Born in July 6, 1946, in New Haven, Connecticut, George
W. Bush was the 43rd president of the United States. He narrowly won the
Electoral College vote in 2000, in one of the closest and most controversial
elections in American history. Bush led the United States' response to the 9/11
terrorist attacks and initiated the Iraq War. Before his presidency, Bush was a
businessman and served as governor of Texas.
George Walker Bush was born on July 6, 1946, in New
Haven, Connecticut. He is the eldest of six children of George Herbert Walker
Bush and Barbara Pierce Bush. The Bush family had been involved in business and
politics since the 1950s. Bush's grandfather, Prescott Bush, was a former Wall
Street banker and progressive Republican senator from Connecticut, and his
father was a businessman, diplomat, and vice president and president of the
United States.
In 1948, George H.W. Bush moved the family to Midland,
Texas, where he made his fortune in the oil business. Young George spent most
of his childhood in Midland, attending school there until the seventh grade.
The family moved to Houston in 1961, and George W. Bush was sent to Phillips
Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. There he was an all-around athlete, playing
baseball, basketball and football. He was a fair student and had a reputation
for being an occasional troublemaker. Despite this, family connections helped
him enter Yale University in 1964.
George W. Bush was a popular student at Yale, becoming
president of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity and also playing rugby. For
Bush, grades took a back seat to Yale’s social life. Despite his privileged
background, he was comfortable with all kinds of people and had a wide circle
of friends and acquaintances. Like his father and grandfather before him,
George W. Bush became a member of Yale’s secretive Skull and Bones society, an
invitation-only club whose membership contains some of American’s most powerful
and elite family members.
Two weeks before graduation, at the end of his draft
deferment, George W. Bush enlisted in the Texas Air National Guard. It was 1968
and the Vietnam War was at its height. Though the Guard unit had a long waiting
list, Bush was accepted through the unsolicited help of a family friend.
Commissioned as a second lieutenant, he earned his fighter pilot certification
in June of 1970. Despite irregular attendance and questions about whether he
had completely fulfilled his military obligation, Bush was honorably discharged
from the Air Force Reserve on November 21, 1974.
After
his Guard duty, George W. Bush continued his education, enrolling at Harvard
Business School, where he earned a Masters of Business Administration degree in
1975. He then returned to Midland and entered the oil business, working for a
family friend, and later started his own oil and gas firm. In 1977, at a
backyard barbeque, Bush was introduced by friends to Laura Welch, a school
teacher and librarian. After a quick three-month courtship, he proposed, and
they were married on November 5, 1977. The couple settled in Midland, Texas,
where Bush continued to build his business.
George W. Bush credits his wife for
bringing his life in order. Prior to marriage, he had several embarrassing
episodes with alcohol. Soon after marrying Laura, he joined the United
Methodist Church and became a born-again Christian. In 1981, the couple enjoyed
the arrival of twin daughters, Barbara and Jenna. In 1986, Bush sold his
struggling oil business to Harken Energy Corporation for stock and a seat on
its board of directors. It was also at this time that he quit drinking and
became deeply involved in his church.
In
1988, George W. Bush moved his family to Washington DC to work on his father’s
bid for the White House, participating in campaign activities and meeting
influential people. After his father’s victory, he returned to Texas, and in
1989 joined a group of investors purchasing the Texas Rangers baseball team.
George W. Bush quickly emerged as the group’s leader and made some savvy
trades. The team did well and Bush earned a reputation as a successful
businessman. In 1998, Bush sold his share of the team for a reported 17 times
his initial investment.
After his father’s 1992 reelection
loss to Bill Clinton, George W. Bush decided to run for governor of Texas as a
Republican. His affiliation with the Rangers and his family reputation helped
him in the 1994 campaign against incumbent Democrat Ann Richards. His campaign
focused on welfare and tort reform, crime reduction, and education improvement.
The contest was contentious and bare knuckled, with accusations of financial
impropriety on one side, and homosexuality on the other. Bush won the election
with 53 percent of the vote and became the first child of a U.S. president to
be elected a state governor. In 1998, Bush became the first Texas governor to
be elected to consecutive four-year terms.
As governor, George W. Bush appealed
to moderate Republicans and Christian conservatives in his own party and earned
a reputation for bipartisan governing. He implemented the philosophy of
"compassionate conservatism," which combined limited government with
concern for the underprivileged and personal responsibility. The previous
gubernatorial administration left the Texas treasury in a surplus, so Bush
pushed for a tax cut and increased funding for education. He promoted
educational reform, tying teachers’ salaries to student performance on
standardized tests, and signed into law legislation lowering the age at which
juveniles could be tried in adult courts.
In
1999, George W. Bush began his quest for the presidency, and after a
contentious series of primary elections, he won the Republican presidential
nomination. The 2000 presidential election pitting George W. Bush and
Democratic candidate Al Gore was close and controversial. As Election Day
unfolded, there was no clear winner. The late-night news declared one candidate
the winner, then the other the winner. By early the next morning, Bush had 246
electoral votes and Gore had 255, with 270 needed to win. Florida’s 25
electoral votes were held in the balance where several counties reported
problems with balloting. After more than a month of recounts and legal
maneuvering, the U.S. Supreme Court decided the election, giving George Bush
the victory. Though Gore lost the election in the Electoral College (271 to
266) he received over 543,000 more popular votes than Bush, a result that
further complicated Bush’s victory.
