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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bush breaks ground on library

Center set to open in 2013 with museum, policy institute

Former President George W. Bush, right, speaks with his wife, Laura, by his side during the groundbreaking for his presidential library  Tuesday.  (Associated Press)
Lori Stahl And Tom Benning Dallas Morning News

DALLAS – Former President George W. Bush basked in the glow of a friendly audience Tuesday as former Vice President Dick Cheney and others praised his legacy during a groundbreaking ceremony at the site of his future library in Dallas.

Cheney said public sentiment is already starting to shift on Bush’s eight years in the White House.

“When times have been tough and the critics have been loud, you’ve always said you had faith in history’s judgment, and history is beginning to come around,” Cheney told Bush during an hourlong program at Southern Methodist University on Tuesday morning.

The library complex is to open in 2013. It will include a museum, a library and a policy institute. Officials expect the 225,000-square-foot Texas limestone and red brick building to draw up to 250,000 visitors annually.

Bush thanked Cheney for coming to the ceremony and said he was the “right pick” for his running mate 10 years ago. But Bush, who has given many interviews during the past week while promoting his new memoir, continued to avoid speculating about his legacy.

“I believe that the ultimate responsibility of a leader is to not do what is easy or popular, but to do what is necessary and right,” Bush told the invitation-only audience of about 3,000 people, who gathered in a giant tent for the ceremony.

The former president also made a point of not criticizing President Barack Obama, saying, “The decisions of governing are on another person’s desk, and he does not deserve criticism from me.”

But Cheney, who spoke before Bush, drew laughs with a jab at Obama when he said the Bush library “will be the only shovel-ready project in America” – an apparent reference to the term used by Obama to describe projects funded through his economic stimulus program.