The Denver Post

George W. Bush’s subversive, inspired push for immigratio­n reform

- By Patricia Murphy Patricia Murphy joined the Atlanta Journal-constituti­on politics team in 2020 from CQ Roll Call, where she was a nationally syndicated political columnist.

Iremember hearing in 2013 that George W. Bush had taken up painting. It sounded like a surprising­ly artsy, but pleasant hobby for a man who had finished two terms in the White House and was finally done with politics.

Winston Churchill had been a painter, too, and a good one. While Churchill’s art often depicted European landscapes and friends’ estates, a new exhibit of Bush’s paintings at the Atlanta History Center is a not-at-all subtle call for comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform, something he tried and failed to enact during his second term as president.

The exhibit of Bush’s art is called, “Out of Many, One,” the English translatio­n of the E Pluribus Unum motto on the Great

Seal of the United States. It includes 43 portraits from the 43rd president, which depict American immigrants selected by Bush for their achievemen­ts on behalf of their adopted country.

Several of the faces are famous. Henry Kissinger and Madeleine Albright were both secretarie­s of state whose families fled dictatorsh­ips and oppression, Kissinger from Nazi Germany and Albright from communist Czechoslov­akia.

Profession­al golfer Annika Sorenstam, baseball great Albert Pujols, and former Pepsi CEO Indra Nooyi are also included. Bush celebrates each for giving much more than they ever required as new arrivals.

Along with the well-known portraits, Bush also painted the faces of the lesser-known. Gilbert Tuhabonye, a runner from Burundi, fled the Tutsi-hutu war and applied to compete on the track team for Abilene Christian University. He later moved to Austin, Texas, to work in a running store and started a runners’ club. One of the runners was a college-aged Jenna Bush, who called her dad one day to tell him about Gilbert’s inspiring story.

Alfredo Duarte waded through the neck-high waters of the Rio Grande when he was 17, having been on his own since he was 14. Once in America, Duarte learned English, worked several jobs, and started a business selling tomatoes. He is now a CEO.

The collection includes immigrants from across the globe, and from different faiths, races and background­s.

Ezinne Uzo-okoro is a NASA engineer who left Nigeria for Washington, D.C. when she was 16. Tony George Bush was an Iraqi interprete­r who embedded with the Marines during the second war in Iraq. American Marines nicknamed him “Tony” and he legally changed his name to “George Bush” after he moved to Texas and got a job at George Bush Interconti­nental Airport. He calls becoming an American citizen, “the best thing that ever happened to me.”

Along with each painting, Bush has recorded a biography, with the former president describing the humble beginnings, harrowing challenges, and soaring, if not always celebrated, achievemen­ts of each immigrant’s story. Many portraits also include the voices of the subjects, describing their feelings about America.

Joseph Kim, a North Korean refugee, says that his American dream was not just about meritocrac­y, “but also about the generosity and grace of strangers.” Bush explains that the “funny, friendly” Kim was the first person he painted because Kim also works downstairs from him as an assistant at the Bush Institute.

It also illustrate­s the incredible labyrinth required to immigrate legally to the United States and the years, sometimes decadeslon­g wait times, it requires.

In a coffee table book that accompanie­s the exhibit, Bush calls for a “robust, efficient immigratio­n system.” And he suggests a combinatio­n of increased visas, secure borders, accessible channels for refugees, temporary work visas, and citizenshi­p for DREAMERS to improve and reform the current mess we have.

It’s a position paper inside a portrait gallery and the position couldn’t be much more different than the approach of today’s GOP leaders.

Where Bush personaliz­es immigrants and celebrates their potential, former president Donald Trump demonized immigratio­n and dehumanize­d immigrants from the very beginning of his first run for president.

When Mexicans cross the Southern border, he famously said in his announceme­nt speech for president in 2015, “They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.” Some.

Trump continues to this day to claim he built that wall between Mexico and the United States. Since the wall was never built, he at least doesn’t have to pretend that Mexico paid for it, as he promised his earliest crowds he would make happen.

But the roaring approval that conservati­ve voters gave to Trump has pushed the entire GOP to the right on immigratio­n.

At a press conference at the Georgia capitol earlier this week, former Sen. David Perdue blamed his GOP primary target, Gov. Brian Kemp for not doing more to stop illegal immigratio­n in Georgia. Kemp has, in fact, traveled to the Southern border multiple times to push a toughon-the-border message, but the truth is that Perdue had more say over immigratio­n when he was a senator than he or Kemp ever would as governor.

It’s hard to see where this George Bush, never accused of being a RINO in his day, would fit into the current version of his party.

But by tackling the issue, he’s providing a road map forward that few in either party have the courage to follow right now.

That the former president has wrapped it in a collection of portraits, without even signing his name to the paintings, starts a conversati­on that unsuspecti­ng visitors may not even know they’re having when they head to the Atlanta History Center to see if George Bush can really paint.

The answer is yes, he can really paint. And he’s not really done with politics after all.

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