Possible Bush successors are lining up
Dominating all is Iraq and how it turns out. Saddam Hussein's villainy will likely be in the headlines anew as his trial enters a new phase. There are intriguing hints about political overtures from some terrorist groups to the interim government. An election two weeks hence will determine the makeup of a new parliament. All these events could have a significant bearing on the future of Iraq.
Aside from Iraq, historians looking at the president's foreign policy record will decide how well he handled relations with Iran and North Korea in the last years of his term, as well as a possible regime change in Cuba, and a possible challenge from Venezuela's Hugo Chavez.
At home the president will take on significant problems like illegal immigration and Social Security reform.
So it is much too early to assess his legacy. But not too early for the possible successor candidates, both Democratic and Republican, to be dreaming dreams about moving into the White House.
On the Republican side, Sen. John McCain has been a stalwart supporter of President Bush's hold-the-line-and-don't-quit position on Iraq, even arguing for committing more American troops. But he is independent and outspoken on a number of other issues and is not beloved by all members of his party. However, as a prisoner of war who suffered torture at the hands of the North Vietnamese, he has great credibility and standing with many Americans.
Rudy Giuliani, mayor of New York at the time of the 9/11 attacks, earned the respect of many Americans for his take-charge stance at that time, rallying his city's police and firefighters and bolstering the courage of New Yorkers at a critical point in the city's history. But that was four years ago; there are three more years to go before the presidential election, and there is a question as to whether the Giuliani legend would still be as bright in 2008.



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