November 5, 2017
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
G. H.
W. and George Bush Attack President Trump: The Fearful GOP Elite in Assault
Mode
==============================================
Friends,
No doubt you have heard about the new,
semi-biographical book about the two presidents Bush? It’s by author Mark
Updegrove, and the title is: The Last
Republicans. Apparently, Updegrove had full access to and the full and
active cooperation of both G. H. W. Bush and George W. Bush. And both father
and son let loose with a vengeance on President Trump. In words laced with both
animus and resentment—and most likely, sheer jealousy—they call the president a
“blowhard” (George the Elder) and “unfit” (George the Younger). Neither voted
for President Trump, with the senior Bush declaring that he voted for Hillary
Clinton, and the younger, after some soul-searching and probably thinking he
would do the same thing, ending up leaving the top of the ticket blank on his
ballot.
And, as I recall it, these are the same
two GOP presidents, with the same establishment GOP party apparatus at their
backs, who have always demanded that the conservative grass roots simply had
to vote Republican come whatever, that we could not break ranks,
that the fear of electing a Democrat was simply too awful to contemplate. How
many times over the years have we heard that refrain, as many of us having seen
truly conservative candidates sandbagged by the GOP elites were instructed that
we “had no place to go, but vote the Republican ticket?”
It’s not like we didn’t know, down deep,
how these two presidents think. Just recently in New York George the Younger
gave a fervently pro-globalist, pro-open borders speech—a speech that the
Mainstream Media and many Democrats vigorously applauded—a speech that Bill
Clinton or Lyndon Johnson could have readily made. All of a sudden, or so it
seemed, George the Younger had become a noble hero to the far Left…. And, despite
the best attempts of political guru and former close advisor and apologist Karl
Rove to defend Bush’s comments, the media and national punditry saw exactly
what was happening. George—let us call him “Shrub,” the name that his old Texas
Democrat adversary Ann “Ma” Richards once called him, as it fits—was publicly attacking
Donald Trump and his policies to make America great again.
For eight years during the Obama
administration “Shrub” had eschewed any
criticism of Obama—it was his policy, he often stated, for a former president not
to criticize his successor in office. It was unpresidential. But obviously that
“policy” does not apply to President Trump, whom both Shrub and his dad despise
more than all the Democrats infectiously festering along the Potomac, since it
was the upstart billionaire from New York who was taking “their party” away from them.
Back on October 21 and 25 this year,
and earlier, I offered comments on the Bushes, and during the course of the
2016 Republican primary season, in the CONSERVATIVE CRACK-UP series, I took aim
specifically at Jeb Bush, as the latest incarnation of Establishment GOP
politics. Jeb was the fair-headed heir apparent to Mitt Romney, John McCain,
Bob Dole, and the elder Bush—that whole line of anointed Republican
establishment candidates who served as shadow-boxers for the steadily advancing
Leftist agenda to transform America, an agenda they helped canonize. He was the
“intended one” who spent millions and millions of big donor dollars, and ended
up “paying” thousands for each one of the very few votes he received. Not only
that, he demonstrated for all to see—including his brother and his father— as
he went down in flaming defeat—that grass roots voters were, very simply, fed
up with the GOP establishment, they were tired of the unkept promises, the
lies, the subterfuge, the cozy alliances with leftist Democrats, the abject
fear Republicans demonstrated when confronted by a hostile media, and the
willingness to support and sanctify the worst policies and programs of the Deep
State managers.
The Bushes and their buddies should
have taken careful note of the defeat of Eric Cantor in Virginia; but, that
defeat they explained away as an anomaly, an exception. All it would take, they
believed, would be the accustomed millions from wealthy special interests,
flooding the airwaves with skillful ads, and warning GOP primary voters that
Donald Trump would be a loser in the general election.
And that he was a…“blowhard.”
But it didn’t work. And just like the
fake and manipulated polls that nearly always underrepresented the strength of
support for candidate Trump and the palpable anger of grass roots “Middle
Americans” (and which continue to underrepresent the support for the president
and his policies), the Bushes, father, son, and anointed one—with their
self-satisfied, unctuous assurances of dominance and their continuing practical,
“we-know-better” condescension towards the American voter—miscalculated badly.
And now, as they see their once-private preserve, their own domination
threatened as never before by the Upstart, they strike out like the Deep State
copperheads they really are, without warning, but finally unmasked as
plutocrats for all to see.
