A Talk with George W. and Laura Bush in the White House (November/December 2004 | Volume: 55, Issue: 6)

A Talk with George W. and Laura Bush in the White House

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Authors: Carl Sferrazza Anthony

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

Historic Theme:

Subject:

November/December 2004 | Volume 55, Issue 6

During the years I’ve lived in Washington, D.C., and worked as a historian there, I’ve been privileged to visit the West Wing of the White House many times. Every administration’s West Wing reflects a different air, often dictated by the events of the moment. On May 13, 2004, I went there to interview President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush in the midst of the Iraq War, just weeks before the country was to be turned over to its national governing council. The waiting room and hallways of the West Wing seemed to buzz with activity in a strangely hushed, expectant atmosphere. As I waited in a vestibule outside the Oval Office with the First Lady’s press secretary, Gordon Johndroe, the door to the most famous room in America suddenly opened and there stood Laura Bush, offering a warm welcome and a wide grin. The president was finishing up a conversation with a departing aide, and then he gave me a hearty handshake and pat on the back. We immediately began the interview, joined by his press secretary, Scott McClellan.

Throughout our conversation, I was struck by just how intensely the president felt about American history and the records of his predecessors. He was quick to point out that it had been a high school history teacher who had sparked his interest, and Mrs. Bush remarked that he had majored in history at Yale. While he was firm on his reasons for pursuing the war, he emphasized that history would be the real judge. He spoke so passionately, and at such length, that I momentarily feared, wrongly as it turned out, that Mrs. Bush would not be able to respond as fully as she might have wished. (Curiously, this was also the case when I interviewed the Clintons for American Heritage a decade ago on the magazine’s 40th anniversary. Presidents do seem to know and enjoy history.) Mrs. Bush’s knowledge of history and her adoption of such preservation projects as “Save Our History” are more widely known, but it was a happy surprise to learn that a childhood in which the old hardback American Heritage magazines were read and cherished may have prompted her interest.

As we neared the end of our talk, any fears I had of running over the allotted time were allayed by the engrossed president, and it was Mrs. Bush who finally explained that she had to dash out of the West Wing to get to another interview. The president smiled and quipped that he wanted to “let the record state” that, if it were up to him, he would have liked to continue our discussion. Here is our conversation:

As you know, this discussion is taking place on the eve of the 50th anniversary of American Heritage magazine. And the White House still looks very much the way it looked back then, when Harry Truman was in office. That’s more than a half-century’s