Gail Collins:
Thanksgiving is next week, and President Bush could make it a really special holiday by resigning.
The idea is to allow Obama to start ruling as soon as possible. According to Collins, Cheney would have to resign, making Pelosi the president - she'd "obviously" defer to Obama, and the Obama administration would be underway.
Brian Beutler has an even more convoluted succession plan: Rice resigns, Bush appoints Obama as SoS. Bush resigns and Cheney resigns and - voila! - Obama is president!
This, of course, is a little far fetched, to say the least. And maybe not even a good idea. First, Bush probably doesn't want to go - as seen recently, the administration wants to get a lot accomplished before it vacates the White House, including rolling back environmental and economic regulations. Without real political pressure from Congress and the public in the form of impeachment, the administration certainly feels no rush to leave. And does anyone believe Bush agrees with the rest of us, that he's an incompetent who does more harm than good in office? Seems to me, he still thinks his "genius" is misunderstood.
Then there are the little awkward details that make the plan unlikely. As Beutler points out, Pelosi would have to resign as Speaker of the House to become president - powerless, and for a single month. Not likely to happen. Beutler's plan has a little hitch, too: if Obama ascended to the presidency through succession as SoS, wouldn't the next month count as a "term," and prohibit him from running again in 2012?
And, of course, there's the little matter of the constitution and the normal transfer of power from one government to another. Sure, this election was extraordinary, there are a number of crises to consider, and the vast majority of the electorate prefers Obama over Bush...but without any clear reason to jerryrig the transfer, it seems like we'd better off following the normal chain of events, especially if what we're trying to do is separate ourselves from the jerryrigging of rules that the present administration is famous for.
Patience, folks. We'll get our turn soon enough. |