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reader supported news 11 August 12
Erasing W
By Robert Reich
A s Bill Clinton is resurrected by the Democrats, George W.
Bush is being erased by the GOP - as if an entire eight years of
American history hadn't happened.
While Bill Clinton stumps for Obama, Romney has gone out of his
way not to mention the name of the president who came after Clinton and before Obama.
Clinton will have a starring role at the Democratic National Convention. George W. Bush won't even be
at the Republican one - the first time a national party has not given the stage at its convention to its
most recent occupant of the Oval Office who successfully ran for reelection.
The GOP is counting on America's notoriously short-term memory to blot out the last time the nation
put a Republican into the Oval Office, on the reasonable assumption that such a memory might cause
voters to avoid making the same mistake twice. As whoever-it-was once said, "fool me once ..." (and
then mangled the rest).
Republicans want to obliterate any trace of the administration that told America there were weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq and led us into a devastating war; turned a $5 trillion projected budget surplus
into a $6 trillion deficit; gave the largest tax cut in a generation to the richest Americans in history;
handed out a mountain of corporate welfare to the oil and gas industry, pharmaceutical companies, and
military contractors like Halliburton (uniquely benefiting the vice president); whose officials turned a
blind eye to Wall Street shenanigans that led to the worst financial calamity since the Great Crash of
1929 and then persuaded Congress to bail out the Street with the largest taxpayer-funded giveaway of
all time.
Besides, the resemblances between George W. Bush and Mitt Romney are too close for comfort. Both
were born into wealth, sons of prominent politicians who themselves ran for president; both are closely
tied to the nation's corporate and financial elites, and eager to do their bidding; both are socially
awkward and, as candidates, tightly scripted for fear of saying something they shouldn't; and both
presented themselves to the nation devoid of any consistent policies or principles that might give some
clue as to what they actually believe.
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They are both, in other words, unusually shallow, uncurious, two-dimensional men who ran or are
running for the presidency for no clear reason other than to surpass their fathers or achieve the aims
and ambitions of their wealthy patrons.
Small wonder the Republican Party wants us to forget our last Republican president and his
administration. By contrast, the Democrats have every reason for America to recall and celebrate the
Clinton years.
Robert B. Reich, Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of
Labor in the Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of
the last century. He has written thirteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock" and "The Work of Nations."
His latest is an e-book, "Beyond Outrage." He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and
chairman of Common Cause.
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