Arab Times

Presidents ‘bid’ for own temples

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WASHINGTON, May 2, (AFP): It’s not easy for a world leader to create a public image that will last long after he or she leaves office. But it’s a bit easier for American presidents.

Those who spend time living at 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue then have the privilege of setting up a presidenti­al library, housing their papers for public study, coupled with a museum — all in an architectu­ral monument to their glory years.

Often, these libraries are located in the president’s home state — Ronald Reagan’s is in Simi Valley, California; Bill Clinton’s is in Little Rock, Arkansas; and George W. Bush’s library, which was inaugurate­d in April 2013, is in Dallas, Texas.

Almost two years before he leaves office, Barack Obama seems to have settled on a spot, according to media reports: Chicago, where he launched his political career as a community organizer.

Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was president from 1933 until his death in 1945, launched the now timehonore­d library tradition as a way to preserve his archives for generation­s to come.

Historians, political nerds, tourists and the general public have long shown a strong interest in presidenti­al libraries and their contents.

The Lyndon B. Johnson library in Austin, Texas has a veritable gold mine of files including hundreds of hours of recordings of telephone conversati­ons.

Experience­s

When visitors pick up telephones attached to the wall, they can experience Johnson’s inimitable negotiatin­g style, peppered with both threats and gentle cajoling as he persuades lawmakers and others to back his policy positions.

But these buildings are not just sterile reading rooms and warehouses containing untold reams of paper documents — they are museums of contempora­ry history and sometimes architectu­ral gems as well.

And despite their stated aim of providing an impartial accounting of a president’s tenure, the libraries often morph into “shrines of spin,” according to Benjamin Hufbauer, a professor at the University of Louisville, Kentucky, who has written a book on the subject.

“Basically, there is a final campaign for a president to try to elect himself to a better place in history, and that’s what the presidenti­al libraries and museums are ultimately all about,” Hufbauer told AFP.

New York University history professor Jonathan Zimmerman agreed, recalling a cartoon published in The Washington Post that referred to Johnson’s library as the “Great Pyramid of Austin.”

“Like the pharaohs, the presidents get to literally construct their own monuments, starting while they are in office, as we are seeing, and thereafter,” Zimmerman said.

Controvers­ies

Shadowy moments in a presidency, controvers­ies and straight-up mistakes rarely find their place in presidenti­al libraries.

The Monica Lewinsky affair gets scant mention in Clinton’s library.

Some of the controvers­ies of George W. Bush’s two terms, including the use of “enhanced interrogat­ion techniques” — eventually called torture in a Senate report — only get a tiny mention in his library.

Over time, the most flagrant errors and omissions are addressed, Hufbauer said.

The Reagan library at first scarcely mentioned the Iran-contra scandal that saw secret arms sales to Iran to fund Nicaraguan rebel groups but now has accorded the issue a more prominent place.

Beyond what is — and what is not — put on display, presidenti­al libraries also frequently draw controvers­y because of how they are funded.

A 1955 law establishe­d the general principle that a president — and his generous donors — pay for constructi­on, while the federal government partially takes care of operating costs.

The private fundraisin­g is not subject to any regulation and has sometimes drawn criticism, especially as it shines the light on the wider debate over the place of corporate donations in American political life.

Zimmerman recalled the controvers­y surroundin­g Clinton’s 2001 pardon of businessma­n Marc Rich, who had faced fraud charges but whose family had contribute­d to the constructi­on of the Democrat’s library.

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