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This article originally provided by
The Washington Post
January 25, 2006
Bush the Incompetent
By Harold Meyerson
Incompetence is not one of the seven deadly sins, and
it's hardly the worst attribute that can be ascribed to
George W. Bush. But it is this president's defining
attribute. Historians, looking back at the hash that his
administration has made of his war in Iraq, his response to
Hurricane Katrina and his Medicare drug plan, will have to
grapple with how one president could so cosmically botch so
many big things -- particularly when most of them were the
president's own initiatives.
In numbing profusion, the newspapers are filled with
litanies of screw-ups. Yesterday's New York Times brought
news of the first official assessment of our reconstruction
efforts in Iraq, in which the government's special inspector
general depicted a policy beset, as Times reporter James
Glanz put it, "by gross understaffing, a lack of technical
expertise, bureaucratic infighting [and] secrecy." At one
point, rebuilding efforts were divided, bewilderingly and
counterproductively, between the Army Corps of Engineers
and, for projects involving water, the Navy. That's when
you'd think a president would make clear in no uncertain
terms that bureaucratic turf battles would not be allowed to
impede Iraq's reconstruction. But then, the president had no
guiding vision for how to rebuild Iraq -- indeed, he went to
war believing that such an undertaking really wouldn't
require much in the way of American treasure and American
lives.
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» Eugene Robinson
| As its servers
fill up with our dreams,
ambitions, beliefs and fears,
Google can know too much. It's
no surprise the administration
wants in on the action.

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It's the president's prescription drug plan (Medicare
Part D), though, that is his most mind-boggling failure. As
was not the case in Iraq or with Katrina, it hasn't had to
overcome the opposition of man or nature. Pharmacists are
not resisting the program; seniors are not planting car
bombs to impede it (not yet, anyway). But in what must be an
unforeseen development, people are trying to get their
medications covered under the program. Apparently, this is a
contingency for which the administration was not prepared,
as it has been singularly unable to get its own program up
and running.
Initially, Part D's biggest glitch seemed to be the
difficulty that seniors encountered in selecting a plan. But
since Part D took effect on Jan. 1, the most acute problem
has been the plan's failure to cover the 6.2 million
low-income seniors whose medications had been covered by
Medicaid. On New Year's Day, the new law shifted these
people's coverage to private insurers. And all hell broke
loose.
Pharmacists found that the insurers didn't have the
seniors' names in their systems, or charged them far in
excess of what the new law stipulated -- and what the
seniors could afford. In California fully 20 percent of the
state's 1.1 million elderly Medicaid recipients had their
coverage denied. The state had to step in to pick up the tab
for their medications. California has appropriated $150
million for the medications, and estimates that it will be
out of pocket more than $900 million by 2008-09. Before Jan.
1 the Bush administration had told California that it would
save roughly $120 million a year once Part D was in effect.
California's experience is hardly unique. To date at
least 25 states and the District have had to defray the
costs to seniors that Part D was supposed to cover. What's
truly stunning about this tale is that, while officials may
not have known how many non-indigent seniors would sign up
of their own accord, they always knew that these 6.2 million
seniors would be shifted into the plan on the first day of
the year. There were absolutely no surprises, and yet
administration officials weren't even remotely prepared.
No such problems attended the creation of Medicare itself
in the mid-1960s. Then, a governmental agency simply assumed
responsibility for seniors' doctor and hospital visits. But,
financially beholden to both the drug and insurance
industries, the Bush administration and the Repsublican
Congress mandated that millions of Americans have their
coverage shifted to these most byzantine of bureaucracies.
This is, remember, the president's signature domestic
initiative, just as the Iraq war is his signature foreign
initiative.
How could a president get these things so wrong?
Incompetence may describe this presidency, but it doesn't
explain it. For that, historians may need to turn to the
seven deadly sins: to greed, in understanding why Bush
entrusted his new drug entitlement to a financial mainstay
of modern Republicanism. To sloth, in understanding why
Incurious George has repeatedly ignored the work of experts
whose advice runs counter to his desires.
More and more, the key question for this administration
is that of the great American sage, Casey Stengel: Can't
anybody here play this game?
meyersonh@washpost.com
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