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George W. Bush

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George Walker Bush
43rd President of the United States
Vice PresidentDick Cheney
Preceded byBill Clinton
Personal details
BornJuly 6, 1946
New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Political partyRepublican
SpouseLaura Welch Bush

George Walker Bush (born July 6, 1946) is the 43rd and current President of the United States. Prior to his political career, he was an entrepreneur in the oil industry and served as the managing general partner/owner of the Texas Rangers baseball team. Bush, a member of the Republican Party, was elected 46th [[Governorwin the nomination of the Republican Party for the 2000 presidential race and ultimately defeated Democratic Vice President Al Gore in a particularly close and controversial general election. In 2004, Bush was elected to a second term, defeating Democratic Senator John Kerry. This term will expire January 20, 2009.

Bush's presidency has been defined by the ongoing War on Terror including the Iraq War following the September 11, 2001 attacks. In the aftermath the U.S. and a multinational force (dubbed the "Coalition of the Willing") took military action in Iraq, overthrowing and capturing Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. The war proved controversial both in the United States and internationally. In response to the September 11th attacks, Bush and congress created the Department of Homeland Security and increased the powers of law enforcement agencies with the passage of the USA PATRIOT Act.

Buh has also signed into law large tax cuts and a Medicare prescription drug plan. He has appointed two justices to the Supreme Court, including a new Chief Justice. Bush's terms of office coincided with Republican control of the United States Congress, giving him greater control over policy formulation than presidents dealing with an opposition-controlled Congress. While continuing American policy of support for Israel, President Bush became the first U.S. president to also endorse the creation of a state. His promise of $15 billion (over 5 years) to Africa for AIDS relief was funded by Congress. In late 2005 and 2006, Bush led the world community in opposition to Iran's announced intention to develop nuclear technology.

Bush is a member of a prominent political family: his father, George H. W. Bush, served as U.S. President for four years and as Vice President for eight, his brother Jeb Bush is the current Governor of Florida, and his grandfather, Prescott Bush, was a Republican United States Senator from Connecticut. Among his family, he acquired the nickname "W" (for his middle initial; later Dubya, a literal spelling of a colloquial pronunciation of the letter), which has become a common public nickname, used both affectionately and pejoratively. He is the second son of a former United States president to become president himself.

Bush before his presidency

File:Bush daughers.gif
George and Laura Bush with their daughters Jenna and Barbara, 1990.
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The eldest son of former President George H. W. Bush and his wife Barbara Bush (née Pierce), George Walker Bush was born in New Haven, Connecticut. He moved to Texas with his family at the age of two and he identifies himself as a native Texan. He was raised in Midland, and Houston, Texas with his siblings Jeb, Neil, Marvin, and Dorothy. Another younger sister, Robin, died in 1953 at age three from leukemia.

Following family tradition, he attended prep school in New England, at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, the same school his father attended. Bush then enrolled at Yale University, where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in History in 1968. As a senior, Bush was a member of the secretive Skull and Bones society, as was his father. In May 1968, at the height of the Vietnam War, he entered the Texas Air National Guard. He trained in the guard for two years, where he was among the last to learn to fly the F-102, a plane not used in Vietnam and due to be retired. Bush was promoted to First Lieutenant in November 1970 on the recommendation of his commander Lt. Col. Jerry B. Killian. He served as an F-102 pilot until 1972.

In 1974, he obtained permission to end his six-year service obligation six months early in order to attend Harvard Business School, from which he earned his Master of Business Administration (MBA) in 1975; he is the first U.S. President to hold an MBA. After graduation, Bush returned to Texas to enter the oil business. Two years later, he married Laura Welch, a school librarian originally from Midland, Texas. Their twin daughters Barbara and Jenna Bush were born in 1981. Bush is the only U.S. President to be the father of twins.

Early in his professional life, Bush ran, or was a partner in a number of oil companies, including Arbusto Energy, Spectrum 7, and the Harken Energy Corporation. Bush started his political career assisting his father's 1964 and 1970 campaigns for the U.S Senate, neither of which was successful. He then served as political director for an Alabama senate campaign. In 1978, Bush ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. House of Representatives. After working on his father's successful 1988 presidential campaign, Bush purchased a share in the Texas Rangers baseball franchise, in April 1989, where he became managing general partner.

