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Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy Hardcover – February 21, 2006
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Despite their strong misgivings, most conservatives remained silent during Bush’s first term. But a series of missteps and scandals, culminating in the ill-conceived nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court, has brought this hidden rift within the conservative movement crashing to the surface.
Now, in what is sure to be the political book of the season, Bruce Bartlett lays bare the incompetence and profligacy of Bush’s economic policies. A highly respected Washington economist—and true-believing Reaganite—Bartlett started out as a supporter of Bush and helped him craft his tax cuts. But he was dismayed by the way they were executed. Reagan combined his tax cuts with fiscal restraint, but Bush has done the opposite. Bartlett thus reluctantly concluded that Bush is not a Reaganite at all, but an unprincipled opportunist who will do whatever he or his advisers think is expedient to buy votes.
In this sober, thorough, and utterly devastating book, Bartlett attacks the Bush Administration's economic performance root and branch, from the "stovepiping" of its policy process to the coercive tactics used to ram its policies through Congress, to the effects of the policies themselves. He is especially hard on Bush’s enormous new Medicare entitlement…and predicts that within a few years, Bush's tax cuts and unrestricted spending will produce an economic crisis that will require a major tax increase, probably in the form of a European-style VAT.
Bartlett has surprisingly kind words for Bill Clinton, whose record on the budget was far better than Bush’s. Whatever else one may think of him, Bartlett argues, Clinton cut spending, abolished a federal entitlement program, and left a budget surplus. By contrast, Bush has increased spending, created a massive entitlement program, and produced the biggest deficits in American history.
In fact, Bartlett concludes, Bush is less like Reagan than like Nixon: an arch-conservative Republican, bitterly hated by liberals, who vainly tried to woo moderates by enacting big parts of the liberal program. It didn't work then, and it won't work now—and may have similar harmful effects for the GOP.
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherDoubleday
- Publication dateFebruary 21, 2006
- Dimensions6 x 1.25 x 9.75 inches
- ISBN-100385518277
- ISBN-13978-0385518277
Editorial Reviews
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
—Ron Suskind, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Price of Loyalty
“Bruce Bartlett has long been one of Washington’s most searching, thoughtful, and uncompromisingly candid economic analysts. That’s a view shared not only by those who agree with him, but also by people like me, who differ with him about 80 percent of the time. This book is a perfect reflection of Bruce’s gifts: he cares far more about being honest and consistent than about following anyone’s party line. It will shape our political discussion into 2008.”
—E. J. Dionne Jr., author of Stand Up Fight Back and Why Americans Hate Politics
“While I don't agree with Bruce Bartlett very often, he is always worth paying attention to. Bartlett's loyalty is to his conservative ideas, not to the Republican Party. That loyalty has not come cheaply. Bartlett lost his job in order to write this book. The least you can do is read it.”
—Jonathan Chait, senior editor at The New Republic and columnist for the Los Angeles Times
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
I Know Conservatives, and George W. Bush Is No Conservative
George W. Bush is widely considered to be one of the most politically conservative presidents in history. His invasion of Iraq, his huge tax cuts, and his intervention in the Terri Schiavo case are among the issues where those on the left view him as being to the right of Attila the Hun. But those on the right have a different perspective–mostly discussed among themselves or in forums that fly below the major media’s radar. They know that Bush has never really been one of them the way Ronald Reagan was. Bush is more like Richard Nixon–a man who used the right to pursue his agenda, but was never really part of it. In short, he is an impostor, a pretend conservative.
