By WILLIAM
MCGURN
Wall Street
Journal Op-Ed
When a man
hangs up his byline to write for a president, he gets
more than a new job. He gets to see how the press and
pundit corps look from the other side of the notepad.
And over
three years in the West Wing, you see a few things. You
see who's a straight shooter, and who's full of snark.
You see who's smart, and whose outrageous behavior would
have made its way to Drudge had it involved White House
staffers instead of White House correspondents. Most of
all, you see how conventional wisdom can keep otherwise
talented reporters and commentators on the same stale
storyline long after the facts on the ground have
changed.
Let me put
this in context with three contentious issues -- one
economic, one cultural, and one on foreign policy. In
each case, President Bush took a clear stand. In each
case, he was accused of stupidity or stubbornness and
sometimes both. In each case, the facts on the ground
increasingly bear the president out, sometimes
dramatically. Yet the beat goes on -- with no sense of
the great irony that it may be our writers and pundits
who are stubbornly clinging to old assumptions.
Start with
taxes. In the first three years of his administration,
the president signed into law a series of tax cuts. They
helped families by lowering rates, doubling the child
credit, and reducing the marriage penalty. They helped
small businesses, by increasing the incentives for
investment and lowering the rate at which most small
businesses pay taxes. And they put the death tax on the
road to extinction.
Critics
attacked on all fronts. The tax cuts were unfair because
they only helped the rich. They would blow out the
deficit, and do nothing for the economy. And when the
economy began to improve, the focus shifted to a
"jobless recovery."
We now know
that "jobless recovery" in fact produced the longest
period of consecutive job growth in our history. We now
know that the tax cuts that were supposed to blow a hole
in the federal budget deficit actually contributed to
economic growth that has in turn yielded record tax
revenues. As for unfairness, we also know that if the
Democrats have their way and allow the Bush tax cuts to
expire, a family of four with $60,000 in earnings in
2007 would see their taxes go up by about $1,800. So
who's being stubborn?
Or take stem
cells. Shortly after taking office, the president had to
make a tough decision about federal funding for
embryonic stem cell research that holds out hope for
life-saving treatments. The problem was that getting the
stem cells requires destroying embryos. In July 2001,
Mr. Bush announced a reasonable compromise. The solution
was that the federal government would support embryonic
stem cell research, but would not support the creation
of life just to destroy it.
For more than
six years, the critics have reacted by suggesting
America was regressing into a new Dark Ages. "An act of
self-serving political Houdinism" said one columnist. A
later editorial after a presidential veto ran under the
headline "The President's Stem Cell Theology." The
science reporter for ABC News put it this way: "We talk
to a lot of scientists who believe nothing will change
until the next inauguration in 2009."
Well, we
didn't have to wait until 2009 for something to change.
Last November, scientists discovered a way to reprogram
adult skin cells to act like embryonic stem cells. In
other words, we now have the potential to cultivate
adult cells with the same pluripotent qualities that
make embryonic cells so valuable -- and without having
to destroy human life. That sure sounds like a welcome
development. So let me ask: How many stories or
editorials have you read giving the president his due?
Finally there
is Iraq. By the end of 2006, sectarian violence was
tearing Iraq apart, the terrorists were getting away
with spectacular acts of murder, and our strategy
plainly was not working. For a man said to resist
unpleasant truths, the president acted boldly. He
replaced his defense secretary, replaced his commanders
on the ground, and completely overhauled his strategy.
Granted, it would have been better had it come earlier.
But it was a tough thing to do, he did it -- and he did
it knowing full well that the critics would jump all
over him.
The president
announced the surge in a nationally televised address in
January 2007. A conservative columnist accused the
president of offering nothing but "salesmanship and
spin." A cable TV host went on a rant declaring "the
plan fails militarily, the plan fails symbolically, the
plan fails politically." Columnists and commentators
either hedged their bets or predicted disaster ahead,
with allusions to Vietnam sprinkled in for good measure.
Yet the surge
went ahead. In Anbar Province, Marines were sent in to
take advantage of a popular Sunni revolt against al
Qaeda -- and by April the capital city of Ramadi was
being taken back from the terrorists. By September, U.S.
and Iraqi forces were clearing out Baquba, a one-time al
Qaeda town in Diyala Province. And though Gen. David
Petraeus says that the gains can still be reversed,
sectarian killings are down, civilian deaths are down,
and the people of Baghdad are getting a taste of normal
life. Surely the president deserves a little credit
here.
Of course, if
you are one of those experts who reassured us that a
"well managed defeat" in Iraq was the way for America to
go, you don't like hearing the president use plain words
like "win" and "victory." Then again, you're not the
audience George W. Bush worries about. During one of my
first meetings in the Oval Office, the president told me
and my fellow speechwriters that we must always be
mindful of how his words would sound to the enemy -- and
how they would sound to the young Marine risking his
life against that enemy in some dusty town in
Afghanistan or Iraq.
President
Bush hasn't always been right. But he's been right on
the things that matter most, and he's been willing to
take the heat. I, for one, admire him for it.
Mr. McGurn, an executive at News Corporation, served as
chief speechwriter for President Bush from January 2005
until February 2008.