BUSH, GEORGE WALKER

1946–, 43d president of the United States (2001–), b. New Haven, Conn. The eldest son of President George H. W. Bush, he was was raised in Texas and, like his father, attended Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass., and Yale, graduating in 1968. He subsequently earned a Harvard M.B.A. (1975) and worked in the oil and gas industry (1975–86). Bush helped manage his father's 1988 presidential campaign, then became managing partner (1989–94) of the Texas Rangers baseball team.

Governor of Texas and Presidential Candidate

In 1994, Bush was elected governor of Texas, defeating the incumbent, Ann Richards. In office he won a reputation for being able to forge bipartisan coalitions with the conservative legislature's Democrats, and won passage of changes to tort laws and the welfare, public-school, and juvenile-justice systems. His most significant setback occurred when legislative Republicans deserted his tax-system overhaul. Bush was reelected in 1998 by a landslide.

In 1999, Bush officially began his campaign for the 2000 Republican presidential nomination, and quickly raised record campaign funding. Widely regarded as the favorite Republican hopeful, Bush won a majority of convention delegates in the primaries and became the GOP's candidate. Although he appeared generally to lead in the polls, he ultimately lost the popular vote to Democrat Al Gore. However, Bush secured the presidency with a victory in the electoral college when he won Florida by a narrow margin, having outlasted Gore's attempt to challenge the Florida vote-counting process in court. He thus became the first person in more than a century to win the presidency without achieving a plurality in the popular vote.

Presidency

In his first months in office Bush moved quickly to win congressional approval of his tax-cut program, as well as to halt or modify the institution of various regulations proposed in the last weeks of the Clinton administration. Many of his proposed measures were generally conservative and probusiness, as in legislation to modify bankruptcy laws, proposals to fund church-run social welfare programs, and the abandonment of the Kyoto Protocol on global warming and of the antiballistic missile (ABM) treaty (see disarmament, nuclear; Strategic Defense Initiative). In other areas, however, his administration pursued a less traditionally conservative course, for example, securing the establishment of federally mandated nationwide standardized testing for public school students. President Bush was also unusual in assigning greater policy-making and governing responsibilities to the vice president and members of the cabinet than earlier administrations had.

Devastating terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in Sept., 2001, confronted Bush with a crisis without recent parallels. Some 3,000 lives were lost in a coordinated assault against the United States, but the perpetrators were a decentralized and elusive terrorist network, not a nation. Bush demanded that Afghanistan's Taliban government turn over Osama bin Laden, the Saudi-born Islamic militant heading Al Qaeda, the group behind the attacks; the president adamantly refused to negotiate and said that no distinction would be made between terrorists and those who harbored them. The administration, which had previously pursued an essentially unilateralist foreign policy, now sought international support for military action against bin Laden and Afghanistan and for measures to cut off the financial resources of various terrorist groups. In addition, the Office of Homeland Security was created in the White House to coordinate government efforts to counter terrorist threats.

In October, Bush ordered air and then ground raids against Afghanistan, beginning a war whose immediate goals were the destruction of Al Qaeda and its Taliban allies. Afghani opposition forces, with U.S. support, ousted the Taliban and largely routed it and Al Qaeda by the end of 2001, but bin Laden remained uncaptured. The long-term course of the "war on terrorism" that Bush proclaimed, however, was less clear. A second unsettling challenge confronted his government in late 2001 when cases of anthrax resulted from spores that had been mailed by an unknown source to U.S. media and government offices in bioterror attacks. Despite their coincidence, the anthrax and Al Qaeda attacks appeared to be unrelated. In Dec., 2001, Bush officially announced the U.S. withdrawal from the ABM treaty, but he also had agreed to further missile cuts with Russia, which were formalized in 2002 by the Moscow Treaty.

As sporadic fighting in Afghanistan continued, with U.S. forces devoted mainly to mopping-up operations, the administration provided military assistance to a number of nations as part of the war on terrorism. In February the administration announced plans for the largest American military buildup since the 1980s. That increase in defense spending and the loss of revenue due to the 2001 tax cut led to new budget deficits, beginning in 2002. Very strong public support for the president declined somewhat in 2002, largely over domestic issues, where the administration, as in its decision to make the Homeland Security Office a cabinet department (enacted in Nov., 2002; see Homeland Security, U.S. Dept. of) and in its support for increased regulations on business accounting practices, was largely following the lead of Congress in responding to public concerns.

