http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6846109/President Bush is a politician with large ambitions and few doubts, someone not easily given to mea culpas. But in the run-up to today's inauguration, he has at least hinted at some of the lessons learned in office. From his relations with Democrats in Congress to his approach to the rest of the world, Bush has suggested he will try to strike a different tone -- without abandoning principles or policies.
Balancing those objectives could be one of the biggest challenges in a second term already facing difficult problems. His agenda includes turning Iraq into a success story, repairing relations with other nations, tackling the restructuring of Social Security and the tax code, and revising immigration policy. The question is whether he can aggressively pursue that agenda and still achieve a more accommodating climate here and abroad.
Presidential historian Fred I. Greenstein of Princeton University said that Bush appears to have a greater capacity for self-correction than he likes to advertise and that he has gradually grown more confident in exercising the powers of the presidency while shedding some of what Greenstein called a frat-boy style before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. "I was struck on the campaign with his whole persona and his capacity to project a personality and a style," he said. "I just think he has come to fill that space."
White House senior adviser Karl Rove said of Bush: "The clearest and biggest way is he's grown to have a comfort with exercising the levers available to him. He understands the office better, he's comfortable with it. Second, he now has a series of relationships, internationally with (foreign leaders). He knows them, understands them, he has taken the measure of them in a way you can only do if you're up close. Third, he is more acutely aware that while a president can set an agenda -- and it's vital you do so -- that history has a way of intruding on you. Things happen."