Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Bush faces tough challenges in final 100 days

His last act will be overseeing the $700 billion financial bailout

Image: George W. Bush
"It looks like I'm going to have a lot of work to do between today and when the new president takes office," Bush said this past week.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP file
INTERACTIVE
Who will be in Obama's new Cabinet?
Who's in line to be the next secretary of state? A look at some of the high-profile departmental vacancies — and who's on the shortlist to fill them.
Video: White House  
  
Columnist: Obama 'needs to find his inner FDR'
Nov. 18: Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen says in light of our tough economic times, Barack Obama needs to channel Franklin Roosevelt's ability to lift the country's spirits during the Great Depression.

Video
  Looking back at the historic race
Nov. 5: NBC News offers a retrospective of the historic 2008 race for the White House.

Nightly News

  Presidential legacies
Truman Laughing
Getty Images
  Harry S. Truman
From the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the end of World War II to the beginning of the cold war.
AP
  John F. Kennedy
The Cuban missle crisis, civil rights and Vietnam dominated his short presidency.
President Richard Nixon meets with Elvis Presley
Getty Images
  Richard Nixon
Astronauts walk on the moon, shootings at Kent State, meetings with Brezhnev and the Watergate scandal.
Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher
UPI via Getty Images
  Ronald Reagan
Cold war, war on drugs, the Challenger disaster, Beirut and Berlin bombings and Iran-Contra scandal.
photo dated 17 March 1992 in Chicago shows Democra
AFP - Getty Images
  Bill Clinton
Welfare reform, the Brady bill, Somalia, Kosovo, budget surplus and the scandals that plagued him.
Image: George W. Bush campaigning in 2000
AFP/Getty Images
  George W. Bush
A contested election, Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, war in Iraq, hurricane Katrina, and economic crisis.
updated 6:50 a.m. ET Oct. 12, 2008

WASHINGTON - So how will it end?

President George W. Bush is down to his final 100 days in office as of Sunday. Don't expect a quiet fade into the Texas night.

The bleakest economic downturn in decades has changed the dynamic drastically, keeping Bush and his financial team in activist mode to the end.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

While the powerful heads of the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve keep making radical moves, no one elected them. Bush is the one charged with reassuring the nation that an abysmal economic period will give way to better days, even if he is long gone from Washington by the time that happens.

The president will keep speaking about the economy, calling world leaders about it, meeting with business owners, perhaps attending an overseas summit. His final act will be overseeing the $700 billion buyout of devalued assets from banks, in hopes that credit will start flowing to an anxious, weary country.

"It looks like I'm going to have a lot of work to do between today and when the new president takes office," Bush said this past week.

‘Economy will emerge stronger’
The scope of the credit crisis is so vast that it will likely overshadow anything else Bush does before he leaves office on Jan. 20.

"We will stand together in addressing this threat to our prosperity. We will do what it takes to resolve this crisis. And the world's economy will emerge stronger as a result," the president said Saturday in the Rose Garden after meeting with finance ministers from the world's economic powers.

People are panicked about their retirement accounts and the markets are reeling. Behind the daily drumbeat of bleak economic news, Bush leaves behind a national debt that has soared from less than $6 trillion when he took office to more than $10 trillion now. That staggering bill will fall on future generations to pay.

Beyond the financial mess, there is a daunting list of unfinished items for a president who has a history of making bold promises. But hope and time are diminishing.

Before his presidency ended, Bush wanted a Mideast peace deal built around the outlines of Palestinian state. That is unlikely. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert resigned in a corruption scandal, negotiations stalled and the same issues that have divided the parties for decades seem as irreconcilable as ever.

The ambitious priority of pushing an international effort to rid North Korea of its nuclear arms has made late progress, but the communist country has a spotty record of following through on its pledges. After North Korea relented on nuclear inspection demands, the U.S. on Saturday erased the North from a terrorism blacklist.

Bush's diplomats acknowledge the challenge of verifying any claims from what one official calls "the most secret and opaque regime in the entire world."

Perhaps most notably, the United States and Iraq still are without an agreement governing the presence of U.S. forces after Dec. 31, when the U.N. mandate runs out. The two sides are hung up over legal jurisdiction for U.S. troops and contractors, and a timeline for U.S. withdrawal.


Sponsored links

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Find a business to start

Try for Free

Search Jobs

Find Your Dream Home

$7 trades, no fee IRAs

Find your next car