Updated: Monday, 10 Nov 2008, 3:47 PM EST
Published : Thursday, 06 Nov 2008, 11:57 AM EST
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush and Democratic successor Barack Obama will have
their first meeting about Iraq, the financial meltdown and the
future of the country on Monday as the transformation of the White
House accelerates.
Bush, heading home to Texas soon after two terms in office,
directed employees Thursday to ensure a peaceful transfer of power.
"We face economic challenges that will not pause to let a new
president settle in," Bush told a gathering of hundreds of
employees from the presidential bureaucracy. "This will also be
America's first wartime presidential transition in four decades.
We're in a struggle against violent extremists determined to attack
us, and they would like nothing more than to exploit this period of
change to harm the American people."
The president's comments, under a gray sky on the South Lawn,
also had the feel of an early goodbye with 75 days left in office.
He stood with his Cabinet, the first lady, and his vice president
and his wife, and he grew emotional by the end. His wife, Laura,
leaned in to give him a hug.
The White House signaled that after months of staying out of
the politics of the 2008 election - often enduring a pummeling from
Obama - it would soon start speaking up to defend Bush's record on
education, energy, the economy and other issues. The focus will be
a natural turn to Bush's legacy.
President-elect Obama and his wife, Michelle, will visit the
White House on Monday at Bush's invitation, aides to Obama said.
Meanwhile, the shift from one White House to the next is
fully under way, with Bush setting a serious tone and expectations
for his staff.
The Bush administration has already arranged security
clearances for key Obama transition staffers and is providing
working space and policy briefings as well. Career employees, who
keep their jobs even when administrations change, have taken on
extra work to prevent any disruption in essential services.
"Taken together, these measures represent an unprecedented
effort to ensure that the executive branch is prepared to fulfill
its responsibilities at all times," Bush said.
"We must keep our attention on the task at hand, because the
American people expect no less," Bush directed the executive
employees.
Officials at the Department of Homeland Security caution that
the U.S. is in a heightened state of alert against terrorism. The
fear is that enemies could exploit the transition period to test
the country's defenses, as Bush himself warned. No specific threat
has been presented to the public.
Preparation for the complex transfer of power has quietly
been unfolding for about a year. It accelerated with the landslide
election on Tuesday of Obama, the Democratic senator from Illinois.
Obama on Thursday was receiving the first of what will become
regular briefings on highly classified information from top
intelligence officials.
World leaders are seeking out Obama. White House press
secretary Dana Perino said Bush's government is making sure those
calls get through.
Bush also suggested there will be no tolerance of pranks
during the transition.
When he took office in 2001, many aides found their computer
keyboards were missing the W key - a nod to the middle initial in
George W. Bush. Staff members of outgoing President Bill Clinton
were suspected and criticized for acting immaturely.
Bush told the big gathering of employees on Thursday: "I know
that you will continue to conduct yourselves with the decency and
professionalism you have shown throughout my time in office."
During the campaign, Obama relentlessly blistered the Bush
administration for what he called failed, tired policies that have
harmed the country. The White House has sought to make clear that
politics will not affect the transition in any way.
The transition involves a delicate dance, in which the White
House keeps the president-elect in the loop, and even solicits his
input, while decisions still remain solely Bush's to make.
Bush sounded wistful as he looked out at a lot of familiar
faces, including some people he's seen at work each day for nearly
eight years.
The president recalled that before his inauguration, he said
that he and his wife would never quite settle in Washington.
"While the honor is great," Bush said, "the work is
temporary."
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