In 1993, Bush and his brother Jeb Bush both decided to run for governor, George in Texas and Jeb in Florida. Although his brother was unsuccessful, George Bush ended up defeating popular incumbent Ann Richards on 1994-11-08, to become Governor of Texas. That same year, he and his partners sold the Texas Rangers with the governor realizing a profit of nearly $15 million. In 1998 Bush went on to win re-election in a landslide victory with nearly 69% of the vote, becoming the first Texas governor to be elected for two consecutive four-year terms (before 1975, the gubernatorial term of office was two years). During Bush's governorship, he undertook significant legislative changes in criminal justice, tort law, and school financing.

Religious beliefs and practices

A 1985 meeting with evangelist Billy Graham ultimately led Bush to give up alcohol and devote himself to a more serious practice of Christianity. During this period, he left the Bush family's Episcopalian faith to join his wife's United Methodist Church, a denomination that in part represents a more socially conservative worldview (see United Methodist Church "Diversity Within Methodist Beliefs").

Bush attends services at St. John's Episcopal Church on a semi-regular basis. This is apparently a matter of convenience for chief executives, as the church is situated immediately across from the White House, off Lafayette square. Every president since Madison has attended services there.

In the televised Republican presidential debate held in Des Moines, Iowa on December 13 1999, all of the participating candidates were asked: "What political philosopher or thinker do you most identify with and why?" Unlike the other candidates, who cited former presidents and other political figures, Bush responded "Christ, because he changed my heart." His decision to name a religious figure generated some criticism - even among religious conservatives such as Alan Keyes and Bill Kristol.

During his Presidency, Bush has also hosted celebrations at the White House for non-Christian holidays such as Ramadan . He also took a stand to retain the White House's main "Christmas Tree."

Bush's overt Christian faith is believed to have aided his election, as Evangelical Christians overwhelmingly voted for him in both the 2000 and 2004 election.

Presidential campaigns

2000 campaign

Main article: ]

Advisors convinced George W. Bush that 2000 would be the right time to run for president. He had more than enough money, and the Republicans lacked any single strong candidate. Before Bush had even committed to the race, he was the clear favorite in the polls, and contributions abounded from political donors. Bush declared himself a "compassionate conservative", a term coined by University of Texas professor Marvin Olasky, and his political campaign promised to "restore honor and dignity to the White House." Bush proposed lowering taxes in response to a projected surplus, supported participation of religious charities in federally funded programs, and promoted education vouchers, oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, a balanced budget, and structural changes to the United States armed forces.Bush's foreign policy campaign platform supported a stronger economic and politl relationship with Latin America, especially Mexico, and reduced involvement in "nation-building" and other minor military engagements indirectly related to U.S. interests.

Imagein late December of 2000.

Bush lost the New Hampshire primary to Senator John McCain of Arizona, but rebounded to capture 9 of 13 Super Tuesday states, effectively clinching the nomination. Bush then chose Dick Cheney, a former U.S. Representative and Secretary of Defense for Bush's father, as his running mate in July of 2000.

On November 7 200 (Election Day), television networks initially called the state of Florida for his opponent, Vice President Al Gore, then withdrew that projection and later called the state for Bush along with the entire election, and finally declared that it was too close to call. Sometime after the networks reported that Bush had won Florida, Gore conceded the election and then rescinded that concession less than oe %, the electoral votes were less clear. The Florida vote count, which favored Bush in preliminary tallies, was contested over allegations of irregularities in the voting and tabulation processes. Allegations included confusing ballots, defective voting machines, faulty absentee ballots from the military, and the illegal barring of some voters. Because of Florida state law, a state-wide machine recount was triggered and completed. Although it narrowed the gap, the recount still left Bush in the lead. Eventually four counties in Florida which had large numbers of Presidential undervotes began a manual hand recount of ballots. A legal battle ensued between the Bush and Gore campaigns over these recounts. On December 8, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that every county with a large number of undervotes would perform a hand recount. On December 9, in the Bush v. Gore Supreme Court case, the Court stopped the statewide hand recount and upheld the machine recount due to time constraints. The machine recount showed that Bush had won the Florida vote, giving him 271 electoral votes to Gore's 266; Bush carried 30 of the 50 states. Several months later, a group of newspapers commissioned a study of what would have happened had the hand recount continued. The researchers conducting the study concluded that, under the standard for assessing ballots in use during the actual count, Bush still would have won. However, other reasonable counting methods would have given the victory to Bush in four cases and Gore in four others . Since the Supreme Court did not allow the recount to continue, no one knows what standard might have been prescribed by it, or by a lower court at its direction, had the recount been reinstated. In the final official count, Bush had won Florida by only 537 votes (2,912,790 for Bush to 2,912,253 for Gore) earning the needed 25 electoral votes and the presidency. Bush was inaugurated January 20 2001.