As 2002 progressed, the administration took a forceful stand against Iraq over its alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction and its resistance to UN arms inspections. Congress authorized the use of the military against Iraq, and the United States continued to build up its forces in the Middle East. Although in November the Security Council passed a resolution offering Iraq a "final opportunity" to cooperate on arms inspections, which subsequently resumed, it became clear that Bush was determined on a course of "pre-emptive war" to prevent Iraq from developing or possessing weapons of mass destruction that might someday be used against the United States. This use of pre-emptive war to protect the United States, often called the "Bush doctrine," was adopted by the administration in its National Security Strategy (2002). A significant shift in official U.S. policy, it was the result in part of the September 11th attacks.

Bush faced a second crisis involving weapons of mass destruction beginning in Oct., 2002, when North Korea admitted it had a nuclear weapons program. The administration initially responded by ending fuel shipments required under a 1994 agreement and refusing to negotiate until the North Koreans complied completely with their responsibilities under that agreement (neither they nor the United States had fully done so). Subsequently, however, North Korea engaged in a series of well-publicized moves, including withdrawing from the nuclear nonproliferation treaty, that were designed to enable it to resume the development of nuclear weapons. Faced with pressure from North Korea's neighbors for negotiated solution and apparently unwilling to pursue a military solution, the administration adopted a somewhat less confrontational tone in 2003.

The Nov., 2002, elections resulted in unexpected, if small, gains for the Republicans, who secured control of both houses of Congress, and enhanced the political strength of the president, who had campaigned vigorously in the off-year election. In December, Bush ordered the deployment of a ballistic missile defense system designed to prevent so-called rogue missile attacks, and the next month he proposed a new round of tax cuts, ostensibly as an economic stimulus. Many criticized the cuts as inappropriate because of the increasing budget deficits and because the most significant cuts would not occur immediately.

In early 2003, Bush, insisting that Iraq must prove it had no weapons of mass destruction or face being disarmed, pushed for an end to inspections and for the use of military force against Iraq. Despite strong opposition from many European allies as well as Russia, China, and most other nations, Bush demanded in March that Iraqi president Hussein step down or face invasion, and on March 19, U.S. and British forces commenced their attack. By mid-April the allies were largely in control of the major Iraqi cities and largely had turned their attention to the establishment of a new Iraqi government and the rebuilding of Iraq. No weapons of mass destruction, however, were found by allied forces after the war, a fact the forced the president to appoint (Feb., 2004) a bipartisan commission to investigate U.S. intelligence failures.

Bush won congressional approval of his new tax cuts (albeit at a reduced level) in May, and those cuts combined with the effects of the slowly recovering economy and the costs of the Iraq invasion and occupation produced a record budget deficit of $374 billion. In mid-2003 the administration signed free-trade agreements with Singapore and Chile, and a Central American agreement was signed at year's end. Progress was also made on a Free Trade Area of the Americas, and additional bilateral trade agreements were signed in 2004. A Medicare overhaul bill also was finalized in late 2003; it included a prescription drug benefit for the first time.

