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View Full Version : The Obama Heyday is Over


RobMoney$
09-10-2010, 05:58 PM
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704644404575482122517174884.html?m od=WSJ_Opinion_LEADTop

With so many Democrats running against the president's agenda in the midterm, change will come in the next Congress, regardless of which party is in control.



Barack Obama hit the campaign trail this week to resurrect some of that hopey-changey stuff and to complain that his critics talk about him "like a dog."
Turns out the president wasn't, in fact, referring to his own party.

Voters might be forgiven the confusion. It isn't as if Democrats have been showing Mr. Obama much love. Quite the opposite. Seven weeks from Election Day, the vulnerable wing of the majority has finally found itself a campaign issue: blunt opposition to Mr. Obama and his agenda.

Has it only been 20 months? Candidate Obama swelled into office with an ambitiously liberal plan. He promised his party that his legislative items would be more than policy triumphs; they'd be political triumphs. Stick with me, he said, and we'll get credit for leadership. Voters will come to love this stuff. Polls will improve. I'll campaign in your district.

It was bunk, as many Democrats knew even back then. Witness the threats and bribes necessary to coax a bare majority for every vote. But enough went along. And now that the ambitious Obama experiment in liberal governance is going kaboom, his members—even those who voted with him—are running for cover.

Health care? A total of 279 House and Senate Democrats voted for ObamaCare. Not one is running an ad touting that vote. How can they, given headlines about Medicare cuts and premium hikes? You will, however, find a growing catalogue of ads such as this one from Maryland Rep. Frank Kratovil: "As a career prosecutor, I made decisions on facts, not politics," and that's why "I voted against . . . the health-care bill."

Not to be outdone, Alabama Rep. Bobby Bright's ad explains he voted against "massive government health care." South Dakota's Stephanie Herseth Sandlin boasts she voted against the "trillion-dollar health-care plan." But the prize goes to former Georgia Gov. Roy Barnes, vying to get his old job back: Not only is ObamaCare "financially devastating," it is "the greatest failure, modern failure, of political leadership in my lifetime."

Stimulus? Only a handful of Democrats can be found who will even utter the dreaded "s" word—and those are the ones bragging they voted against it. The rest have developed a curious code involving brief references to "roads" and "bridges." Even the White House is running from the White House. Press Secretary Robert Gibbs crankily lectured the press corps this week that the latest $50 billion Mr. Obama wants to "spur" the economy is absolutely not a "stimulus."

Cap and trade? "I voted against Nancy Pelosi's energy tax on Hoosier families," explains Indiana Rep. Joe Donnelly in an ad, echoed by North Carolina Rep. Mike McIntyre and Pennsylvania Rep. Jason Altmire. And the yes votes are rushing to argue that all they were really voting for was "renewable energy."

Financial regulation? What's that? Most of the country doesn't know, and few Democrats are bothering to explain. They see more mileage in ads putting distance between themselves and the auto bailouts, the president's budget, or the party's cultural reputation. Roy Herron, running in Tennessee, ran an ad describing himself as a "truck-driving, shotgun-shooting, Bible-reading, crime-fighting, family loving country boy." This is not a joke.


As for campaigning, Mr. Obama failed to warn Democrats that—thanks to the agenda he was asking them to pass—by September he'd be upside-down in his approval on most issues, and not much help. Instead of a president to help them, Democrats have found a president to run against. And it isn't George W. Bush.

The White House is now letting it be known that it is miffed that more Democrats aren't running to embrace its new "economic" plan. But as parents are fond of telling their five-year-olds, choices have consequences. This White House could have pivoted to the economy at any point—as many Democrats were begging it to do—but instead doggedly pushed ahead with an unpopular agenda. Many Democrats are no longer listening.

Will the anti-Obama strategy work? In this environment, running away from Mr. Obama certainly beats running to him. Then again, midterms are referendums on a president's agenda, and the country is in a mood to punish Democrats en masse. For those anti-Obama Democrats who do survive, the political lesson will be that there is mileage in telling Mr. Obama no.

This is where today's exodus will really be felt—after the election. The president still has a to-do list. Yet the more this election becomes about the toxicity of his "accomplishments," the less ability Mr. Obama has to command a caucus. Republicans will be hunting for votes to block and reverse, and some liberated Democrats may feel happy to help.