Not since the 1888 election had a winner failed to receive a plurality of the popular vote. It was the first since the 1876 election in which the Supreme Court affected the decision.

Substance abuse controversy

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On September 4, 1976, near his family's summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine, police arrested Bush for driving under the influence of alcohol, having been drinking with former Australian world number one tennis player John Newcombe. He pleaded guilty, was fined $150, and had his driver's license suspended for 30 days within Maine. News of the arrest was published five days before the 2000 presidential election. Bush has described his days before his religious conversion in his 40s as his "nomadic" period of "irresponsible youth" and admitted to drinking "too much" in those years. He says he changed to a sober lifestyle shortly after waking up with a hangover after his 40th birthday celebration. He attributed the change partly to a 1985 meeting with the Reverend Billy Graham, though by his own admission, he did still drink as recently as July 1986.

Bush has stated he did not use illegal drugs at any time since 1979. An aide clarified this as being 1974, and the correction was first broadcasted on CNN.

2004 campaign

George W. Bush speaks at a campaign rally in 2004.
Main article: ]

In the 2004 election, Bush was able to win re-election against John Kerry, the Democratic candidate and senator from Massachusetts. Despite the fact that Kerry was a decorated naval officer in the Vietnam War, polls showed that Bush had convinced the people he and his administration would be better able to protect the nation from another terrorist attack. Bush carried 31 of 50 states for 286 Electoral College votes. The highest voter turnout since 1968 gave him more popular votes than any previous presidential candidate (62,040,610 votes/50.7%). This was the first time since 1988 that a President received a popular majority. However, Bush's victory margin, in terms of absolute number of popular votes, was the smallest of any sitting president since Harry S. Truman in 1948. Also, Bush's win was, percentage-wise, the closest popular margin ever for a sitting president. Senator John Kerry carried 19 states and the District of Columbia, earning him 251 Electoral College votes (59,028,111 votes/48.3%). A faithless elector, pledged to Kerry, voted for Democratic Vice Presidential running mate, John Edwards, giving him one Electoral College vote. No other candidate won College votes. Notable third-party candidates included Independent Ralph Nader (463,653 votes / 0.4%), and Libertarian Michael Badnarik (397,265 votes/0.3%). Congress debated potential election irregularities, including allegations of voting irregularities in Ohio and electronic voting machine fraud. An Official challenge to the Ohio election was rejected by a vote of 1-74 by the Senate and 31-267 in the House.

Bush was inaugurated for his second term on January 20 2005. The oath of office was administered by Chief Justice William Rehnquist. Bush's inaugural address centered mainly on a theme of spreading freedom and democracy around the world.

National Guard Military service

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George W. Bush in his National Guard uniform.

Bush's military service record has been a point of controversy, especially during the 2004 presidential election. During the 2004 presidential campaign, various partisan groups such as Texans for Truth called adverse attention to Bush's military service history. Additionally, specific and harsh criticisms on this topic were made by such notable Democrats as then Democratic National Committee Chairman Terence R. McAuliffe. President Bush was honorably discharged.

Important people in Bush's life and career

Bush's family and advisers are considered important to him in his life and career. His father, George H. W. Bush, served as U.S. President, his younger brother, Jeb Bush is the current Governor of Florida, and his grandfather, Prescott Bush, was a United States Senator. His wife Laura and his mother Barbara Bush are also considered important to his life. His most trusted advisers have included many women, including Condoleezza Rice, Karen Hughes, and Harriet Miers. Karl Rove has had perhaps the greatest influence on Bush's professional life.

