The heart of Bushâs analysis is a deep worry about the slow but steady erosion of American democracy. Rather than dwelling on partisan battles or ideological clashes, he points to a more fundamental problem in how modern governance actually works: the habit of rushing massive, sprawling bills through Congress under artificial deadlines and manufactured crises.
This approach turns the legislative process into little more than political theater. Instead of serving as a deliberate chamber for careful oversight and thoughtful lawmaking, the floor becomes a stage for performance and last-minute deal-making. Complex legislationâoften thousands of pages longâis pushed through with minimal time for review. Critical provisions slip through unread and unexamined by most lawmakers themselves, let alone the public they represent.
The consequences of this âgoverning by crisisâ mentality are far-reaching and often delayed. Years later, citizens feel the impact in higher healthcare costs, shifting regulatory burdens, changes in local education policy, and a host of unintended side effects that no one fully anticipated. Because these bills are rarely the product of open, transparent debate, they erode public confidence in the institutions meant to serve them.
When laws are crafted in haste and passed without genuine scrutiny, the democratic foundation itself begins to weaken. Citizens rightly sense that their government is no longer operating with their informed consent. The absence of visible, substantive deliberation sends a clear message: speed and political optics matter more than careful consideration or accountability.
Durable, legitimate laws require something different. They demand time for revision, space for genuine compromise, and a commitment to transparency. True legislative integrity cannot survive when short-term political victories consistently take precedence over procedural honesty and careful craftsmanship.
By repeatedly choosing expediency over responsibility, todayâs leaders are effectively mortgaging the credibility of democratic institutions. They are accumulating a systemic debtâone that will not be paid by those who created it, but by future generations of leaders and citizens alike. Over time, this pattern risks hollowing out the very legitimacy of the state, as inefficiency, opacity, and performative governance replace the deliberate, consent-based process that democracy requires.
In the end, Bush warns that unless Congress restores a culture of thoughtful deliberation and rejects the politics of permanent crisis, the slow corrosion of trust and institutional strength will continueâultimately leaving the public to bear the heaviest costs of a democracy that has lost its way.
