The Mercury News Weekend

GeorgeW. Bush rebukes Trump leadership style

Former president warns of threats to democracy, denounces ‘bigotry’

- By DavidNakam­ura The Washington Post

Former president George W. Bush on Thursday delivered a rare political speech in which he warned of threats to American democracy and a decay of civic engagement, a message that was interprete­d as a rebuke of President Donald Trump’s divisive leadership style.

At a New York forum sponsored by his presidenti­al center, Bush offered a blunt assessment of a political system corrupted by “conspiracy theories and outright fabricatio­n” in which nationalis­m has been “distorted into nativism.”

“We’ve seen our discourse degraded by casual cruelty,” Bush said during a 16-minute address at “The Spirit of Liberty” event. “Bullying and prejudice in our public life sets a national tone and provides permission for cruelty and bigotry. The only way to pass along civic values is to first live up to them.”

Bush did not mention Trump by name, and former aides emphasized that hismessage echoed words he has spoken before. But the fact that a former president was sounding the alarmabout American values and the United States’ role in the world at a time when Trump has unsettled allies abroad and provoked intense political backlash at home injected his remarks with greater urgency.

The scene was remarkable in part because Bush has largely remained out of the political spotlight since leaving office amid low popularity in 2009 and had made a point not to criticize or second-guess his Democratic successor, Barack Obama. Just hours after Bush completed his speech, Obama also made a veiled critique of the Trump era, calling on Democrats at a New Jersey campaign event to “send a message to the world that we are rejecting a politics of division, we are rejecting a politics of fear.”

That Trump’s two most recent predecesso­rs felt liberated, or perhaps compelled, to reenter the political arena in amanner that offered an implicit criticism of him is virtually unpreceden­ted in modern politics, historians said. Trump has been harshly critical of both Bush and Obama — calling each of them the “worst” president at one time or another — and mercilessl­y mocked the 43rd president’s brother Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor, during the 2016 Republican primaries.

GeorgeW. Bushwas taking aim at Trump’s “roiling of the traditiona­l institutio­ns of the country and, in particular, demeaning the office of the president by a kind of crude or vulgar bashing of opponents,” said Robert Dallek, a presidenti­al historian and author.

“I think this is Bush throwing down the gauntlet and feeling that this is a man who has gone too far,” Dallek said. The discretion former presidents traditiona­lly afforded their successors “is now sort of fading to the past because of the belligeren­ce of Trump.”

It’s not just the former presidents. On Monday, Sen. John McCain, RAriz., while receiving the National Constituti­on Center’s Liberty Medal, lambasted “half-baked, spurious nationalis­m” and suggested the United States was abandoning its leadership role, an approach the Vietnam War veteran and former prisoner of war called “unpatrioti­c.”

Bush, who had unsuccessf­ully attempted to advance legislatio­n that featured a path to citizenshi­p for undocument­ed immigrants, later praised the “forgotten dynamism that immigratio­n has always brought to America.”

 ?? SETHWENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former U.S. President George W. Bush, speaking Thursday at a forum sponsored by the George W. Bush Institute in New York, condemns President Donald Trump’s style, which he said has produced divisivene­ss in America.
SETHWENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former U.S. President George W. Bush, speaking Thursday at a forum sponsored by the George W. Bush Institute in New York, condemns President Donald Trump’s style, which he said has produced divisivene­ss in America.

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