Presidency 2001-

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Then-Prime Minister of the PA Mahmoud Abbas, United States President George W. Bush, and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon after reading a statement to the press during the closing moments of the Red Sea Summit in Aqaba, Jordan, on June 4 2003

First term

His most controversial appointment was John Ashcroft as Attorney General. Democrats vigorously opposed Ashcroft, citing socially conservative positions on issues, such as abortion and capital punishment, though he was eventually confirmed. On his first day in office, Bush moved to block federal aid to foreign groups that offered counselling or any other assistance to women in obtaining abortions. Days later, he announced his commitment to channelling more federal aid to faith-based service organizations that critics feared would dissolve the traditional separation of church and state.

Republicans lost control of the Senate in June, when Vermont's James Jeffords quit the Republican party to become an independent, but not before five Senate Democrats crossed party lines to approve Bush's $1.35 billion tax cut. Less than three months later, however, the administration released budget projections that showed the projected budget surplus decreasing to nothing over the next years.

Second term

President Bush's second term has been characterized by misfortune both political and natural. Following his fifth State of the Union, the President pushed for Social Security reform, a measure which was initially supported by the President's party but was unable to pass the congress after bipartisan opposition arose. Ramifications of special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's investigation into the Valerie Plame leak case caused loss of public faith in the Office of the President , and preempted the resignation of high level White House staff. The federal response to Hurricane Katrina and question of cronyism in August 2005 proved to be difficult for the president. Sandra Day O'Connor's resignation and the death of Chief Justice William Rehnquist allowed for the nomination and appointment of two new justices. President Bush initially nominated John Roberts to replace Justice O'Connor, but on the death of Justice Rehnquist asked the Senate to confirm Roberts as Chief Justice. Harriet Miers was the president's second choice to fill the vacancy of Justice O'Connor, but after the withdrawal of Miers nomination decided upon Samuel Alito, who was successfully appointed to the Supreme Court. Currently a debate on the legality of President Bush's domestic surveillance program has led to public debate on the limits of executive privilege and some fractions within his own party.

Political ideology

During the 2000 election campaign Bush started to use the phrase compassionate conservatism to describe his beliefs. Some conservatives have questioned Bush's commitment to traditional conservative ideals because of his willingness to incur large budget deficits by permitting substantial spending increases. Democrats and liberals have claimed that the prefixing of the word "conservative" with the adjective "compassionate" was less a new ideology and more a way of making conservatism seem palatable to independent and swing voters. In his 2005 inaugural address he outlined his vision of foreign policy and plan for democracy promotion.

An important element of Bush's presidency is its emphasis on the importance of executive powers and privileges. According to Bush and his supporters, the War on Terrorism requires a very strong executive with the ability to take various kinds of otherwise illegal covert actions against terrorists. For example, Bush repeatedly argued that the limits imposed by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act over-restrict its ability to monitor terrorists electronically, and has pushed for statutory exemptions to those restrictions, including certain parts of the USA PATRIOT Act. The Bush administration threatened to veto two defense bills that included amendments by Senator John McCain that would limit the ability of the executive to authorize cruel inhuman and degrading treatment; Bush and his supporters argued that harsh treatment of detainees believed to be terrorists can be necessary to obtain information that would prevent terrorist attacks. Administration lawyers like John Yoo have argued that the president has inherent authority to wage war as he sees fit, regardless of laws and treaties that may restrict that power. Bush's Chief Justice of the United States appointee, John Roberts, considers the executive's power to be quite broad as well; in his decision in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, he wrote that Common Article III of the Geneva Conventions did not apply to people detained in the War on Terrorism, thus authorizing secret military tribunals for suspected terrorists if Bush chose to use them. The administration has classified previously public information about the executive and written executive orders to block Freedom of Information Act requests and to keep old documents classified beyond their normal expiration date. Bush's critics argue that executive power that is not reviewable risks abuse for political purposes, undermines civil liberties and that they are anti-democratic, immoral, and likely to cause resentment, as in the world's response to prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib. Bush's supporters respond that broad powers in the War on Terrorism are necessary to prevent major attacks against the United States and that the president has not abused these powers.

Administration

Main article: ]

Bush places a high value on personal loyalty and, as a result, his administration has high message discipline. Critics allege that Bush is willing to overlook mistakes and that Bush has surrounded himself with "yes men".