Bibliography

See his A Charge to Keep (2000); B. Minutaglio, First Son: George W. Bush and the Bush Family Dynasty (1999); M. Ivins and L. Dubose, Shrub: The Short but Happy Political Life of George W. Bush (2000); E. Mitchell, W: Revenge of the Bush Dynasty (2000); H. Gillman, The Votes That Counted: How the Court Decided the 2000 Presidential Election (2001); Washington Post political staff, Deadlock: The Inside Story of America's Closest Election (2001); F. Bruni, Ambling into History: The Unlikely Odyssey of George W. Bush (2002); D. Frum, The Right Man (2002); I. H. Daalder and J. M. Lindsay, America Unbound: The Bush Revolution in Foreign Policy (2003).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Judge Griffin B. Bell, President George H.w. Bush, and the Walker Cup by David E. Hudson In August 2001...was an address by former President George H. W. Bush, for whose grandfather, George Herbert Walker, die competition is...
...Diary of George H.W. Bush: The Making of a Global...Skinner China Diary of George H,W. Bush: The Making...Global President. By George H. W. Bush, edited...576 pp. China Diary of George H.W. Bush: The Making...office, George Herbert Walker Bush was one of the most...
Power and Prudence: The Presidency of George H. W. Bush. by LeRoy Ashby Power and Prudence: The Presidency...draw comparisons between the administration of George Herbert Walker Bush and that of his son. As the authors observe...
...advisors and processes commit moral negligence. George Herbert Walker Bush George H. W. Bush chose his senior team to ensure...a power base to achieve sustainable goals. George Herbert Walker Bush President Bush saw the Iraq invasion of Kuwait...
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...opposition in the Senate--Bush used his authority over...research was far smaller than Bush had claimed. Some prominent...Lone Star Statecraft George Herbert Walker Bush had been derided...the vision thing." But George W. Bushs advisers, if...
...apparently positive contacts with George W. Bush. "I think with the return of...be pro-Israel. His father George Herbert Walker Bush certainly is not considered...and other states, talked with George W. Bush about Palestinian compliance...
Could Bush Be Prosecuted? Two Recently...Possibility of Prosecuting George W. Bush and Top Bush Administration...and the Case for Prosecuting George W. Bush, by Congressman Dennis...paperback. The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder, by Vincent...
How Bush Broke the Government: To...Alyssa Rosenberg , LaNitra Walker There is nothing new about...But the strategies that George W. Bush used to strengthen his presidency...Security. As she points out, George Washington may be celebrated...
...November 3,1970: George Bush Sr. loses Senate election...agricultural importer, Bush uses F-102 to shuttle...his commanding officer, Bush never shows up for duty...The Guard on Bush: "George Walker Bush is one member of the...
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President George Walker Bush the 43rd President of the United States...America inaugurated its 43rd President, George Walker Bush. By coincidence, the new...Executives of the land. The assumption of George Walker Bush to the US presidency comes...
...Four Years with President George W Bush, Brendan Sullivan, a...Saddam and al-Qaida. 3 Bush is not a cowboy. In America...dont approve of what Bush is doing. But enough are...Pacino and Blondie and Alice Walker. We do great things...
Adviser defends Bush tax cuts as boosting science...science adviser to Texas Gov. George W. Bush yesterday rebutted Vice...our future," said Robert Walker, a former Pennsylvania...In the interviews, Mr. Bush said a "dark cloud" hangs...
...the huge Bush-Walker clan have not...they view the Bushes as the nations...ahead, with Jeb Bush an eventual Republican...nominee, and George P. Bush, Jebs...George W. Bush. Several things...out in "The Bushes" and, lest...tell us, the Bush men have a knack...who married George H. W.; Laura...wife Dorothy Walker. For another...
...Byline: Frank J. Murray George Walker Bush thrived for 54 years in the shadow of George Herbert Walker Bush...retired as the second. George W. Bush will become the 43rd president...Democrat whose character both Bushes attacked as a staple of...
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BUSH, GEORGE WALKER 1946 , 43d President...eldest son of President George H. W. Bush , he...Unlikely Odyssey of George W. Bush (2002...America Unbound: The Bush Revolution in Foreign...Schweizer, The Bushes: Portrait of a Dynasty...
BUSH, GEORGE HERBERT WALKER 1924 , 41st President...His father, Prescott Bush, was a successful investment...1976 77). Presidency Bush was unsuccessful in his...Campbell, ed., The Bush Presidency (1991); P. and R. Schweizer, The Bushes: Portrait of a Dynasty...
...Mondale Ronald Wilson Reagan Republican 1981 89 George H.W. Bush George Herbert Walker Bush Republican 1989 93 J. Danforth Quayle Bill Clinton Democratic 1993 2001 Albert Gore, Jr. George Walker Bush Republican 2001 9 Dick Cheney Barack...
...three sons (or adopted sons) of Texas have been president of the nation: Lyndon Johnson , George Herbert Walker Bush , and George Walker Bush . In 2005 and 2008, SE Texas suffered extensive damage as a result of Hurricanes Rita and Ike, respectively...


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