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Bush's Days: 100 and Counting
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15989 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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7 / 1989 |
2,226 Words |
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Bill Whalen Bill Whalen covers the campaign trail for Insight Magazine. |
Ask most Americans what line they remember from John F. Kennedy's Inaugural Address and the response is uniform: "Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country." Ask George Bush which of Kennedy's lines he remembers and the answer might be different: "All this will not be finished in the first hundred days."
Since Franklin D. Roosevelt swept into office in 1933 and unleashed a dramatic series of domestic and economic proposals in his first three moths as president, subsequent chiefs if state have labored under the pressure to produce results in their first 100 days in power. Some presidents have succeeded by this yardstick: Ronald Reagan, for instance, began his full-court press on Congress for changes in taxes and defense, aided in part by his ability to survive an assassination attempt. Other presidents have gotten off on the wrong foot in their first 100 days, never to recover their prestige: Jimmy Carter kicked off his lone term by banning the playing of "Hail to the Chief" in his honor and asking the nation to turn down its thermostats to 65 degrees.
Now there is George Bush, whose nascent presidency seems to defy both categories. In his first 100 days, President Bush introduced legislation to overhaul the financially beleaguered savings & loan industry, approved accords with Congress on the Nicaraguan Contras, and decided to move ahead with development on both the MX and Midgetman missile systems. At the same time, however, Bush delayed action on other contentious issues, such as U.S. reaction to the reforms of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and the massive demonstration in China.
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