In the first two years of his
presidency, George W. Bush enjoyed a political majority in both Congressional
houses but faced a strongly divided government. At times, his political
rhetoric fueled this divide. Taking a budget surplus left by the previous
Democratic administration, Bush pushed through a $1.35 trillion tax cut to stimulate
the economy, but critics contended it favored the wealthy. His administration
prompted further controversy when he announced the U.S. would not abide by the
Kyoto Protocol for reducing green-house gas emissions, citing potential harm to
the U.S. economy.
9/11 and Iraq War
On September 11, 2001, Al Qaeda
terrorists hijacked four U.S. commercial jetliners. Three of them hit their
targets in New York and Washington, D.C. A fourth plane crashed into a farmer’s
field in Pennsylvania. The war on terror had begun, and President George W.
Bush promised the American people that he would do all he could to prevent
another terrorist attack. A comprehensive strategy was formed with the creation
of the Homeland Security Department, the Patriot Act and the authorization of
intelligence gathering that, for a time, included monitoring international
phone calls made by U.S. citizens. The Bush administration also built
international coalitions to seek out and destroy Al Qaeda and other terrorist
organizations in Afghanistan, where the ruling Taliban government was said to
be harboring Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
As the conflict raged on, United
States military forces in Afghanistan began transferring Taliban fighters and
suspected Al Qaeda members to a special prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, a
permanent U.S. naval base. Hundreds of prisoners were held there as enemy
combatants, a classification given by the Bush administration that stated
terror detainees were not protected by the Geneva Conventions. As a result, many
were subject to enhanced interrogation techniques, which in the opinion of
various international organizations, including the Red Cross, amounted to
torture.
In September, 2002, the Bush
administration announced that the United States would preemptively use military
force if necessary to prevent threats to its national security by terrorists or
"rogue states" especially any that possessed weapons of mass destruction.
Based on what would prove to be inaccurate intelligence reports, the Bush
administration successfully obtained a UN Security Council resolution to return
weapons inspectors to Iraq. Soon afterward, Bush declared that Iraq hadn’t
complied with inspections, and on March 20, 2003, the United States launched a
successful invasion of Iraq, quickly defeating the Iraqi military. Baghdad, the
Iraqi capital, fell on April 9, 2003, and Bush personally declared an end to
major combat operations on May 1, 2003. With a power vacuum in place, Iraq soon
fell into a sectarian civil war.
In 2004, George W. Bush ran for
re-election. Though the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were not going well, and
his efforts in Social Security reform had met with great resistance, Bush's
political core remained supportive, and he was able to win reelection over
Democratic challenger Senator John Kerry in the November election. During his
second term, Bush pushed for immigration reform, which received criticism from
many conservatives, and eased environmental regulations, which received
criticism from many liberals. The Bush administration's poor response to
Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans further pushed down his favorability rating.
In 2008, as George W. Bush entered
the final year of his presidency, the country faced enormous challenges. The
United States was fighting two foreign wars, and the budget surplus left by the
Clinton administration had transformed into a multi-trillion-dollar debt—the
effects of military spending, tax cuts, and slow economic growth. In the early
fall of 2008, the country was hit with a severe credit crisis that sent the
stock market into free fall and led to massive layoffs. The Bush administration
scrambled and encouraged Congress to enact a controversial $700 billion
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act to bail out the housing and banking
industries.
Life After the White
House
George W. Bush left office in
January, 2009, leaving behind much unfinished business and low approval ratings.
The country remained politically divided. Critics laid much of the country’s
misfortunes at his feet, while supporters defended him for his strong
leadership during one of the country’s most dangerous periods. Bush and his
wife settled in Dallas, Texas, where he participated in the building of his
presidential library and wrote his memoir "Decision Points." At the
request of President Barack Obama, Bush and former president Bill Clinton led
private fundraising efforts in the United States for disaster relief, after the
2010 Haiti earthquake.
After years of leading a relatively
quiet life in Texas, Bush returned to the media spotlight in 2013. He was on
hand for the opening of the George W. Bush Library and Museum on the grounds of
Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. The other living former
presidents, including Bill Clinton and Bush's own father, attended the event as
did President Barack Obama. Bush joked that "There was a time in my life
when I wasn't likely to be found at a library, much less found one,"
according to Fox News. Speaking on a more serious note, Bush seemed to defend
his time as president. "When people come to this library and research this
administration, they’re going to find out we stayed true to our convictions,"
he said.
George W. Bush played up to his Texas
roots through most of his political life. For both his supporters and
detractors, it provided reasons for their support and criticism. For some, his
folksy image and manner suggested he was "not ready for prime time,"
politically adept, but not a statesman at a time when the country need one. For
others, he was perceived as a president of big ideas who eagerly embraced large
visions and the risks involved. His supporters credit him with re-establishing
America’s place as the world’s uncontested leader. Internationally, he has been
maligned for his "cowboy diplomacy" in foreign affairs. Like many
presidents before him, the George W. Bush presidency will find its place in
history balanced against his successes and failures.
In July 2013, George W. Bush made
history when he joined President Barack Obama in Africa in commemoration of the
15th anniversary of Osama bin Laden's first attack on the United States—marking
the first meeting on foreign soil to commemorate an act of terrorism between
two U.S. presidents.
Bush ran into some health problems
later that summer. On August 6, he underwent surgery to insert a stent in his
heart to open a blockage in one of his arteries. The blockage discovered during
his annual physical. Through a spokesperson, Bush expressed his gratitude to
"the skilled medical professionals who have cared for him," according
to the Associated Press. Bush also thanked "his family, friends, and
fellow citizens for their prayers and well wishes. And he encourages us all to
get our regular check-ups."
That October, it was revealed that
Bush's heart condition was more serious than originally described. He had a 95%
blockage in that artery before his surgery, according to CNN.com. If he had not
been treated, Bush would have been at risk of having a heart attack.
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