Bush, following and flip-flopping, takes a stand on gas prices
It's the sort of thing that happens when your approval rating starts flirting with 30 percent: A few paragraphs into a story on your plan to combat high gas prices, the New York Times reveals that you announced the plan after taking a 14-car motorcade across town and past an Exxon station where the cheapest gas was going for $3.29 a gallon.
George W. Bush came out fighting on gas prices today, but the man once hailed as a strong leader came across as a follower instead. Two weeks ago, Senate Democrats asked Bush to join them in supporting legislation aimed at preventing and prosecuting price gouging in the energy markets. After seeing the polls and hearing complaints from constituents during their spring break, Republicans in the House and Senate returned to Washington Monday and immediately asked Bush to order the attorney general and the Federal Trade Commission to open investigations into price-gouging allegations.
The president finally took up the call today, saying that he was directing the Department of Justice to work with the FTC and the Energy Department to investigate any "manipulation or cheating related to the current gasoline prices." But even as he demanded that oil companies treat American consumers fairly, he took steps to make it easier for them to profit by temporarily suspending certain environmental regulations.
http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/