Bill Clinton dealt with the 1994 massacre by moving right and triangulating. It is unclear whether the ideological Mr. Obama has the ability to follow suit. What is clear is that some big changes are now necessary. The Obama heyday is officially over.

Write to kim@wsj.com

Dorothy Wood
09-10-2010, 08:25 PM
I wish she wouldn't have tainted her whole article by invoking Sarah Palin. "hopey-changey"...ugh.


anyway, politicians are politicians, of course they're going to do whatever they can to win. cater to the majority, even if the majority is wrong and/or ignorant.


I scoff in your general direction, rob. nothing definitive enough in that article to declare Obama's "heyday" to be over. :rolleyes: and you can't call something a "heyday" before it's complete.

editorial trash.

yeahwho
09-10-2010, 08:31 PM
That is sort of funny, because Obama has been completely ignored by the republicans since day one and really only has had a "Heyday" when he was roundly criticized or attacked.

When was that Heyday? Because "Hey" I don't remember it.

Kimberly Strassel is a douche waffle.

Documad
09-11-2010, 03:38 AM
I'm not a big Obama fan, and I'm certainly no fan of this Congress, but the idiocy of these political reporters/columnists makes me furious.

The economy is in the shitter through no fault of Obama. I would have made different choices at the tail end of the Bush presidency and during the Obama presidency re how I would have spent money, but I doubt that anything could have fixed the economy. I'm furious that Obama ramped up the nonsense in Afghanistan and that his policy re terrorists is the same as Bush's, but republicans can't jump on that because those are their issues. So they're going to campaign against health care reform? really? I don't know how the chips will ultimately fall on that, but it doesn't start till 2014, so how is it already the greatest failure in anyone's lifetime? Good god, I hate the current congress but it's clear that we're not going to do any better when a bunch of republican knobs sweep in this fall.

Frankly, it would be the best thing in the world for Obama if republicans take one or both houses of congress, because that will give him something to campaign against in 2012. It's not like they have a plan/vision. It's not like they are going to make things better. They have it good now, where they can do nothing and take no responsibility. If they have congress, they have to come up with some kind of agenda. And Obama is fucked if things stay the same. His approval rating has fallen, but it's still higher than congress's and it's higher than the republican party's. He could be like Clinton after his first midterms when the republicans came in and shut down the government. It made Clinton.

Yeah, I don't like Obama much, but there isn't a single republican leader I'd want as president. It's pretty fucking depressing, really.

RobMoney$
09-11-2010, 02:43 PM
I scoff in your general direction, rob. nothing definitive enough in that article to declare Obama's "heyday" to be over. :rolleyes: and you can't call something a "heyday" before it's complete.


I didn't write the title of the article "The Obama Heyday is Over", Kimberly Strassel did. Please feel free to foward your issues with the title to her via email. I included her addy at the bottom of the op.

Just thought it was noteworthy that Dems up for re-election are distancing themselves from Obama's agenda.

It's pretty obvious evidence that America is not impressed with Obama or the Dems performance at all.

Burnout18
09-11-2010, 05:49 PM
It's pretty obvious evidence that America is not impressed with Obama or the Dems performance at all.

yea agreed, im fairly confident the dems will lose both the house and senate this fall.

9.7% unemployment. That hurts.

Documad
09-11-2010, 07:30 PM
In a year this bad, you have to expect that the ruling party will be taken down. It doesn't even matter what the other side is selling.

For me personally, I'm satisfied with my local democrats so I'll be voting for them. The republican options on my ballots are downright scary.

yeahwho
09-11-2010, 08:43 PM
The other side is selling the same thing as the current side, the worlds largest military apparatus with special interest corporate rule. They have the same plan, just less coy and cunning. Give the ruling class more plausible deniability (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plausible_deniability) to continue to destroy the planet while the lawmakers keep shielding themselves from any fallout legally.

Only the other side dumbed it down to something called "tea party" rather than the disney like "hope change" mantra.

We've been bantering on here for how long about our Country and it's become very obvious on this day, 9/11, that Obama is now in the 2nd year of Bush's third term. Yet amazingly enough you read Op/Ed pieces like those pro or con about Obama none of them address the central theme of why we never resolve seemingly obvious problems with our planet, it's environment and the citizens well being.

