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Let's talk turkey

JONATHAN CHAIT

February 26, 2006|JONATHAN CHAIT

EVERY THANKSGIVING Day, the president traditionally selects a turkey to be spared the butcher's ax. Much the same thing happened in Colorado last week. President Bush paid a visit to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colo., to highlight his administration's commitment to developing renewable energy sources. It was a wonderful idea for an event, except for the slight problem that his administration is not, in fact, committed to renewable energy sources. The lab had been slated for a significant drop in federal funding and had laid off 32 employees.


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Rather than spoil a good photo opportunity, the White House hastily announced that it was shifting $5 million from unspecified sources in order to bring the 32 employees back to work. And so the turkey -- I mean the energy researchers -- was saved after all.

Unfortunately, this episode is entirely typical of how the Bush administration conducts domestic policy. The default mode for most government functions is total neglect. Except, every so often, a lucky program is plucked from obscurity and held up as a symbol of Bush's devotion to some inspiring and high-minded goal, at which point it is showered with attention and money. Inevitably the fortunate program outlives its public relations utility and slides back into neglect and decay.

Bush's interest in renewable energy seems to have come about as a result of his need to have a dramatic theme for his State of the Union address. Before that, he was not just uninterested but outright contemptuous of the idea. In 2000, when Al Gore proposed tax credits for people who purchased alternative energy sources, Bush used the concept as a punch line. "How many of you own hybrid electric-gasoline engine vehicles?" he would ask audiences to laughter. "How many of you own a rooftop photovoltaic system?"

The same dynamic drove Bush in January 2004 to dramatically embrace the goal of landing astronauts on Mars. Bush announced this goal with a soaring burst of Kennedy-esque rhetoric. "We will build new ships to carry man forward into the universe ... and to prepare for new journeys to worlds beyond our own," he said. "We choose to explore space because doing so improves our lives and lifts our national spirit. So let us continue the journey."

Or not. After this dramatic announcement, the administration learned that the Mars trip would be massively expensive and of dubious benefit, and the idea was greeted with skepticism by the GOP base, so it pretty much let the whole thing drop. Whatever. Mars wasn't the point. The point was to give Bush something he could announce to lift our national spirits.

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