The curse of second terms
Tom Ehrlich, Religion News Service
Issue date: 1/19/06 Section: DIVINE INTERVENTION
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It's a variant on "last day at camp," when imminent departure makes fellow campers seem the best friends one will ever have. In the case of second-term presidents, whatever their party, imminent departure causes people to see what has been present all along and fellow politicians to stop wanting to protect.
Eisenhower had scant attention for domestic issues from the start. Nixon's questionable ethics dated back to his California days. Iran-Contra began in Reagan's first term. Infidelity issues marred Clinton's character well before his second oath of office. And Bush's secretive and cavalier attitudes were well known to Texans long before he came to Washington.
What if we had a strong appetite for truth-telling and truth-seeing all along? And not just in politics, but in all aspects of our lives?
Instead of imagining that this presidency will be different and then clinging to that imagining because reality is inconvenient and sordid, we would exercise caution and scrutiny from the start. Same with new relationships, new jobs, now homes.
We would grant respect, but not trust, certainly not the blind and total trust that Americans awarded George Bush after 9-11.
We would question everything, not just the final round of nominees. Tax policies, the Patriot Act and the creation of the Department of Homeland Security deserved the same scrutiny that is being given now to Judge Samuel Alito.
We would stop seeing politics as a distant game of Republicans vs. Democrats, like Colts vs. Steelers, but as a fundamental working out of critical issues that impact our daily lives, like security, freedom, morality, justice. This isn't a Super Bowl party; it is our nation's future.
We would examine outcomes, not party labels. Have the actual consequences of recent policies worked to our benefit? Do we feel safer? Is the America that we value the America that is on display in Washington and overseas? That is for us to determine, not for politicians to sell.