Today,
then, I pass on links to two accounts of the “leaked” contents of Updegrove’s
book at: [https://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/republicans-george-h-w-bush-blowhard-trump/2017/11/04/id/824099/] and [https://www.cnbc.com/2017/11/04/white-house-questions-bush-legacies-as-feud-with-trump-intensifies.html]
It is titled The Last Republicans for a specific reason, for that is the clearly
announced fear that George the Elder and Shrub and brother Jeb have—that their party may be slipping away from
them. Although I dearly hope that they are correct, I am not as fearful as they
seem to be. The Establishment is still quite powerful and has demonstrated in
the past—as its taming of Ronald Reagan demonstrated thirty years ago—that it
will do practically anything to continue in power.
Lastly, I copy a piece I published
about the Bush family several years ago. Much of it, certainly the historical
information, continues to be, I think, valuable and adds perspective to our
present situation:
Bush family liberalism: The ghost of Prescott Bush haunts us still
WASHINGTON, July 2, 2014 —
A history of the Bush family, beginning with Yankee patriarch and Wall Street
banker, Prescott Bush, is one of calculated pretense to being and sounding like
whatever best advances the political and financial fortunes of the
family. But down deep the Bushes, arguably, have never been
conservatives. In recent years, the Bushes have, it is true, sometimes sounded
“conservative,” but in the darker recesses of their thinking, they reject basic
principles that give essential life to conservatism.
Let’s
go back and take a look at Prescott Bush. He was the archetypal patrician New England
“progressive” Republican. Just read a few lines from the Wikipedia about
him:
“Prescott
Bush was politically active on social issues. He was involved with the American Birth Control League as early as 1942, and served as the treasurer of the first national capital
campaign of Planned Parenthood in
1947 [....] “From
1947 to 1950, he served as Connecticut Republican finance
chairman, and was the Republican candidate for the United States Senate in
1950. A columnist in Boston said
that Bush “is coming on to be known as President Truman’s Harry Hopkins. Nobody knows Mr. Bush and he hasn’t a Chinaman’s chance.” (Harry Hopkins [a Communist fellow traveler] had been one of FDR‘s
closest advisors.) Bush’s ties with Planned Parenthood also hurt him in heavily
Catholic Connecticut, and were the basis of a last-minute campaign in churches
by Bush’s opponents; the family vigorously denied the connection, but Bush lost
to [William] Benton by only 1,000 votes.”
Prescott
became US Senator from Connecticut through appointment in late 1952, and he
served until 1963. Continuing on from the Wiki:
“On
December 2, 1954, Prescott Bush was
part of the large (67–22) majority to censure Wisconsin Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy after
McCarthy had taken on the U.S. Army and
the Eisenhower administration. During the debate leading to the censure, Bush said that McCarthy
had ‘caused dangerous divisions among the American people because of his
attitude and the attitude he has encouraged among his followers: that there can
be no honest differences of opinion with him. Either you must follow Senator
McCarthy blindly, not daring to express any doubts or disagreements about any
of his actions, or, in his eyes, you must be a Communist, a Communist sympathizer,
or a fool who has been duped by the Communist line’
“In
terms of issues, Bush often agreed with New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller. According to Theodore H. White’s book about the 1964 election,
Bush and Rockefeller were longtime friends. Bush favored a
Nixon-Rockefeller ticket for 1960.”
This
is the kind of silk-stocking, Rockefeller Wall Street Republicanism that George
H. W. and succeeding members of the family inherited. And since 1992 the
examples that confirm the persistence of this same heritage among the Bushes
continue to surface, almost weekly.
Last
September, for example, the latest Bush “papabile,” Jeb, made cozy with Hillary
Clinton. Here’s a brief paragraph from The
Washington Times (September 13, 2013):
“HOUSTON, September
13, 2013 - On Tuesday September 10, Jeb Bush, chairman of the board for
the National Constitution Center and former governor of Florida, presented
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with the group’s annual Liberty
Medal. [!!!] It is widely speculated that
both Bush and Clinton will run for their party’s nomination for the presidency
in 2016.”
What
this incident actually indicates is something profound about the Bush
“establishment” ethos. Indeed, Jeb Bush has a whole bag of occasions where the
ghost of Prescott has seeped out for–perhaps unwanted–public view. It’s not
just his strong support for Common Core and what amounts to amnesty for illegal
immigrants. A quick review of the Internet offers numerous examples of the
survival of the spirit of Prescott in this latest representative of the clan.
