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Gegli news - These words changed George H.W. Bush's presidency - 12/5/2018 1:19:04 AM 1:19:04 AM 

The Republicans never saw him, the Democrats were in the best interest. But the next year, the former president, seemed to think that he had not made a mistake.

 This was the most famous deal in modern political history.

George H.W. On August 18, 1988, Bush built it at Superdome, New Orleans. He was there to accept Republican presidential candidates and launch his campaign against Democrat Michael Duke.
"My opponent will not ban the increase, but I will," Bush said. "And my congress is raising taxes, and I say" no "and they push, and I say," no "and they push again, and I say to them:" Reading the blemish: no New Tax! "
With Harry's dirty guy, Bush hoped to stay once and for all two of the biggest doubts he had about his candidacy. On the right, there was deep skepticism about his commitment to the conservative cause; among the general public, a striking visual problem remained - the "pressed factor," as Newsweek coverage was memorable several months ago.
In the short term, it became brilliant.
The tax-free tax line destroyed the house in New Orleans, and the Bush team was trying to reduce the Ducats to a caricature of liberal disability (however, the Democrats were deceived, the ability to help themselves from Dukakis). In November, Bush made 40 states and 426 polls - the coast-to-coast dominance of which no Republican nominee has approached.
But two years later, President Bush found himself in a fund unit. The economic recovery in the Reagan years declined, the interest rate climbed, and the annual budget deficit, which had risen sharply over the past decade, exploded. As Bush predicted in his speech, Congress, with its largely democratic majority, urged him to raise taxes. But there was no news of the weather. Instead, Bush said he would be in demand.
It began as a budget summit, months of talks between the White House and the congressional leaders on both sides. In general, this was, in general, the Bush leadership's generation of compromise against the confrontation.
The big deal was held in September of 1990 in Rose Garden: Democrats receive an increase in gas taxes and other excise taxes, and the Republicans include reduced costs, including a piece of Medicare - a big deal Two-sidedly apparently reducing the budget deficit and the sustainable economy.
"Sometimes," Bush said, "it's not just the way you want it, and this is for me at the same time, and I expect this time to stand for everyone here."
Republican High Democrat Congolese, Senate Minority Leader, Bob Dol and minority minority leader Robert Michel, were standing at the ceremony with Bush. But others in the Communist Party were noticed more than what Bush had ever noticed, as it stands as a betrayal by the president - not only from his promise, but also from everything his party has to stand up to.
The Republican Party had preferred to prefer the budget from the old days, even if it meant more taxes, but the revolution of Ronald Reagan sparked all this. In the 1980 election campaign, Reagan accepted a new concept of supply economics, claiming that tax cuts could, by freeing up economic growth, actually generate more government revenue.
The idea of ​​the "Voodoo economy" was raised by Reagan's main rival in the 80-year-old GOP, which was on average George W. Bush's nominee, a strong demonstration in his early, VP position on Reagan's ticket. Bush spent his past eight years as a Reagan loyalist and building peace with the conservative faction of peace, but the right remained - so "read my lips!" Oath - Commitment.
By breaking this promise, Bush believed that all these suspicions were old. In a different period, this may not matter, with the White House joint forces, Dowl and Michelle, who dominate GOP members. But in 1990, there was a drainage force: Newt Gingrich, who recently claimed to be No. 2 in the House of Representatives leadership. To Gingrich, the tax wanted Ginrich's decision to see Americans between parties when he decided to separate the Republicans from the Democrats - a "conservative oppressive society" against the "liberal welfare state".
After that, Bush knew there was a full rebellion, and when the parliament voted on October 5th, the majority of the Republicans joined Gingrich and lost their president. The deal was dead and the final was not even close. It was a blow to Bush, a humiliating man, who then cut off a new deal, this time even more demanding Democrats. Finally, with Gingrich and many of the GOP's still in the hand, the package was accepted and Bush signed it.
This was a turning point in many ways. For Bush, it helped a major challenge to Pat Buchanan in 1992, which shook the world of the political world with a strong show in New Hampshire. After the boycott, Bush tried to refuse to raise his taxes. He said, "Listen, if I did it, I would not do it for many reasons, including political reasons.
Bush has survived Buchenhan's challenge, but when he sought to violate his general election, Bill Clinton, as another financial liberal, and only forced, the counterfeit actually wrote himself. Clinton said, "He is the one who, after telling him, does not want to raise taxes on the middle class."
Bush's calculation was that the deal stabilized the economy, and thus re-elected him. But recovery in the early 1990s was a severe recession, and unemployment was only a few months before the election day in 1992.
"It's stupid economy," known as the survival of Clinton's struggles, and when Bush came in, even the Republicans who stood with him in the tax deal were convinced that this policy was not just bad policy, but also bad policy.
Bush's political blockade in the GOP circles has been gained as a credible Gingrich approach. Clinton did not have a two-way deal when Clinton tried to raise her taxes to reduce the budget deficit in 1993. Each Republican voted in the House and Senate, but the White House advises Vice President Al Gore with a Senate vote.
The Republicans accused Clinton of imposing the highest tax increases in history, and in 1994 an election fatwool made Gingrich a spokesman for the House of Representatives. The uniform opposition to tax increases has been the main constituent of the GOP.
Brutally, as the economy flourished in the mid-1990s, tax rates helped raise income levels higher than in the 1990s and 1993s. By 1998, the country had remained for the first time in decades, and the actual removal of debt actually seemed to be, but the explosion of costs after 9/11 changed this path.
In 2014, when Bush was close to 90, John F. Kennedy's library added to his courage to "place the country in front of political and political events" when he raised taxes. Bush accepted the library and thanked the book "To recall what our team tried to do, it's been a few years ago."
He does not say this, but it seemed that he no longer thought he was wrong - even if he had an article in faith in his party.


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