Bush's presidency has been characterized by a vigorous defense of executive privilege. Many commentators have claimed that deference to executive privilege was one of the principal considerations Bush's administration considered when he proposed his three nominations for the Supreme Court, and appointed John R. Bolton to the United Nations.

Bush also has performed many of his presidential duties from his ranch in Crawford, Texas, dubbed "The Western White House". As of August 2 2000, Bush had visited the ranch 49 times during his time as President, accruing 319 days away from the White House and nearly reaching Reagan's eight-year record of 335 days in 5.5 years. The administration has supported this trend, saying it helps the president get a different perspective from Beltway thinking and that he is still working (the administration noted that Bush's longest visit to Crawford, in August 2005, included only one week of actual respite in the five-week visit.)

A list of Bush's cabinet appointees is included on the main administration page.

Foreign policy

Main article: ]

His foreign policy includes such events as the plans to create a missile defence system and rejection of the Kyoto Protocol. Days after taking office, Bush stated "I am going to go forward with... plans for a missile defense system." To accomplish this deployment, Bush announced on May 1 2001 his desire to withdraw from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and deploy a missile defense system with the ability to shield against a limited attack by a rogue state. The American Physical Society criticized this policy change, citing doubts about the system's effectiveness. Bush argued this was justified as the treaty's Cold War benefits were no longer relevant. The official notification of withdrawal from the treaty was announced on December 13 2001, citing the need to protect against terrorism. While there is past precedent for a President to cancel a treaty, most past cases have involved Congressional authorization. Terrorism was Bush's main topic at the 2002 NATO Summit in Prague too, calling for restructuring the organization from a Cold War focus and prepare it for new threats. During his first presidential visit to Europe in June 2001, European leaders criticized of kyotoBush for his rejection of the Kyoto Protocol to reduce global warming. In 2002, Bush rejected the treaty as harmful to economic growth in the United States, stating: "My approach recognizes that economic growth is the solution, not the problem." The administration also disputed the scientific basis of the treaty. In November 2004, Russia ratified the treaty, meeting the quota of nations required to enforce it without ratification by the United States.

International leaders also criticized Bush for withdrawing support for the International Criminal Court soon after he assumed the presidency. Bush made the following comment: "I wouldn't join the International Criminal Court. It's a body based in Hague where unaccountable judges and prosecution can pull our troops or diplomats for trial." Probably his most significant foreign policy action was, however, launch of The War on Terror.

Terrorism

President Bush addresses rescue workers at Ground Zero in New York, September 14, 2001: "I can hear you. The rest of the world hears you. And the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon."

On September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks were carried out by a terrorist organization known as al-Qaeda, which is led by Osama bin Laden, who had issued a fatwah against the United States in 1997.In response to these attacks, on October 7 2001, the United States, with international support, launched a war against the Afghan Taliban regime, charged with harboring bin Laden. The regime was quickly defeated. Subsequent nation-building efforts with the United Nations and Afghan president Hamid Karzai have had mixed results. Democratic elections were held on October 9 2004. Even though international observers called the elections "fairly democratic" at the "overall majority" of polling centers, 15 of the 18 presidential candidates nevertheless threatened to withdraw, alleging flawed registration and validation.

Further information: ]

Shortly after the 9/11 attacks, the Bush administration also promoted urgent action in Iraq, stating that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein once again had weapons of mass destruction (WMD), even though Saddam claimed to have destroyed all the chemical and biological weapons he had before 1991 (he had used WMD in the Halabja poison gas attack against the Kurds in northern Iraq in 1988, when his chemical and biological weapons program was being covertly funded and supported, in part, by the United States and Britain). The theory that Saddam had destroyed his WMD capability was asserted by former weapons inspector Scott Ritter and the UN's former chief weapons inspector Hans Blix. Bush also said that Saddam was a threat to U.S. security, destabilized the Middle East, inflamed the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and financed terrorists. CIA reports asserted that Saddam Hussein had tried to acquire nuclear material, had not properly accounted for Iraqi biological weapons and chemical weapons material in violation of U.N. sanctions, and that some Iraqi missiles had a range greater than allowed by the UN sanctions. It had been, since 1998, U.S. policy for the President to support efforts to remove Saddam Hussein from power by a law (the Iraq Liberation Act) passed by the House of Representatives and the Senate and later signed by President Bill Clinton.

