Countdown to Crawford: Tracking the final days of the Bush administration

A note from the bloggers: Countdown to Crawford exits

Sunset over Washington--and Countdown to Crawford

This is the final post on Countdown to Crawford.

Johanna Neuman and James Gerstenzang are heading to new ventures, spurred by the closing of the Los Angeles Times' Washington Bureau and the creation of a bureau -- smaller than the Times office at the beginning of the year -- serving all news outlets owned by the Tribune Co.

We are taking this opportunity to thank you, our readers. For allowing us, both veteran journalists, to learn the new skills and delights of blogging. For sharing your passion about current affairs. Mostly, for teaching us the meaning and value of participatory journalism.

We treasure your comments -- nearly 10,000 in five months -- your debates with each other and your roar. And we wish each and every one of you -- on the right, on the left or in the middle -- a smooth landing, wherever your countdowns take you.

                                                             -30-

-- Johanna Neuman & James Gerstenzang

Photo: Ron Edmonds / Associated Press

President Bush: the toll of the years

Over a period of eight years in the White House, every president changes.

The results are internal and external.

Here are two pictures demonstrating the toll of the years on President George W. Bush: The hair more gray, the wrinkles pronounced.

The first, in the initial weeks of his presidency, shows a confident Bush at a Townsend, Tenn., elementary school on Feb. 21, 2001. The Twin Towers were still standing. The American economy was still standing tall. Here is a president on top of the world.

President Bush at the Townsend, Tenn., elementary school on Feb. 21, 2001 

The second, below, shows the president in the Rose Garden on Oct. 14, 2008, speaking to reporters. The topic was the financial rescue package.

The eyes, the forehead, the hair: the toll of the job can be fierce.

President Bush in the Rose Garden, Oct. 14, 2008

-- James Gerstenzang

Photos: Top, Kenneth Lambert / Associated Press. Bottom, Alex Wong / Getty Images

Eight years of George W. Bush: a photo essay

It started for Eric Draper at a Christmas Party at the governor's mansion in Austin in 2000. That's when the 30-something Associated Press photographer from Albuquerque, N.M., went up to Texas Gov. George W. Bush and told him, straight on, that he wanted to be his personal White House photographer.

"I didn't blink," Draper recalled in an interview this week. "He said he'd get back to me. A week later I was packing."

White House photographer Eric DraperEight years later, Draper will soon be packing again. The longest-serving of Bush's photographers, Draper oversees a staff of 12 photographers, plus interns. He's the veteran, the one who started at the beginning and plans to, as the president likes to say, sprint to the finish at the end.

The most remarkable thing about the job? "One of the things about this job that I never anticipated was the volume," he said, "the amount of moments and history in a single day." The shooter recalled that when he came to Washington to interview for the job, Chief of Staff Andrew Card told him that working at the White House was like drinking through a fire hose. "And he was right,"  Draper said. "There are a lot of things to document."

President VBush outside the Oval Office before the start of a morning National Security Briefing, just five months after the 9/11 terror attack

The photo above shows the president outside the Oval Office before the start of a morning national security briefing, just five months after the 9/11 terror attack. While others see changes in the president's face with the weight of eight years, Draper said he sees the same man. "I always witnessed exactly the same president for the last eight years -- just as sharp, friendly, warm as he ever was," he said. "Obviously in eight years you see a change, but my perspective hasn't really changed."

President Bush and Vice President Cheney both check their watches before attending the swearing-in ceremony for Secretary of State Colin Powell

In the photo above, both President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney check their watches in the Oval Office before leaving for the swearing-in ceremony for Secretary of State Colin Powell on Jan. 26, 2001. It was destined to be a White House with a reputation for promptness.

Draper, a graduate of Cal State Long Beach, almost blew the opportunity to chronicle the history of this presidency on Day One. A veteran  of campaign journalism, he attended the ceremony on the West Steps of the U.S. Capitol when former President Clinton officially handed off to Bush. And then, by force of habit, he jumped into Clinton's press van. A colleague told him, "Eric, your guy is staying."

So he scampered up the steps of the Capitol, in time to catch history.

Perhaps no moment was as filled with tension as the scene aboard Air Force One on Sept. 11, 2001, when the president and his top aides looked out the window to observe the F-16 fighter jets escorting him back to Washington.

The scene aboard Air Force One on Sept. 11, 2001, when President Bush and his top aides looked out the window to observe the F-16 fighter jets escorting him back to Washington

With a just a few months left on the Bush administration,  Draper shared with us some of his favorite pictures. The one below is Bush driving his pickup truck on his ranch in Crawford, Texas, on Aug. 7, 2001. Bush will be returning to Texas in January, though first lady Laura Bush is relocating the family to Dallas.

As for Draper, he's back to New Mexico in January, but his photographs -- all 800,000 of them -- will be part of history forever.

