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“We saw it coming,” Bush said, referring to the gridlock and instability that now define much of the legislative process. His concern was not about a single policy or party, but about a system that routinely sacrifices scrutiny for speed. When legislation stretches into thousands of pages and is negotiated overnight, he argued, it becomes nearly impossible for lawmakers—or the public—to fully understand what is being passed in their name.
Bush described these rushed measures as carrying “hidden risks.” These are provisions buried deep in dense legal language, added late in negotiations, and passed before anyone outside a small circle has time to analyze their long-term impact. While such measures may solve an immediate political problem, they often create downstream consequences that surface years later, when the original urgency has faded and accountability has blurred.
Drawing on his experience in the executive branch, Bush emphasized that laws passed in haste rarely remain confined to the moment that produced them. Decisions made under pressure can ripple outward into healthcare systems, public services, national security frameworks, and economic policy in ways that are difficult to reverse. When those laws fail or produce unintended harm, it is not lawmakers who absorb the cost, but ordinary people navigating systems that no longer work as promised.
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