President of the U.S., 1989-1993; Former Republican Rep. (TX)
Bush-Clinton Katrina Fund for New Orleans relief
New Orleans to provide young people with a way to help the city rebuild.
In the lower Ninth Ward, which was virtually wiped out by Katrina, volunteers turned the first new homes over to residents. The project was organized by ACORN
When Hurricane Katrina ravaged the Gulf Coast, President George W. Bush asked his father and me to help raise private funds to supplement the government's efforts.
The Bush-Clinton Katrina Fund also helped create a new City Year branch
Community Organizations for Reform Now), which also provided the financing with support from a California bank.
ACORN works to empower low- and moderate-income people through the grassroots activism of more than 200,000 members in one hundred communities all over America.
With Clinton, raised $14M for Asian tsunami reconstructio
Perhaps the most meaningful new-beginnings project I've ever participated in was the fundraising efforts with former President George H. W. Bush for the victims of the tsunami in southern Asia.
We tried to raise the overall level of
America and put together a relatively small fund of about $1.4 million, out of which we financed the reconstruction of schools, health facilities, fishing boats, and other economic restoration efforts, and scholarships for students from
Indonesia, by far the hardest-hit area, to study at Texas A&M and the University of Arkansas.
George and I got so excited by our tsunami work that we both wound up working on disasters two more years for
U.N. secretary general Kofi Annan. I became the U.N. envoy for the tsunami restoration efforts; George did the same thing in Pakistan after the earthquake there.
Bush took a much stronger stance on environmental protection than [Reagan]. Bush took note of environmental issues and attempted to find a true place for them in his administration. As a life-long hunter, fisherman, and outdoorsman, Bush knew
the importance of protecting America's natural resources. Both the Bush campaign and the Bush presidency proved that the political importance of the environmental movement was not dead within the Republican Party.
Source: Cameron Lynch in W&M Env. Law Review, vol. 26 #1, p.223-224
, Jan 1, 2001
1988: Cited Gov. Dukakis' failure to clean up Boston Harbor
The 1988 Bush presidential campaign managed to turn the environmental issue around on Gov. Michael Dukakis during the 1988 cycle. Citing Dukakis' failure to protect Boston Harbor from pollution, Bush managed to establish himself as a more concerned
environmentalist, as well as a candidate that would pursue sound environmental issues while in office.
When he arrived at the White House, Bush staked out aggressive policies in a number of environmental areas, including phasing out chlorofluorocarbons
by the end of the century, protecting and developing clean air, and promoting a stable plan to initiate rapid reforestation of America's forest preserves. Bush appeared to champion environmental causes for the causes themselves, whereas previous
Republican administrations appeared to have occasionally favored cost-benefit analysis.
Bush achieved some noted environmental successes by amending the Clean Air Act with the Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 and the Oil Pollution Acts.
1991: Rejected requiring 25% recycling of incinerator waste
In Bush's major regulatory decision, one of the President's specially established environmental councils upheld Office of Information and Regulatory Affair's disapproval of a new source performance standard for incinerators that required recycling of
25% of waste streams. This decision proved specifically problematic, as the EPA had spent years developing this initiative and the Reagan OMB had previously cleared the policy. This decision negated some of the positive work
Bush had done in the environmental areas & was interpreted as a resurgence of the kind of "anti-regulatory fervor that prevailed in the early days of the Reagan administration." Bush responded to these criticisms with frustration that bordered on anger.
Additionally, Bush claimed that his battle with the environmental groups was one that he could never win because they were never willing to acknowledge any of his initiatives as successes.
Onerous environmental regulation will cause job loss
BUSH: [to Clinton]: One mistake [Clinton] has made is fuel efficiency standards at 40 to 45 miles a gallon will throw auto workers out of work.
There's a pattern here of appealing to the auto workers and then trying to appeal to the spotted owl crowds or the extremes in the environmental movement.
CLINTON: Let's talk about fuel efficiency standards. They are now 27.5 miles per gallon per automobile fleet. We ought to have a goal of raising the fuel efficiency standards to 40 miles a gallon.
We ought to have incentives to do it. It is good for America to improve fuel efficiency. We also ought to convert more vehicles to compressed natural gas. That's another way to improve the environment.
Look for common ground: economic growth & clean environment
I spoke the other day about wanting to broaden the consensus for defense, but that's not the only consensus that I would like to broaden. I want to broaden the consensus for a clean environment, and I believe doing that requires finding ways
the environment without stifling the economy. During the campaign I noted that environmental action has too often been marked by confrontation among competing interests. Well, the fact is that more often than not there is common ground if the
will make an effort to find it. Our great common desire is a better life for all Americans. And I believe that economic growth and a clean environment are both part of what all Americans understand a better life to mean. I also believe that t
people are impatient for results. They won't accept excuses anymore. And they won't accept finger pointing. They want us to get all the sides together and find a way to achieve both their goals