If all goes as planned, President Bush next week will
break Ronald Reagan’s all-time high for most presidential vacation days.
According to the
Washington Post, with three and a half years left in his second term, Bush had already spent 319 days in Crawford -– almost 20% of his time in office -- upon arriving at the so-called Western White House last week. Reagan, another president famous for his ranching retreats, spent 335 days on vacation spread across eight years.
So, assuming he doesn't cut his vacation short, Bush will break Reagan's record on Aug. 19.
This probably is not as big a record as say, breaking Hank Aaron's all-time home run record. And it's certainly not as newsworthy as say, bringing Osama bin Laden to justice.
Still, the White House is trying to spin the vacation as a busy time for the president. Why? In a recent article,
The Houston Chronicle offered this insight: "
White House officials are touchy about criticism of Bush's traditional August break, because most Americans don't get five weeks of vacation a year, nor do they have access to Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland where Bush sometimes spends weekends. So they call the ranch the Western White House."
***
Why the long vacation? The Guardian
speculates that it's because of the continued drumbeat from Democrats regarding the ongoing investigation into White House leaks of CIA operative Valerie Plame's name or identity. That investigation has apparently centered on senior White House officials Karl Rove -- dubbed "Bush's Brain" -- and Lewis "Scooter" Libby.
And this is an exceptionally long vacation.
The Guardian reports that Bush's five-week vacation may be the longest retreat in at least 36 years. By comparison, the president spent 27 days at his ranch in August 2001, another 27 days in August 2002, and 29 days in August 2003, and 14 days in August 2004.
***
This article first appeared at
Journalists Against Bush's B.S.