President Bush driving his pick-up truck on his ranch in Crawford, Tex. on Aug. 7, 2001

-- Johanna Neuman

Photos by Eric Draper / White House

NYPost: "Laura's hot, but Dubya's not"

First Lady Laura Bush delivers remarks June 6, 2007, at the Schwerin City Library in Schwerin, Germany

The New York Post's Page Six, home to gossip about wanna-be celebrities and their cousins, the actually famous, disclosed today that First Lady Laura Bush is negotiating with publishers who are bidding on her memoirs. As one literary agent told the Post, "The publishers are coming to the White House to meet with her and discuss the book."

President Bush, by contrast, is said to be waiting before pitching his memoirs. With an approval rating at historic lows, the president apparently thinks he should wait five years before approaching publishers. One agent, Mort Janklow, asked how long Bush should wait, quipped, "30 or 40 years might be good." In the meantime, the more popular first lady -- a former teacher, librarian and a published author -- may serve up a more palatable version of the Bush 43 White House, say literary agents.

Recalling a similar situation for British Prime Minister Tony Blair, whose wife Cherie published a memoir before he did, British literary agent Andrew Lownie told the London Telegraph:

The Blairs pioneered this strategy and it is a great way of testing the waters. Mrs. Bush is clearly a lot more popular than her husband at the moment and this is a way of serving up a story in a way that is palatable to the public. Longer term, I am sure we will also see a book from her husband and this of course allows for two bites of the cherry. Commercially, it makes great sense. Also, of course, the public tend to mellow in their attitude to even the most hated political leaders over time.

No word yet on the size of the advance, but you can start counting those zeroes. Bill Clinton made $30 million from sales of his "My Life" and his "Giving: How Each of Us Can Change the World." Former First Lady, now New York senator, Hillary Rodham Clinton, got $8 million for "Living History."

-- Johanna Neuman

Photo: Shealah Craighead / White House

Barack Obama at White House: The photos tell the story

Barack Obama at White House 

Outside the gates of  the White House, tourists, school kids and even usually blase native Washingtonians gathered to catch a glimpse of history at today's meeting of the incoming and outgoing presidents. In the photo above, by Mark Wilson of Getty Images, President Bush and President-elect Barack Obama walk through the Rose Garden en route to the Oval Office.

With Obama to be sworn in on Jan. 20 as the nation's 44th president and its first African American president, history was made at every step of today's visit by Obama and his wife Michelle.

There was this view, by Mandel Ngan of AFP/Getty Images, as the Obamas  arrived at the White House, with everybody trying to figure out their places.

Barack Obama at White House

And finally this one, also by Ngan, of the penultimate Colonnade walk.

Barack Obama at White House in the Colonnade wak

-- Johanna Neuman

Barack Obama to do the Colonnade walk at White House

President Bush walks down the Colonnade from the Oval Office to the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008, to deliver a statement about the transition of the administration of President-elect Barack Obama

It will be a moment of history unlike any other, a transition not just from one president to another but from a shameful and long chapter of racial prejudice in American history to a new beginning.

President-elect Barack Obama, the first African American elected to the highest office in the land, will take a photogenic walk along the White House Colonnade this afternoon with President Bush. In those few steps, they will cement the progress of the civil rights movement's "We Shall Overcome."

White House Press Secretary Dana Perino told reporters this morning that the Obamas will be greeted by the Bushes on the South Portico on their arrival at 2 PM Eastern, and then proceed to the Diplomatic Reception Room, where they will meet Adm.  Stephen Rochon, the chief usher, who runs the residence.

Then the two wives will assume their own schedule -- adjourning to the First Family's living quarters, where Mrs. Bush plans to show Mrs. Obama the bedrooms used by children of past presidents. The Obama daughters, Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7, are the youngest children to live at the White House since John F. Kennedy's administration in the early 1960s.

As for Bush and his successor, Perino said they will "walk down the Colonnade into the Oval Office," where, his staff said, Obama has never been. On the agenda: the economic meltdown, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and a peaceful transition. But no news conference is planned afterward.

In a C-SPAN interview, reporters from the Associated Press and the Washington Post asked Bush White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten what he thought the president would tell the man who ran against his policies. Bolten said:

I know the president will want to convey to President-elect Obama his sense of how to deal with some of the most important issues of the day.  But exactly how he does that, I don't know, and I don't think anybody will know.

-- Johanna Neuman

Photo: Gerald Herbert /Associated Press

Bush White House gives one last gift to Wall Street

American International Group Inc. offices in lower Manhattan on Nov. 10, 2008 as the U.S. government announced the restructuring of its bailout of the faltering insurance giant

Well maybe not the last. After all, there are still 71 days to go before the inauguration.

But late Sunday, George W. Bush's administration scrapped its original $123-billion bailout of American International Group (AIG) and offered a new one, for $170 billion, that extends the loan from two years to five. The deal is part of the $700-billion stash that Congress passed last month.

So far this morning, Wall Street seems to like the news. As for AIG, its CEO Edward Liddy said the new plan "is a significant step forward" that will help AIG divest itself of bad business loans. Tapped to lead the company amid its turmoil five weeks ago, Liddy also said it feels more like five years.

As the Wall Street Journal reported this morning, the new, more robust bailout of AIG is likely to spark a political backlash.