File:20030501-15 d050103-2-664v.jpg
President Bush, with NFO Lt. Ryan Philips, in the flight suit he wore for his controversial televised arrival on the USS Abraham Lincoln

Asserting that Saddam Hussein could provide terrorists with WMD, Bush urged the United Nations to enforce Iraqi disarmament mandates, precipitating a diplomatic crisis. On November 13 2002, under UN Security Council Resolution 1441, Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei led UN weapons inspectors in Iraq. Lapses in Iraqi cooperation triggered intense debate over the efficacy of inspections. UN inspection teams departed Iraq upon U.S. advisement given four days prior to full-scale hostilities.

Secretary of State Colin Powell urged his colleagues in the Bush administration to avoid a war without| ||John W. Snow||2003- |- |Defense||Donald Rumsfeld||2001- |- |Justice||John Ashcroft||2001-2005 |- | ||Alberto Gonzales||2005- |- |Interior||Gale Norton||2001- |- |Agriculture||Ann Veneman||2001-2005 |- | ||Mike Johanns||2005- |- |Commerce||Donald Evans||2001-2005 |- | ||Carlos Gutierrez||2005- |- |Labor||Elaine Chao||2001- |- |HHS||Tommy Thompson||2001-2005 |- | ||Michael O. Leavitt||2005- |- |Education||Rod Paige||2001-2005 |- | ||Margaret Spellings||2005- |- |HUD||Mel Martinez||2001-2004 |- | ||Alphonso Jackson||2004- |- |Transportation||Norman Mineta||2001- |- |Energy||Spencer Abraham||2001-2005 |- | ||Samuel W. Bodman||2005- |- |Veterans Affairs||Anthony Principi||2001-2005 |- | ||Jim Nicholson||2005- |- |Homeland Security||Tom Ridge||2003-2005 |- | ||Michael Chertoff||2005- |}


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Supreme Court nominations / appointments

Bush nominated the following individuals to sit on the Supreme Court of the United States:

See also

Further information: Category:George W. Bush

Notes

  1. The long road to the White House - Tom Carver, BBC, December 14, 2000
  2. George Walker Bush - Famous Texans
  3. George W. and the Texas Press: Is the Honeymoon Over? - Robert Bryce, Columbia Journalism Review, May/June 2004
  4. Texas Gov. George W. Bush wins in landslide - CNN, November 3, 1998
  5. Openly Religious, to a Point - Alan Cooperman, Washington Post, September 16, 2004
  6. St. John's Church (Episcopal)
  7. St. John's History
  8. Transcript of Alan Keyes on Crossfire with hosts Robert Novak and Bill Press, December 15, 1999
  9. Ramadan at the White House
  10. Ballot-Count Scenarios in Bush-Gore 2000 - Los Angeles Times, November 13, 2001
  11. Florida recount study: Bush still wins - CNN, 2001
  12. 2000 OFFICIAL PRESIDENTIAL GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS - Federal Election Commission, report on November 7, 2001 elections
  13. ^ Bush acknowledges 1976 DUI charge, CNN, November 2, 2000
  14. The Smoking Gun report
  15. Bush's Guard Service In Question - Lois Romano, Washington Post, February 3, 2004
  16. Restoration of the Mexico City Policy - White House memorandum, from Bush to "administrator of the United States Agency for International Development", January 22, 2001
  17. Church, State and the Faith-Based Initiative - Thomas E. Buckly, America, November 11, 2002
  18. Faith-based Initiatives - NOW, PBS, September 26, 2003
  19. The National Security Strategy of the United States of America - released by the White House, September 2002
  20. The Truth about Torture - Charles Krauthammer, The Weekly Standard, December 5, 2005
  21. THE PRESIDENT'S CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY TO CONDUCT MILITARY OPERATIONS AGAINST TERRORISTS AND NATIONS SUPPORTING THEM - United States Department of Justice
  22. Declassifixation - John Prados, The New Republic, April 21, 2004
  23. Bush's High Crimes - editorial, The Nation, December 20, 2005
  24. The Abolition of Torture - Andrew Sullivan, The New Republic, December 7, 2005
  25. Uncuff the FBI - Mark Riebling, Wall Street Journal OpinionJournal, June 4, 2002
  26. The Fog of War Reporting - Brendan Miniter, Wall Street Journal OpinionJournal, December 17, 2001
  27. Remarks by the President in Photo Opportunity with Governors - White House press release, January 26, 2001
  28. Transcript - speech by Bush at National Defense University, Washington, May 1, 2001
  29. Report of the APS Study Group on Boost-Phase Intercept Systems for National Missile Defense - American Physical Society, Panel on Public Affairs, July 15, 2003
  30. Termination of Treaties by Notice - FindLaw, accessed February 20, 2006
  31. President Announces Clear Skies & Global Climate Change Initiatives - White House press release, February 14, 2002
  32. President Bush Discusses Global Climate Change - White House press release, June 11, 2001
  33. The First Democratic Elections in Afghanistan: A Report by the Bipartisan Observer Team - United States Department of State, October 15, 2004
  34. Exclusive: Scott Ritter in His Own Words - Scott Ritter, interview by Massimo Calabresi, Time Magazine, September 14, 2002
  35. Blix sceptical on Iraqi WMD claim - BBC, December 16, 2003
  36. Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction Programs - CIA, October 2002
  37. The secret Downing Street memo - Times Online, May 1, 2005
  38. U.S advises weapons inspectors to leave Iraq - USA Today, March 17, 2003