George
Bush the Younger doesn’t escape conservative scrutiny, either. Once again,
there are various articles and stories in print and on the Web detailing the
emergence of the real “Bush soul,” which is most definitely not conservative. A
2011 article in The Washington Monthly highlighted
some of the issues that separated him from conservatives: “Bush was wrong about
everything from education (NCLB) to health care (Medicare Part D), immigration
(comprehensive reform) to international aid (PEPFAR), national service
(AmeriCorps, USA Freedom Corp) to foreign policy (growing Republican skepticism
about Afghanistan).”
Liberal
columnist Richard Cohen also noticed what
he termed Bush’s “neo-liberalism,” especially in education and the role of the
Federal government:
“Bush
has extended the [Education] department’s reach in a manner that Democrats
could not have envisaged. I am referring, of course, to the 2001 Elementary and
Secondary Education Act, better known as No Child Left Behind. I will spare you
the act’s details, but it pretty much tells the states to shape up or face a
loss of federal funds. It is precisely the sort of law that conservatives
predicted Washington would someday seek — and it did.”
Professor
Jack Kerwick, in a fascinating article in the journal, Modern
Age ["The Neoconservative
Conundrum," Modern Age, Winter/Spring 2013, vo. 55, nos. 1 & 2, pp. 5-12], wrote recently of
a philosophical outlook that he identifies as partaking of the revolutionary
“rationalist mind,” using the measures and research of the late English
conservative political theorist Michael Oakeshott. Kerwick identifies this as
essentially an ideologically a priori approach to statecraft, which rejects long-standing custom and the
organicism of tradition, in favor of an imposed, “progressivist” universal
standard based on supposedly self-evident “principles” born out of human
reason. It was such a rationalist mindset that guided Bush II through much of
his presidency, and it was one of the several reasons that made strong
conservatives very uncomfortable with and suspicious of him.
Events
have come full circle. Back in 1992 I argued strenuously with some of my
Republican friends that voting for Pat Buchanan was the right thing to do.
While admitting the deficiencies of George the First, their main argument was
that voting for Buchanan would only assist Bill Clinton, and that a Bill
Clinton presidency would give the man who couldn’t keep his pants up the
opportunity to name Supreme Court justices. When I pointed out the Justices
David Souter, Harry Blackmun, Earl Warren, William Brennan, Sandra Day
O’Connor, and other Leftists were appointed by Republican presidents, responses
were muted. They continued to insist that a primary contest with Buchanan
would weaken Bush in the 1992 general election. But every poll, including
immediate polls right after Buchanan’s famous “culture war” speech at the GOP
national convention, gave the lie to such spurious charges. George H. W. lost
because of what he did and what he said, and because the American electorate
listened to the insidiously seductive and polished oratory and promises of
“Slick Willie.”
Since
George the First, the national GOP has given us the following presidential
candidates: Bob Dole, George the Younger, John McCain, and the hapless Mitt
Romney–not a real, philosophical conservative among the lot of them. In
fact, conservatives, who arguably make up a majority of the Republican base,
haven’t controlled the party apparatus since Reagan. And even back then, based
on the testimony of the few conservatives who worked in the Reagan White House,
Reagan permitted George H. W. to control and fill most appointments from the
get go. You can imagine what types of folks were approved for service.
The
specter of Prescott still casts a spell over the Bush family. If a few
more pusillanimous conservatives had not run for “the tall grass” back in 1992,
just perhaps we might have stopped the contagion twenty-two years ago. Pat
Buchanan was right in 1992, as he is today. Begrudgingly, some of my friends
who supported the Bushes then, recognize this now.
All
along, despite some pleasant words, the Bushes have been enablers. As
congressional Republicans continue to sell out America on everything from
immigration to the debt ceiling, conservatives need to be told, once again,
that the Republican “establishment” is not on their side. Prescott Bush’s ghost
lives and prospers at the RNC and in the halls of the US Congress. Until it is
fully exorcized (and the Karl Roves and John McCains finally interred for
good), this nation will have no real opposition to the ongoing, steep decline
into neo-Marxist multicultural totalitarianism.
Boyd D. Cathey holds a doctorate in European
history from the Catholic University of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain, where he was
a Richard Weaver Fellow, and an MA in intellectual history from the University
of Virginia (as a Jefferson Fellow). He was assistant to conservative author
and philosopher the late Russell Kirk. In more recent years he served as State
Registrar of the North Carolina Division of Archives and History. He has
published in French, Spanish, and English, on historical subjects as well as
classical music and opera. He is active in the Sons of Confederate Veterans and
various historical, archival, and genealogical organizations.
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