Houston Chronicle Sunday

Bush coined political sayings throughout public service

Some inspiratio­nal, others problemati­c for former president

- By Allie Morris STAFF WRITER amorris@express-news.net

AUSTIN — A handful of political sayings that continue to reverberat­e in American politics are indelibly linked to President George H.W. Bush, whose public life included serving as director of the CIA, as vice president during the administra­tion of President Ronald Reagan and his single term in the White House as the 41st president. ‘Voodoo’ economics

While they were rivals for the Republican presidenti­al nomination in 1980, Bush famously panned Reagan’s economic plan, calling it “voodoo” economics.

Bush, who had an undergradu­ate degree in economics from Yale University, coined the phrase to describe Reagan’s plan to drive economic growth by cutting taxes. “It just isn’t going to work,” he said, “what I call a voodoo economic policy.”

After joining the Reagan administra­tion as vice president, Bush at one time denied using the term, which was a source of embarrassm­ent. But it caught among Reagan’s critics. ‘The wimp factor’

As he campaigned in 1987 to succeed Reagan as president, Bush was battling against a “wimp factor,” according to a Newsweek cover story published in October of that year.

The article raised questions about whether Bush could overcome public perception­s that he wasn’t strong or tough enough to take on the nation’s challenges during the Cold War.

Vice President Bush, the article pointed out, stood taller than Reagan at 6 foot 2 inches. But members of the public were often surprised to find when meeting Bush in person that he wasn’t a “little short guy,” it said.

Bush went on to win the 1988 election, but lost a second term. On Saturday, a Newsweek editor behind the cover story “Fighting the ‘wimp factor,’ ” said he was wrong to have thought that Bush lacked the “the inner fortitude to lead the free world.” ‘Read my lips: no new taxes’

Bush spoke this iconic line as he accepted the Republican nomination for president in 1988 — one that would come to haunt his presidency.

“The Congress will push me to raise taxes, and I'll say no, and they'll push, and I'll say no, and they'll push again, and I'll say to them, ‘Read my lips: no new taxes’,” he told a cheering crowd.

In 1990, Bush struck a budget deal with congressio­nal Democrats that called for raising taxes to help cut the national deficit. The reversal became a major line of attack in Bush’s bid for a second term and he ultimately lost to Democrat Bill Clinton.

“It did destroy me,” Bush later told biographer Jon Meacham. “It was a mistake (to make the pledge), but I meant it at the time, and I meant it all through my presidency. But when you’re faced with the reality, the practical reality of shutting down government or dealing with a hostile Congress, you get something done.” ‘A kinder, gentler nation’

Bush laid out his vision for a kinder, more gentle nation during his bid for president in 1988 and when he was eventually sworn in as the country’s 41st president. The words stand in stark contrast to the incivility and name-calling that has come to define today’s politics.

But, at the Republican convention in 1988, Bush described his meaning as “teaching troubled children through your presence that there’s such a thing as reliable love.”

“Some would say it’s soft and insufficie­ntly tough to care about these things,” he said. “But where is it written that we must act as if we do not care, as if we are not moved? Well, I am moved. I want a kinder, gentler nation.” ‘1,000 points of light’

Bush coined the phrase in 1988 at the GOP national convention, when he described America as a nation of community volunteer organizati­ons — “a brilliant diversity spread like stars, like a 1,000 points of light in a broad and peaceful sky.”

The focus on volunteeri­sm continued through Bush’s first term with a practice of honoring someone as a Point of Light for community service. He also launched a nonprofit organizati­on bearing the same name.

The phrase caught on with the public, sparking a country song and plenty of political satire, including cartoons of devastated neighborho­ods cast as “a thousand points of blight,” according to the New York Times.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States