References

Academic

  • Colin Campbell and Bert A. Rockman, eds. The George W. Bush Presidency: Appraisals and Prospects. Congressional Quarterly Press, 2004.
  • George C. Edwards III and Philip John Davies, eds. New Challenges for the American Presidency New York: Pearson Longman, 2004. 245 pp. articles from Presidential Studies Quarterly
  • Fred I. Greenstein, ed. The George W. Bush Presidency: An Early Assessment Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003
  • Gary L. Gregg II and Mark J. Rozell, eds. Considering the Bush Presidency Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2004. 210 pp. British perspectives
  • Bryan Hilliard, Tom Lansford, and Robert P Watson, eds. George W. Bush: Evaluating the President at Midterm SUNY Press 2004
  • Fred I. Greenstein; "The Contemporary Presidency: The Changing Leadership of George W. Bush A Pre- and Post-9/11 Comparison" in Presidential Studies Quarterly v 32#2 2002 pp 387+.
  • Gary C. Jacobson; "The Bush Presidency and the American Electorate" Presidential Studies Quarterly v 33 #4 2003 pp 701+.

Pro-Bush

  • Fred Barnes. Rebel-in-Chief: How George W. Bush Is Redefining the Conservative Movement and Transforming America (2006)
  • George W. Bush. George W. Bush on God and Country: The President Speaks Out About Faith, Principle, and Patriotism (2004)
  • Bob Woodward. Plan of Attack (2003) on Iraq war

Anti-Bush

  • Bruce Bartlett, Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy (2006), conservative attack by former aide
  • Ron Suskind. The Price of Loyalty: George W. Bush, the White House, and the Education of Paul O'Neill (2004), complaints of ex Treasury Secretary

Links

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Template:Incumbent succession box
Preceded byBob Dole Republican Party presidential nominee
2000 (won), 2004 (won)
Succeeded byN/A: Most recent Republican presidential nominee
Preceded byAnn Richards Governor of Texas
1995–2000
Succeeded byRick Perry
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  29. Warren G. Harding (1921–1923)
  30. Calvin Coolidge (1923–1929)
  31. Herbert Hoover (1929–1933)
  32. Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933–1945)
  33. Harry S. Truman (1945–1953)
  34. Dwight D. Eisenhower (1953–1961)
  35. John F. Kennedy (1961–1963)
  36. Lyndon B. Johnson (1963–1969)
  37. Richard Nixon (1969–1974)
  38. Gerald Ford (1974–1977)
  39. Jimmy Carter (1977–1981)
  40. Ronald Reagan (1981–1989)
  41. George H. W. Bush (1989–1993)
  42. Bill Clinton (1993–2001)
  43. George W. Bush (2001–2009)
  44. Barack Obama (2009–2017)
  45. Donald Trump (2017–2021)
  46. Joe Biden (2021–present)
Presidency
timelines
Governors and lieutenant governors of Texas
Governors

Lieutenant
governors

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