Obey is in a good position to help enforce this. We'll see what happens.

Bush's Approval Soars All The Way Up To 31 Percent

Poll headlines like this really are a sign of the times:

George W. Bush's Job Approval Increases to 31%

The new poll, which is from American Research Group, says Bush's numbers have bounced up to 31% from his record low of 25% last month. Bush's big rebound is driven by a drop in public pessimism about the economy, the poll says.

Also driving Bush's comeback is the fact that the number of independents who approve of Bush has jumped to one in four -- up from last month's total of eight percent.

Thirty Senators Write To Bush: You Don't Have Authority To Invade Iran

Thirty Senators, led by Jim Webb, have just released a letter they sent to the President. The message: Stop trash-talking about Iran. Key quote:

We are writing to express serious concerns with the provocative statements and actions stemming from your administration with respect to possible U.S. military action in Iran. These comments are counterproductive and undermine efforts to resolve tensions with Iran through diplomacy.

We wish to emphasize that no congressional authority exists for unilateral military action against Iran.

Intrestingly, as The Huffington Post reported today, one Senator who didn't sign the letter is Barack Obama, apparently because he disagrees with the letter's assertion that Kyl-Lieberman "should in no way" be seen as a predicate for war with Iran.

"It will take more than a letter to prevent this administration from using the language contained within the Kyl-Lieberman resolution to justify military action in Iran," Obama spokesman Bill Burton told us. "This requires a legislative answer and Senator Obama intends to propose one."

The full letter, and a full list of signers, after the jump.

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Bush Ties Record Low Of 25% In New Poll

Yet another poll finds that only a quarter of the electorate approves of the job Bush is doing as President. The new American Research Group survey finds Bush's approval rating at 25% -- matching his low point in ARG polling.

Bush's numbers are also sagging (relatively, at least) among Republicans. His approval among GOPers has dropped to 67%, down from 80% last month.

Poll: Bush Hits New Record Low Of 24%

The new Reuters/Zogby poll finds that Bush's approval rating has tumbled to 24% -- a full five points lower than his previous record low of 29% in Zogby polling. Our Official Election Central Calculator tells us that this means that less than one in four now approve of Bush's performance.

As if that weren't bad enough on its own, Atrios points out that this matches Richard Nixon's record low in Gallup polling.

The poll also finds that Congress' approval sits at an abysmal 11% and that both Rudy and Hillary have expanded their national leads.

Fox News Poll Asks Respondents Whether They've Prayed For Bush

The new Fox News poll finds that Republicans are twice as likely than Democrats to have prayed for the President:

Republicans (74 percent) are twice as likely as Democrats (37 percent) to have included the president in their prayers, while just over half (52 percent) of independents have prayed for Bush.

Since we're on this topic, the real takeaway here may be that Dems are surprisingly magnanimous towards the President with their prayers. After all, in the same poll only 11% of Dems approved of his performance.

So, if 37% of Dems say they have prayed for Bush, that means that roughly one-forth of Dems disapprove of the President but have nonetheless prayed for him, anyway.

Either way, it's certainly kind of intriguing that Fox polled on whether people are praying for Bush in the first place.

Meanwhile, we have some more fun stuff from this poll right here at The Horse's Mouth.

Poll: Bush Approval At Record Low

The new AP/Ipsos poll shows President Bush with his lowest approval rating ever in their surveys. Bush's approval comes in at 31%, with 66% of registered voters disapproving of his performance.

As for Congress, an even broader coalition of voters hate them. Congress' approval rating is a paltry 22%, with 73% disapproval.

(Via Think Progress)



Oops — White House Releases Bush's Pronunciation Guides

The White House made a mistake that will just feed more of the perceptions about President Bush's problems with the English language — accidentally releasing to the press his prepared remarks before the United Nations, including phonetic pronunciation guides for the president to follow.

A guide was given not only for an admittedly tough one like Kyrgyzstan ("KEYR-geez-stan"), but also for Nicolas Sarkozy ("sar-KO-zee"), which seems pretty simple to pronounce as it is.

It's not at all unusual for a leader to use pronunciation guides, but having them in circulation must be pretty embarrassing. As the Times of London noted, the prepared speech did not include a phonetic guide for the name of Aung San Suu Kyi — and Bush predictably stumbled over that one.

Late Update: White House Press Secretary Dana Perino lambasted a question about the president's apparent difficulties with some of these words. “I think that’s a offensive question," Perino said. "I’m going to just decline to comment on it."

Bush Doesn't "Accept The Premise" That Dems Will Win In 2008

A new quote from President Bush, reportedly done in an interview for an upcoming book from the conservative Regnery Publishing house, tells us more about Bush than it does about Election 2008.

"I will work to see to it that a Republican wins and therefore don't accept the premise that a Democrat will win," Bush said. "I truly think the Republicans will hold the White House."

So Bush works towards an objective, refusing to accept the idea of failure — and then takes this to its logical extreme, truly believing that the opposite scenario simply can't happen.

He really does let his goals define his reality. This explains a lot about the last few years, doesn't it?

Vicente Fox: "Cowboy" Bush Is Scared Of Horses

Here's another fun detail from Vicente Fox's upcoming autobiography: He says that despite President Bush's cowboy image, the man is actually scared of horses.

Fox tells the story of the two men meeting in Mexico in early 2001, in which he invited Bush to ride a large horse. Bush nervously backed away. "A horse lover can always tell when others don't share our passion," Fox wrote.

Fun fact: Bush's Crawford ranch, purchased in 1999 in order to help create a down-home image for his presidential campaign, does not have any horses.

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