116:, Bushies tended to be "boring" corporate careerists with "neat desks and thin briefcases because their reading comes in the form of memos", who saw themselves as "master managers" and politics as a "competition of interests" rather than ideas. Although Brooks acknowledged that both groups were skeptical of government, their skepticism took different forms, with the Reaganites viewing the Bushies as skilled at political or bureaucratic wrangling, but lacking principles. According to Brooks, the failure of the Bushies in the first two years of the elder Bush administration, which led to major losses in the 1992 Congressional elections, brought about the ascendancy of "ideologues" such as
187:
197:
94:
A Bushie is defined by
Podhoretz as "someone either directly beholden to or someone to whom Bush was directly beholden," someone who could prove himself to interviewers in the Bush job- appointments team as having "Bush experience," meaning not "general Republican experience, perhaps working on a
166:
The real question is whether being a "loyal Bushie" meant letting partisan considerations poison law enforcement decisions.... The actions of the Bush
Administration call into question every decision by federal prosecutors in corruption cases across the
144:
we would like to replace 15-20 percent of the current U.S. Attorneys -- the underperforming ones . . . The vast majority of U.S. Attorneys, 80-85 percent, I would guess, are doing a great job, are loyal
Bushies, etc.,
47:
of Bush advisors, appointees, and acolytes. The label carries much the same meaning as the terms "Reaganite", "Clintonista", and “Obamabot”, which are used to denote aides and followers of
Presidents
124:, but their "uncompromising" approach once again returned the reins of the party to the Bushies by the 2000 election, in which George W. Bush was elected.
308:
313:
273:
128:
318:
249:
158:
250:"Justice Dept. Would Have Kept 'Loyal' Prosecutors: Aide Recommended Retaining 'Bushies' And Top Performers"
222:
106:
Reagan In His Own Hand: The
Writings of Ronald Reagan That Reveal His Revolutionary Vision for America
218:
101:
108:. Brooks differentiated Reaganites and Bushies as types of Republicans. While Reaganites were often
151:
17:
8:
192:
85:
281:
227:
36:
67:
Although the term has a longer recorded usage, it first came to prominence with the
80:
109:
68:
40:
302:
136:
117:
48:
44:
132:
56:
52:
76:
129:
investigation of the controversial replacement of several U.S. Attorneys
277:
154:
121:
113:
95:
Senate race in Idaho or something, but ... Bush experience solely."
75:, about his experiences working for the George H. W. Bush
217:
247:
131:
when it was revealed that
Justice Department official
35:, is a term referring to a political supporter of
300:
185:
135:suggested in an e-mail to then-Attorney General
43:. More specifically, it is used to denote the
309:Political terminology of the United States
248:Dan Eggen and Paul Kane (March 16, 2007).
301:
188:"Conservative Estimate of The Bushies"
186:Jonathan Yardley (November 10, 1993).
127:The term became prominent during the
274:"Reid Supports U.S. Attorneys Bill"
13:
14:
330:
280:. March 19, 2007. Archived from
314:Presidency of George H. W. Bush
266:
241:
211:
179:
1:
172:
104:in a review of the 2001 book
100:The term was also defined by
319:Presidency of George W. Bush
7:
10:
335:
62:
15:
219:David Brooks (journalist)
223:"Reagan Was a Reaganite"
79:. According to reviewer
112:academics connected to
152:Senate Majority Leader
18:Bushi (disambiguation)
221:(January 28, 2001).
27:, or less commonly,
16:For other uses, see
254:The Washington Post
193:The Washington Post
86:The Washington Post
228:The New York Times
200:on October 1, 2007
37:George H. W. Bush
326:
293:
292:
290:
289:
270:
264:
263:
261:
260:
245:
239:
238:
236:
235:
215:
209:
208:
206:
205:
196:. Archived from
183:
81:Jonathan Yardley
334:
333:
329:
328:
327:
325:
324:
323:
299:
298:
297:
296:
287:
285:
272:
271:
267:
258:
256:
246:
242:
233:
231:
216:
212:
203:
201:
184:
180:
175:
65:
21:
12:
11:
5:
332:
322:
321:
316:
311:
295:
294:
265:
240:
210:
177:
176:
174:
171:
170:
169:
148:
147:
98:
97:
73:Hell of a Ride
71:'s 1993 book,
69:John Podhoretz
64:
61:
59:respectively.
41:George W. Bush
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
331:
320:
317:
315:
312:
310:
307:
306:
304:
284:on 2007-04-25
283:
279:
275:
269:
255:
251:
244:
230:
229:
224:
220:
214:
199:
195:
194:
189:
182:
178:
168:
164:
163:
162:
160:
156:
153:
150:According to
146:
142:
141:
140:
138:
137:John Ashcroft
134:
130:
125:
123:
119:
118:Newt Gingrich
115:
111:
107:
103:
96:
92:
91:
90:
88:
87:
82:
78:
74:
70:
60:
58:
54:
50:
49:Ronald Reagan
46:
42:
38:
34:
30:
26:
19:
286:. Retrieved
282:the original
276:. Office of
268:
257:. Retrieved
253:
243:
232:. Retrieved
226:
213:
202:. Retrieved
198:the original
191:
181:
165:
149:
143:
133:Kyle Sampson
126:
105:
102:David Brooks
99:
93:
84:
72:
66:
57:Barack Obama
53:Bill Clinton
45:inner circle
32:
28:
24:
22:
114:think tanks
77:White House
303:Categories
288:2007-05-14
278:Harry Reid
259:2007-05-12
234:2007-05-12
204:2007-05-12
173:References
155:Harry Reid
122:Dick Armey
167:country.
159:Democrat
110:Hayekian
63:History
29:Bushite
139:that
55:, and
25:Bushie
145:etc."
33:Bushy
157:, a
120:and
161:,
83:of
39:or
31:or
305::
252:.
225:.
190:.
89:,
51:,
23:A
291:.
262:.
237:.
207:.
20:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.