| Thursday, September 22, 2005 |
| The man who fell to Earth |
If this were September 2001, 2002 or even 2003, could you imagine -- in your wildest imagination -- a headline like this, even in the National Enquirer?
BUSH'S BOOZE CRISIS
By JENNIFER LUCE and DON GENTILE
Faced with the biggest crisis of his political life, President Bush has hit the bottle again, The National Enquirer can reveal.
Bush, who said he quit drinking the morning after his 40th birthday, has started boozing amid the Katrina catastrophe.
Family sources have told how the 59-year-old president was caught by First Lady Laura downing a shot of booze at their family ranch in Crawford, Texas, when he learned of the hurricane disaster.
His worried wife yelled at him: "Stop, George."
Following the shocking incident, disclosed here for the first time, Laura privately warned her husband against "falling off the wagon" and vowed to travel with him more often so that she can keep an eye on Dubya, the sources add.
"When the levees broke in New Orleans, it apparently made him reach for a shot," said one insider. "He poured himself a Texas-sized shot of straight whiskey and tossed it back. The First Lady was shocked and shouted: "Stop George!"
"Laura gave him an ultimatum before, 'It's Jim Beam or me.' She doesn't want to replay that nightmare — especially now when it's such tough going for her husband."
Bush is under the worst pressure of his two terms in office and his popularity is near an all-time low. The handling of the Katrina crisis and troop losses in Iraq have fueled public discontent and pushed Bush back to drink.
A Washington source said: "The sad fact is that he has been sneaking drinks for weeks now. Laura may have only just caught him — but the word is his drinking has been going on for a while in the capital. He's been in a pressure cooker for months.
"The war in Iraq, the loss of American lives, has deeply affected him. He takes every soldier's life personally. It has left him emotionally drained.
The result is he's taking drinks here and there, likely in private, to cope. "And now with the worst domestic crisis in his administration over Katrina, you pray his drinking doesn't go out of control."
Another source said: "I'm only surprised to hear that he hadn't taken a shot sooner. Before Katrina, he was at his wit's end. I've known him for years. He's been a good ol' Texas boy forever. George had a drinking problem for years that most professionals would say needed therapy. He doesn't believe in it [therapy], he never got it. He drank his way through his youth, through college and well into his thirties. Everyone's drinking around him."
Another source said: "A family member told me they fear George is 'falling apart.' The First Lady has been assigned the job of gatekeeper." Bush's history of drinking dates back to his youth. Speaking of his time as a young man in the National Guard, he has said: "One thing I remember, and I'm most proud of, is my drinking and partying. Those were the days my friends. Those were the good old days!" Here's the rest you horrible gossip hounds...
Now whether or not you buy this story obviously depends on your feelings about George W. Bush. Consider the source ... this is the Enquirer, after all, although N.E. was the same outfit that broke the Rush Limbaugh drugs story, which turned out to be true. (They bipartisan tabloid also snagged many a Lewinski scoop during the Clinton years).
As to whether the story is plausible, remember this little nugget from the July 28, 2004 edition of Capitol Hill Blue?
Bush Taking Anti-Depressants to Control Mood Swings ... and of course, there's the matter of this pesky 1992 wedding video...
The Enquirer's deputy editor told Ed Schultz' stand-in host (Colorado's Jay Marvin) today that the story was double-sourced, and even said a "major media outlet" was currently working on the same story. Hm...
At the end of the day what's most remarkable here is not the story itself, or the inevitable glee it's producing on the left (or the grumbling on the right) -- it's the fact that just four years ago, this president was so untouchable, even Jay Leno wouldn't make fun of him. He was considered so sacrosanct, Saturday Night Live made jokes about his global badassness (is that a word) but not about him. News anchors led every sentence concerning him with "the extremely popular president..." -- even as his approval rating descended to the mortal 50 percent level. Now, we're back to the George W. Bush of the 2000 campaign -- he's again the butt of drunkard jokes.
This story illustrates just how far off the 9/11 pedestal Mr. Bush has fallen. That first step must have been a doozy.
Tags: politics, News, Bush, hurricane katrina |
posted by JReid @ 7:48 PM   |
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