For one thing, Democrats have signaled that under President-elect Barack Obama's administration, the Treasury will use the $700-billion bailout money differently. If there's any left.

For another, Democrats are likely to be enraged that the U.S. government is bailing out Wall Street -- again -- while the Big Three auto makers are nearing the precipice. The White House has been resisting a direct bailout of an industry, preferring to dole out the money to the financial sector and let those traditional gatekeepers of the nation's money supply do their thing.

-- Johanna Neuman

Photo: Stan Honda / Agence France-Presse / Getty Images

Will handing over the keys to the White House be George W. Bush's finest hour?

Photos of George W. Bush and Barack Obama

President Bush is hardly a fan of Barack Obama's policies. He warned during the recent meltdown on Wall Street that the way to help the American people was not to raise taxes on the wealthy as Obama has suggested but to extend his own tax cuts on the upper class. And the president is resisting efforts by congressional Democrats to enact a second stimulus package for folks on Main Street.

But Bush made clear to the White House staff last week that he wanted a smooth transition, no pranks. Maybe the president remembers what happened in 2001, when Clinton staffers angry that Al Gore was defeated left anti-Bush graffiti on White House equipment, fixing "Hail to the Thief" and "W Happens" notes to file cabinets in what the GAO later determined was $15,000 in damage.

With President-elect Obama going to the White House Monday to meet with Bush, no one is expecting the two will find much common ground on policy.

But both sides are talking nice. Bush said he is looking forward to their talks. And Obama, noting that the country can only have one president at a time, said "the critical tone, I think, that needs to be struck by all of us right now is the American people need help. It's in that spirit that I will have a conversation with the president."

Both sides are also signaling that despite vast political differences and huge challenges, they want a seamless transition. As White House press secretary Dana Perino said Friday, "Their posture and ours is one of genuine cooperation ... Both recognize the responsibility of keeping the country safe and helping pulls the economy out of its downturn."

If it is a good-faith transition, Bush might emerge more popular than his current ratings reflect.

To presidential scholars, none of this is a surprise.

"Good politicians are like pro wrestlers, bashing one another in public and then walking off arm in arm," Fred Greenstein, a political scientist now retired from Princeton, told the Wall Street Journal.

-- Johanna Neuman

Photos: George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Credits: Getty Images; Associated Press

Barney the White House dog bites reporter; mad at liberal press bias?

Barney the first dog bit a White House reporter today.

Apparently it wasn't the first time. Jon Decker, a political reporter for Reuters, had just finished a live shot for MSNBC at 10:35 a.m. when he spotted Barney and his handler on a walk. He bent down to pet him. Look out.

Maybe Barney, a Scottish terrier, was fed up with liberal media bias. Maybe he was unhappy with how ungrateful Americans seem to be for President Bush's leadership. Or maybe he was just snarling to get out of there.

One thing is clear: Despite high popularity ratings of their own (the Barney cam is a much-visited feature of the White House website) he and Miss Beazley are moving out. And Barack Obama, who promised his daughters Malia and Sasha that they could get a puppy once the political campaign had ended, has OKd a spring arrival for the new first dog.

Speculation is rampant in Washington about the breed of the new first puppy. Malia Obama, a 10-year-old with allergies, has apparently fallen for the cockapoodle, partly because the breed is hypoallergenic. After a lobbying campaign by animal rights activists in the fall, Obama voted for a rescued dog.

-- Johanna Neuman

President Bush lets emotions show while thanking White House staff

An emotional President Bush gets some help from Laura Bush after applause from White House staff

It was an emotional moment for President Bush, and his face showed the strain.

The election was two days in the past. He came out on the White House South Lawn under cloudy skies, the Washington autumn morning damp and dreary, to thank the White House staff for the work they have done.

"We believe that service to our fellow citizens is a noble calling -- and the privilege of a lifetime," he said.

He asked them to conduct themselves during the transition to the Barack Obama administration with "decency and professionalism."

Needing no mention: the reports of fraternity house shenanigans when the Bill Clinton staff turned their offices over to the incoming Bush brigades.

The president and Laura Bush will welcome Barack and Michelle Obama to the White House on Monday, and Bush said: "I hope you will join Laura and me in congratulating President-elect Obama, and wishing him the very best for his family and our country."

He said he recognized that with Jan. 20 approaching, "some of you may be anxious about finding a new job or a new place to live.

"I know how you feel," he said.

But, he added:

Earlier this year, I promised that I would sprint to the finish. I am keeping that promise. ... I will be honored to stand with you at the finish line.

The staff's applause triggered an apparent welling of emotions, and Bush did all he could do to keep them under control.

President Bush, trying to keep emotions in check, after thanking White House staff

-- James Gerstenzang

Photos. Top, Paul J. Richards / AFP/Getty Images; Ron Edmonds / Associated Press



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James Gerstenzang, Johanna Neuman
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James Gerstenzang and Johanna Neuman are reporters in The Times' Washington bureau. Between the two of them, they have covered the White House, diplomacy, military affairs, the environment, international economics, trade and Congress. They have both spent time in Crawford, Texas.