I write as a Reaganite, by which I mean someone who believes in the historical conservative philosophy of small government, federalism, free trade, and the Constitution as originally understood by the Founding Fathers. On that basis, Bush clearly is not a Reaganite or “small c” conservative. Philosophically, he has more in common with liberals, who see no limits to state power as long as it is used to advance what they think is right. In the same way, Bush has used government to pursue a “conservative” agenda as he sees it. But that is something that runs totally contrary to the restraints and limits to power inherent in the very nature of traditional conservatism. It is inconceivable to traditional conservatives that there could ever be such a thing as “big government conservatism,” a term often used to describe Bush’s philosophy.(1)
Perhaps the greatest sin of liberals is their belief that it is possible for them to know everything necessary to manage the economy and society. To conservatives, such conceit leads directly to socialism and totalitarianism. At a minimum, it makes for errors that are hard to correct.(2) By contrast, conservatives like Ronald Reagan understand that the collective knowledge of people as expressed in the free market is far greater than any individual, government bureau, or even the most powerful computer can possibly have.(3) And in politics, they believe that the will of the people as expressed through democratic institutions is more likely to result in correct policies than those devised by Platonic philosopher kings.(4) Liberals, on the other hand, are fundamentally distrustful of the wisdom and judgment of the people, preferring instead the absolutism of the courts to the chaos and uncertainty of democracy.(5)
Traditional conservatives view the federal government as being untrustworthy and undependable. They utilize it only for those necessary functions like national defense that by their nature cannot be provided at the state and local level or privately. The idea that government could ever be used actively to promote their goals in some positive sense is a contradiction in terms to them. It smacks too much of saying that the ends justify the means, which conservatives have condemned since at least the French Revolution.
George W. Bush, by contrast, often looks first to government to solve societal problems without even considering other options. Said Bush in 2003, “We have a responsibility that when somebody hurts, government has got to move.”(6) A more succinct description of liberalism would be hard to find.
My main concern is with Bush’s economic policy because that is my field of expertise. But it doesn’t mean that I am content with the rest of his program. I am deeply concerned about the Iraq operation, which has more in common with Woodrow Wilson’s policy of making the world safe for democracy than with traditional conservative foreign policy, which is based on defending the American homeland and avoiding unnecessary political and military entanglements with other countries–a view best expressed in George Washington’s Farewell Address.(7)
I am also concerned with Bush’s cavalier attitude toward federalism and his insistence on absolute, unquestioning loyalty, which stifles honest criticism and creates a cult of personality around him that I find disturbing. As former Reagan speechwriter John Podhoretz, author of a sympathetic book about Bush, has observed, “One of the remarkable aspects of this White House has been the fanatical loyalty its people have displayed toward Bush–even talking to friendly journalists like me, it’s been nearly impossible to get past the feel-good spin.”(8)
For example, in 2002, the White House directly ordered the firing of former Republican congressman Mike Parker of Mississippi as head of the Army Corps of Engineers because he publicly disagreed with the administration’s budget request for his agency.(9) In 2005, it ordered the demotion of a Justice Department statistician who merely put out some data that the White House found inconvenient.(10) This micromanagement of such low-level personnel is extraordinary in my experience. Columnist Robert Novak referred to this sort of thing as the Bush White House’s “authoritarian aura.”(11)
In White Houses filled with high-caliber people, dissent invariably arises and becomes known. The apparent lack of dissent in this White House, therefore, is an indication to me of something troubling–an unwillingness to question policies even behind closed doors, an anti-intellectual distrust of facts and analysis, and blind acceptance of whatever decisions have been made by the boss.
The only alternative is something equally bad–fear of telling Bush something he doesn’t want to hear. When asked whether he ever disagreed with him, Mark McKinnon, Bush’s chief campaign media adviser in 2004, said, “I prefer for others to go into the propeller first.”(12) This is the sort of thing that has gotten many big corporations like Enron in trouble in recent years, and I fear similar results from some of Bush’s ill-considered policies, especially the disastrous unfunded expansion of Medicare.
In thinking about Bush, I keep coming back to Ronald Reagan. Although derided as an amiable dunce by his enemies, it is clear from recent research that his knowledge and intellect were far deeper than they imagined. Articles and speeches drafted in his own hand leave no doubt that Reagan was exceptionally well read and had an excellent grasp of both history and current issues, including highly technical matters and complex statistics.(13) This knowledge was honed by decades of reading the classics of conservative thought and having spent much of his life publicly debating those whose views were diametrically opposed to his.
