President Bush and his team "are devising plans to salvage the remainder of his presidency by applying the lessons of past two-term chief executives and refocusing attention on the president's larger economic and foreign policy goals," the Washington Post reports.
"To deal with what they consider the darkest days of the Bush presidency, White House advisers have developed a twofold strategy -- confront head-on problems such as the Iraq death toll, while shifting attention to other areas such as conservative economic policies."
The strategy is based on "clues from the playbooks of former presidents Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, both of whom weathered second-term scandals."