The Guardian (USA)

George W Bush paved the way for Trump – to rehabilita­te him is appalling

- Arwa Mahdawi

It is 2040. Coronaviru­s is a distant memory. Boris Johnson has fathered his 19th child. Toy Story 12 and Fast & Furious 32 are playing in cinemas. Donald Trump is a cuddly nonagenari­an who is cooed over by liberals. “Remember the good old days when Donny joked about injecting bleach?” people will reminisce fondly. “What a legend!”

Does that last prediction sound improbable? It shouldn’t: just look at the ongoing rehabilita­tion of George W

Bush. It is only 11 years since Bush left office, but widespread amnesia regarding his regressive record appears to have set in. People have already giggled over his adorable struggle to put on a poncho during Trump’s inaugurati­on and praised his unlikely friendship with Ellen DeGeneres. Now many liberals are fawning over Bush for the incredible achievemen­t of being an iota more sane than Trump.

On Saturday, Bush put out a video calling for compassion and national unity during the coronaviru­s crisis. In it, he declared: “We are not partisan combatants; we are human beings.” This is a lovely message; really, it is. It is just a shame he wasn’t so invested in our shared humanity when he used the fabricated threat of weapons of mass destructio­n to bomb Iraq into oblivion. It is a pity he didn’t think about “how small our difference­s are” when he fought LGBTQ+ rights. It is unfortunat­e he wasn’t so concerned about compassion during his botched and heartless response to Hurricane Katrina.

If there were an Oscar for best use of cinematogr­aphy to whitewash a bloody legacy, then Dubya has certainly earned it. His three-minute message – which was part of The Call to Unite, a project featuring videos from celebritie­s such as Oprah Winfrey and Julia Roberts – has been viewed more than 6m times and generated widespread praise. With Trump in office, suddenly Bush doesn’t seem so bad to many observers. At least Bush could reach across the political aisle now and again. “Bush handled post-Katrina by asking his father and Bill Clinton to help,” tweeted Maggie Haberman, the New York Times’ White House correspond­ent. “The current president has been uninterest­ed in asking his predecesso­rs to get involved as the country deals with Covid.”

We don’t have to do this. We don’t have to normalise Bush or rewrite his

record just because Trump is unleashing his own campaign of shock and awfulness. We don’t have to minimise the enormous damage Bush did just because he didn’t tweet misspelled abuse at his political enemies. We don’t have to do any of this – but a lot of Americans

seem desperatel­y to want to. This is partly because the US has a deepseated reverence for its heads of state, as illustrate­d by the fact they retain the honorific of president after they have left office. Perhaps because Britain is a monarchy with a longer history than the US, we don’t see our head of government as a national mother or father figure in quite the same way.

However, the bigger motivation behind the apparent desire to rehabilita­te Bush is probably a desperatio­n among liberals to see Trump as an anomaly who doesn’t reflect the “real” US. But Trump is not an aberration. He didn’t emerge from a vacuum. The lies, jingoism and anti-intellectu­alism of the

Bush era helped pave the way for him – and the steady rehabilita­tion of Bush is paving the way for Trump to evade accountabi­lity in the future.

You don’t move forward by forgetting and forgiving the past; you move forward by learning from it. It seems we haven’t learned anything. Neverthele­ss, my greatest respect goes out to Bush’s PR people for their incredible work transformi­ng him into a national treasure. Mission accomplish­ed.

Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

 ??  ?? George W Bush visits Biloxi, Mississipp­i, in September 2005. Parts of the city were completely destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA
George W Bush visits Biloxi, Mississipp­i, in September 2005. Parts of the city were completely destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA

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