By contrast, George W. Bush brags about never even reading a daily newspaper.(14) Having worked in the White House, I know how cloistered the environment can be and how limited its information resources are–much of what White House staffers know about what is going on in the White House actually comes from reporters and news reports rather than inside knowledge, which is frequently much less than reporters imagine. It’s distressing to contemplate the possibility that the president’s opinion about the worthlessness of outside information sources is widely held within the White House. Unfortunately, I know from experience that the president sets the tone and style for everyone in the White House, suggesting that it is more likely than not that this view does indeed permeate the West Wing–a suspicion confirmed by the memoirs of those who have worked in this White House.(15)
Reagan, on the other hand, had a conservative distrust of his own ability to know all the facts and arguments before making important decisions. That is one reason why he was so tolerant of leaks from the White House during his administration. Reagan knew that this was an important safety valve that allowed dissenting viewpoints to reach him without being blocked by those with their own agendas. Deputy Chief of Staff Dick Darman, who controlled the paper flow in and out of the Oval Office, for example, was often accused of preventing Reagan from seeing memos that argued against positions Darman favored.(16)
I was involved in one very small effort to get around Darman myself. One day early in the Reagan Administration, while I was still working on Capitol Hill, a midlevel White House staffer whom I knew called me. He had written a memo to the president that he couldn’t get through the bureaucracy. Knowing that Reagan was an avid reader of Human Events, the conservative weekly newspaper, my friend suggested that I take his memo, put my name on it, and publish it as an article in Human Events. I did, thereby getting the information and analysis to the president that my friend thought he needed.(17) Others in the White House frequently did the same thing by leaking memos to the Washington Post or the New York Times that appeared as news stories.
By contrast, the Bush White House is obsessive about secrecy, viewing leaks of even the most mundane information as the equivalent of high treason.(18) Ironically, this attitude can be self-defeating, since “leaks” are a very effective way of getting one’s message out–as the Clinton White House often demonstrated. Think of it as giving an exclusive story to a reporter who has no choice but to accept the leaker’s “spin.” In this way, a leak can garner more and better press for a White House initiative than more conventional means like press releases. Leaking, in short, is not a moral issue, but can be a useful public relations technique.
Conservative Doubts
Traditional conservatives had grave doubts about George W. Bush since day one. First, he was his father’s son. George H. W. Bush ran as Reagan’s heir, but did not govern like him. Indeed, the elder Bush signaled that there would be a sharp break with Reagan-style conservatism in his inaugural address, when he spoke of being R...
Product details
- Publisher : Doubleday; First Edition (February 21, 2006)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0385518277
- ISBN-13 : 978-0385518277
- Item Weight : 1.25 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 1.25 x 9.75 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,420,371 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,964 in Economic Policy
- #2,483 in Economic Policy & Development (Books)
- #3,959 in US Presidents
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Bruce Bartlett is a longtime observer and commenter on economic and political affairs in Washington, DC. He has written for virtually every major national publication in this area, including the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Fortune Magazine, The New Republic and many others. His Twitter feed @BruceBartlett is widely followed and reaches up to 10 million people per month.
Bartlett’s work is informed by many years in government, including service on the staffs of Congressmen Ron Paul and Jack Kemp and Senator Roger Jepsen, as executive director of the Joint Economic Committee of Congress, senior policy analyst in the Reagan White House, and deputy assistant secretary for economic policy at the Treasury Department during the George H.W. Bush administration.
Bruce is the author of eight books including the New York Times best-seller, "The Benefit and the Burden: Tax Reform—Why We Need It and What It Will Take" (Simon & Schuster 2012). His earlier book, "Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy" (Doubleday 2006), was also a New York Times best-seller.
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One particularly good point made by Bartlett is that many of Bush's initiatives have been geared toward winning popular support for the Administration and the Republican Party, rather than serving the public interest (e.g. Medicare drug program), yet they have turned out not only (as expected) to be policy failures, but political failures as well.
It is heartening that the public is finally becoming more fully aware of just how complete a failure the Bush administration has been, as can be seen in the public opinion polls.
A couple of the most devastating indictments in Bartlett's book are those relating to the Medicare drug benefit and the drive to reform Social Security.
As Bartlett points out, the Social Security reform effort became divorced from the original supposed purpose of shoring up the long-term fiscal soundness of the system by the fact that it wound up simply being about private accounts, which, under the most charitable assessment, would not do a great deal to shore up the system.
However, Bush continued to pitch his reforms as being geared toward that goal. And not only did Bush's proposals not address the problem, they ignored the far bigger long-term problem of the fiscal soundness of Medicare. Bush instead put through a hugely expensive Medicare drug benefit that greatly exacerbated the Medicare insolvency problem.
