"U.S. President George W. Bush (R) rolls up his sleeves as he is introduced by speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Rep. Dennis Hastert (R-IL) at the Caterpillar-Aurora Facility in Montgomery, Illinois, August 10, 2005. REUTERS/Jason Reed"
http://news.cincypost.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050812/EDIT/508120320/1003During the last two years of his presidency, LBJ was losing much of the political advantage he had gained for domestic accomplishments that have had enormous impact on the lives of Americans, including Medicare and Medicaid, landmark civil-rights legislation, the economic opportunity act and other successful initiatives after winning a landslide election in 1964. The nation's preoccupation with the disaster that was Vietnam and the radicalization of American youth shoved every other Johnson milestone to the rear, where they remain to this day.
Johnson's decision to quit rather than face humiliating defeat in 1968 came after political advisers reported that voters in key primary states wanted nothing more to do with him. He was devastated, left only with hope for the one thing all outgoing presidents desire - a favorable place in history. But history's treatment of Johnson, who by the end of his tenure was practically a prisoner in the White House, has been far less kind than that of John Kennedy, his predecessor whose policies produced the conflict and whose tragically abbreviated presidency included none of Johnson's domestic achievements. In fact, in many instances historians either downplayed Johnson's contributions or vilified him beyond what normally could be expected of even a president during an unpopular war.
That Bush faces the same sort of assessment unless there is some major break in the Iraq situation is evident in the new surveys that show his approval rating on the war and its conduct plummeting to below 40 percent. His overall approval has declined to 42 percent, the lowest of his presidency. Those numbers could spell real trouble for Republicans in next year's congressional elections, and if the killing of U.S. troops by fanatical insurgents continues at its current pace into the presidential-election season, the GOP's chances of holding onto the White House in 2008 could be slim to none.
Present are the same elements that turned Johnson's presidency from the heights of positive to the depths of negative - false assumptions that led to disastrous consequences. The decision to invade Iraq was based on the erroneous belief that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction and was likely to use them - just as the Vietnam War was based on the similarly erroneous domino theory.