I'm starting to think as I read the eloquent drivel online that perhaps the investment firm, bank, oil corporation ads on the peripheral of the column just may influence the tone.

Color me cynical but , C'mon if anyone thinks the republicans are going to correct this agenda they have no control over, you are fucking bonkers.

EN[i]GMA
09-12-2010, 01:43 PM
I thought the WSJ was supposed to be a good paper.

Dorothy Wood
09-12-2010, 05:11 PM
GMA;1742604']I thought the WSJ was supposed to be a good paper.

yeah, maybe before it was sucked up by news corp 3 years ago.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/News_Corporation#Holdings



they own Fox and a thousand other media outlets.

Drederick Tatum
09-12-2010, 05:45 PM
The other side is selling the same thing as the current side, the worlds largest military apparatus with special interest corporate rule. They have the same plan, just less coy and cunning. Give the ruling class more plausible deniability (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plausible_deniability) to continue to destroy the planet while the lawmakers keep shielding themselves from any fallout legally.

Only the other side dumbed it down to something called "tea party" rather than the disney like "hope change" mantra.

We've been bantering on here for how long about our Country and it's become very obvious on this day, 9/11, that Obama is now in the 2nd year of Bush's third term. Yet amazingly enough you read Op/Ed pieces like those pro or con about Obama none of them address the central theme of why we never resolve seemingly obvious problems with our planet, it's environment and the citizens well being.

I'm starting to think as I read the eloquent drivel online that perhaps the investment firm, bank, oil corporation ads on the peripheral of the column just may influence the tone.

Color me cynical but , C'mon if anyone thinks the republicans are going to correct this agenda they have no control over, you are fucking bonkers.

Call it what it is. Oligarchy.

saz
09-12-2010, 08:09 PM
spot on:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GDm0tq0Pxv0




Why Rahm Emanuel's Political Calculations Were 100% Wrong

By Cenk Uygur, Alternet (http://www.alternet.org/news/148143/why_rahm_emanuel%27s_political_calculations_were_1 00%25_wrong/)
September 11, 2010


Rahm's attitude was that you could ignore progressive demands because, where could they go? Well, it turns out that the answer to that question is: home.

The Rahm Emanuel strategy was to cut deals with power brokers in Washington and ignore what liberals wanted. This was best illustrated when he called liberals "fucking retarded" (http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2010/02/rahm-apologizes-for-privately-calling-liberal-activists-retarded.html) for trying to push for real change. His attitude was that you could ignore progressive demands because - where could they go?!

Well, it turns out that the answer to that question is - home. Now there are several polls (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/09/poll-update-kentucky-poll_n_710262.html) out showing a 5 to 10% difference between registered Democratic voters and likely Democratic voters. Democrats are basically tied with the Republicans on registered voters. But they get clobbered on likely voters. Why? Because voters who are disillusioned aren't likely to vote.

Why are they disillusioned Rahm might ask when we gave them health care reform and financial reform? The answer is because they're not nearly as dumb as you think they are. You think you can just call something reform and people are going to buy it? That's not going to fly, especially in the new media age.

We all know that Obama struck the same exact deals with the big drug companies that Bush did. Obama had campaigned against those specific agreements, but once he got into office he was convinced that we couldn't upset those deals and that we just had to shoot for a tiny bit of change. That we couldn't change the way Washington ran, we could just play the old Washington game a little better. That is the essence of Rahm Emanuel.

And those games have now left the Democrats with a gigantic deficit in voter enthusiasm. Rahm was supposed to be some sort of political genius. But it has turned out to be the exact opposite. He blew it. He had no idea what he was talking about and it looks like his party is about to lose a massive amount of seats. Why? Because Rahm was wrong, completely and utterly wrong.

Will they learn the right lesson from this and actually try to deliver on change in the next two years after this election? Very likely not. Instead, they will get someone new to come and whisper in their ear that the president must play the same old Washington games again and that the election was a sign to go further right. That'll be another disaster and you can trace that back to the original Rahmism - the belief that power must be accommodated, real change is not possible and that your own voters should be ignored. That is what is 100% wrong and what got the Democrats into this mess in the first place.