Thus, Bush's handling of Medicare and Social Security has been absolutely incoherent.
During all this time, however, Republican loyalists were standing with Bush, extolling the virtues of these proposals, which to any moderately intelligent layman were clearly absurd.
It was frustrating that for so long a time Bush loyalists were able to maintain an intellectual climate in which any attempt to interject reason into these policy matters was simply dismissed out of hand, lest a broader awareness develop that "the emperor has no clothes". But by now, the smoke and mirrors aren't working much any more, and the public is becoming increasingly aware that the emperor is naked.
Bartlett does not cover the immigration issue a great deal in his book but that is another issue upon which Bush has proposed policies that fly in the face of reason. On that issue, however, Bush at least has company- the far left advocate "open borders" policies that share much in common with those proposed by the far right.
For more discussion of that issue, keep an eye out for my upcoming book "Immigration Politics" which should be in print by late April to May of this year. I include considerable material documenting the myriad ways in which the Bush administration has brazenly refused to enforce the immigration laws, endangering the public safety and even the very viability of the United States as a sovereign nation.
Bruce Bartlett, a typical paleo-conservative, has discovered what Democrats and Liberals have been saying for years, that George W. Bush is a monumentally bad president with abysmal leadership skills. Mr. Bartlett's has earned his own Conservative street cred as a domestic policy advisor for President Reagan and Treasury advisor under Bush senior. `Imposter' is scathing indictment of Bush and the GOP but Bartlett definitely has not switched sides in fact, ironically, he criticizes Bush for being TOO compromising. Apparently the president should never have negotiated on school vouchers, ANWR or Social Security reform.
Bush's beliefs, however, aren't the point of the book. The point is that irregardless of his personal beliefs, Bush is just a flat out horrible leader. Bartlett writes, "He [Bush] is simply a partisan Republican, anxious to improve the fortunes of his party... he is perfectly willing to jettison conservative principles at a moments notice to achieve that goal.". Now Bartlett is also a partisan Republican but not so partisan that he can't recognize that Clinton was a vastly better leader than Bush and praises him for reducing the deficit as well as cutting spending. The author calls the Medicare drug bill the "Worst Legislation in History" and argues that Bush lost the fight for Social Security reform because he, "simply had no credibility as someone who cares one whit about whether the nation can afford all the entitlement promises it has made".
Mr. Bartlett is very inconsistent when it comes to Bush's disregard for expert advice saying that, "[the Bush White House shows] a disregard for established economic agencies and total reliance on a small cadre of White House staffers, many with no substantive economic background" But isn't that what Conservativism is about? William F. Buckley once said, "I would rather be governed by the first 2000 names in the Boston phone book than by the Harvard faculty." Anti-intellectualism has long been a staple of Conservativism and Bush loves to play up his dismissiveness of PHD's. Mr. Bartlett also attributes the disaster in Iraq to the White Houses insular nature quoting Bush, "I have no outside advice. Anybody who says they're an outside advisor of this administration... is not telling the truth" But then Bartlett chastises Bush for "backsliding on Kyoto", allowing out a government report endorsing the science underlying global warming. First, the Bush administration has done everything it can to squelch info on global warming and second, why is it ok to ignore expert opinion on global warming but not economics or foreign policy?
Bruce Bartlett's advice to the Republican Party is both good and bad. Mr. Bartlett brilliantly writes, "Conservatives have long observed the tendency of right-wing politicians to declare Washington a cesspool and then go there and treat it like a hot tub" However, the problem in the GOP is far deeper than corruption or bad management. It cuts to the core of Conservativism that encourages anti-intellectualism. A friend of mine who has a political science degree commented on the governments response to Katrina saying, "This is what you get when you elect politicians who hate government" Bush is the reductio ad absurdum of Conservative beliefs. The Bush White House was molded on the reality that their goals were/are not the same as those of most American's. It creates an environment of mendacity and the perpetual campaign. Simply finding their core values is not going to solve the GOP's problem. I hope the GOP does find its moorings because they have a proud tradition and this is just tragic.
BTW: The book doesn't mention it but in 2005 Mr. Bartlett was fired from the National Center for Policy Analysis, a free market think tank, after 12 years of service. Apparently criticizing Bush was the reason for his termination. The GOP does not tolerate dissent.

