Progress Pond

History lessons: a tale of two presidents

Los Angeles Times political pundit Ronald Brownstein had the interesting idea of comparing George W. Bush’s presidency to that of little remembered 19th century Democrat James K. Polk. Polk won office in 1844 with a tiny popular vote margin, governed as if he had a huge mandate, and led the nation into an extremely unpopular war against Mexico. Brownstein draws remarkably bland lessons:

It’s worth considering Polk’s record not because Americans will take up arms against each other anytime soon — although you might never know that from listening to talk radio — but because it suggests that a president who slights the need to build national consensus can seed long-term problems that aren’t immediately apparent amid short-term successes. …

Bush, like Polk, launched a war whose initial justification has spawned bitter dispute….

Bush would place the nation’s security on a more stable foundation if he worked harder to find a consensus agenda with those critics whose assessment of the threat in Iraq and at home was closer to his own.

But…
I don’t share Brownstein’s apparent hope that offering mild suggestions to GWB will moderate his behavior because he wants to improve his place in history. But having dropped out of academia so as to interact with history as an activist for justice instead of as professionally cautious scholar, I’m willing to offer some broad, sweeping comparisons.

The contradictions that Polk’s presidency revealed between geographical regions with profoundly different cultures and economic interests led to civil war twelve years later. The U.S. was a rising power, energetically colonizing a continent and on the verge of creating vast wealth. Polk governed in the interests of the losers in the civil war, but nonetheless laid a territorial foundation for future prosperity.

The U.S. today is learning that military and economic power has limits. Bush’s presidency is likely to be remembered as a destructive detour by a society forced to adjust to the reality of being one nation among many that share a fragile planet.

Cross posted at Happening-Here

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