The Wall Street Journal, despite Rupert Murdoch’s recent shenanigans, remains one of the nation’s best newspapers. Today, the day on which it reported the resignation of Alberto Gonzales, it was a particularly good read. And to look at. Just check out the cover.
The right two-thirds of the paper above the fold, you will notice, contains nothing but bad news for our esteemed president. There is a jolly old photo of Gonzales, looking rather fat despite having been canned, but near the fold in the lower right, the eye is drawn there in its descent, is our unsmiling Dear Leader, the real topic of the day.
The headlines told the tale: “Case Closed” said the puckish slug just above the largest headline, “Gonzales Resignation Ends an Era: Broader Bush Effort on Executive Power Is Dealt a Major Blow.” We are beginning to sense that the practice, if not the theory, of the unitary executive is in its final days in this country. And good riddance.
And then there is this charming article, helpfully post on the WSJ website: “Lame-Duck President Has Fewer Tools to Advance His Shrinking Agenda.” And how exactly, Mr. President, does one swagger when one’s agenda is so wretchedly flaccid?
Take that, Mr. Murdoch.
Unsurprisingly, one of the president’s aims, says the Journal, will be “advancing a Republican agenda as best he can through regulatory moves and executive actions that skirt congressional input.” Funny, that sounds familiar.
It is indeed a shame that Bush could not get his immigration bill, as insufficient as it was, through a xenophobic Congress. But the president’s lame-duck status can only be good for the nation. Throughout his presidency, Bush has displayed remarkable arrogance coupled with unflinchingly bad policymaking. His wrongs range from starting a war for no good reason, his worst fault, to comparatively minor offenses, such as hobbling the agency might have inspected the now infamous lead-riddled foreign toys.
Arrogance? Witness spokeman Tony Fratto’s schoolyard disparagement: “the term ‘lame duck’ is for dime-store political scientists,” he said. Sticks and stones, Tony.