Former President George W. Bush appeared Tuesday morning on NBC’s Today show for a fawning interview with co-host Hoda Kotb. And as with other mainstream media outlets that have allowed former Republican leaders to launder their reputations through their platforms, Kotb also allowed Bush to cast himself as a leader from a different political era before the rise of Donald Trump — without holding him accountable for just how much he did to build up the worst excesses of right-wing politics.
On its show website, NBC News is using the interview to play up Bush’s apparent sentimentality for political civility and cross-party friendships. And Politico covered the interview by focusing on Bush’s criticism of the modern Republican Party as “isolationist, protectionist, and to a certain extent, nativist.” But both outlets failed to give context to readers about the reality of the Bush-era GOP.
For example, in 2003, House Republicans changed the name of french fries on the cafeteria menu to “freedom fries” as a rebuke of France for not joining in the Iraq War, and country music stars the Dixie Chicks (since renamed simply The Chicks) faced a wave of right-wing cancel culture after they spoke against Bush and the war. And then in 2004, Bush made banning same-sex marriage a key wedge issue in the presidential election.
But what really crystalized all this hypocrisy was when Kotb asked Bush for his reaction to this year’s January 6 insurrection, when a mob supporting then-President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol after being inflamed for months by conspiracy theories about voter fraud in the 2020 election.